"Best Traditional Folk Album" Grammy Award Winner!
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Pete Seeger
At 89
(2008)
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$15.00 |
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cdbaby |
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itunes |
A National Treasure and Citizen of the World takes a look at where we are, how far we've come, and how far we need to go on 32 new tracks, most previously unrecorded.
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track listing
1. Nameless Banjo Riff |
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2. False From True |
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3. Now We Sit Us Down |
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4. Pete’s greeting (spoken) |
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5. Visions of Children |
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6. Wonderful Friends |
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7. The Water is Wide |
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8. Pete talks about Clearwater (spoken) |
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9. It’s a Long Haul |
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10.Throw Away That Shad Net (How Are We Gonna Save Tomorrow?) |
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11.Song of the World’s Last Whale |
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12. The First Settlers |
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13. The D Minor Flourish / Cindy |
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14. Pete’s intro to If It Can’t Be Reduced (spoken) |
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15. If It Can’t Be Reduced |
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16. Spring Fever |
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17. Pete speaks about WWII (spoken) |
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18. When I Was Most Beautiful |
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19. Bach at Treblinka |
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20. We Will Love or We Will Perish |
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21. The story of Tzena, Tzena, Tzena (spoken) |
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22. Tzena, Tzena, Tzena |
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23. One Percent Phosphorous Banjo Riff |
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24. Pete speaks about involvement (spoken) |
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25. Or Else! (One-a These Days) |
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26. Waist Deep in the Big Muddy |
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27. Little Fat Baby |
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28. Arrange and Re-arrange |
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29. Alleluya |
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30. Pete's extroduction (spoken) |
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31. If This World Survives |
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32. How Soon? |
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It is not an overstatement to call Pete Seeger one of our greatest living Americans, let alone one of the most important musicians of our time. His life’s work – carrying music, social comment, and heartlifting entertainment around the globe – has made a difference, whether his songs are sung in kindergartens or on the political barricades.
On At 89, Pete’s first CD since his “Pete and Friends” disc on the Grammy-nominated 2003 Seeds: The Songs of Pete Seeger, Vol. 3 2-CD set, the peaceful warrior for human dignity surveys the progress that’s been made during his nine-decade lifetime and what still needs to be done to create a society of equals and to assure continued world survival.
Lovingly sequenced by producer/musician David Bernz, At 89 seamlessly segues similarly themed songs into organic suites, using brief solo instrumentals and spoken introductions by Pete as links. After the comfortable opening amble of Pete’s “Nameless Banjo Riff,” Seeger acknowledges on “False From True,” above Perry Robinson’s sardonic clarinet, that he’s now of an age (“no longer young”) when it’s time to reassess what’s left to do – separating false from true, more important now than ever. He is appropriately joined on the next few songs of welcome and fellowship (“Now We Sit Us Down,” “Visions of Children,” “Wonderful Friends”) by the voices of his fellow Hudson River Valley, New York, musicians and friends, who are also heard singing and making music throughout the CD, adding to its sense of community. Among the contributing musicians are the members of Work o’ the Weavers, a quartet (which includes Bernz) devoted to the repertoire and spirit of Pete’s long gone but much-loved group; the Walkabout Clearwater Chorus; the After Hours Quartet; the Hudson River Sloop Singers; violinist Sara Milonovich, and other guests.
“The Water is Wide,” a soothing duet between recorder and 12-string guitar, both played by Pete, provides the transition to the next set of songs (“It’s a Long Haul,” “Throw Away That Shad Net,” “Song of the World’s Last Whale,” “If It Can’t Be Reduced,” “The First Settlers”), which address two of Pete’s leading concerns – ecology and peaceful coexistence. The tragic uselessness of war (“When I Was Most Beautiful,” sung by Sonya Cohen, Pete’s niece; “Bach at Treblinka”) is lightened by a version of The Weavers’ old favorite, “Tzena, Tzena, Tzena,” that adds a hopeful mingling of recently added Arabic lyrics to the existing verses in Hebrew and English. The last segment of the CD circles back to the dangers of blind obedience (a new rendition of the Vietnam, and now Iraq, War parable, “Waist Deep in the Big Muddy”), and the need for personal involvement necessary to save our planet from ourselves (“Or Else!” “Arrange and Re-arrange,” “If This World Survives”). There’s a particularly poignant moment on “Little Fat Baby,” one of the 26 tracks never previously recorded by Pete, when he confronts his own mortality: “Some day, we’ll be saying so long/Some day, it’ll be time for me to move on”.
But that day hasn’t yet arrived. Pete is still sowing the seeds of peace and justice, whether inspiring Bruce Springsteen to carry on his legacy of musical tradition and personal activism or getting a classroom of school kids to sing songs in other languages and to think about their own roles in changing society for the better.
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other releases
Pete Seeger Remembers Woody
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Pete Seeger & Lorre Wyatt: A More Perfect Union |
Tomorrow's Children |
Live in '65 |
The Songs of Pete Seeger
Vol 1
Where Have All the Flowers Gone? |
The Songs of Pete Seeger
Vol 2
If I Had a Song |
The Songs of Pete Seeger
Vol 3
Seeds |
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Sowing the Seeds - The 10th Anniversary |
Give US Your Poor
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Guide My Feet
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Let My People Go! |
One Meat Ball |
Three Score and Ten |
There Was a Time |
Sarajevo/Belfast
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Spain in My Heart: Songs of the Spanish Civil War
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