Tuesday, February 18, 2025

Weavers - The Weavers 1949-1953 Goodnight Irene [2000] (4 x CDs)

WEAVERS

Weavers - The Weavers 1949-1953 Goodnight Irene [2000] (4 x CDs)

There are great records, and then there are records like this one, which is an adventure as well as incomparable listening. And don't be repelled by the 100-plus dollar price tag -- this 4 x CD +1 DVD set manages to be a hootenanny, a history lesson, a light-hearted voyage through pasts musical, political, and cultural, and a pop-culture travelogue all in one, and an investment that will pay off five or ten times that amount in smiles and a few tears. The usual assumption is that the Weavers started their recording career with Gordon Jenkins at Decca Records, adapting their folk sound into an early-'50s popular style, but disc one dispels this notion, going back to the quartet's true recording debut, for Charter Records in 1949. We walk in on them singing in blues and gospel styles, freely injecting elements of country music and also going for some of the kind of four-way acrobatics that one more commonly associated with pop ensembles of the era -- in other words, doing all of the stuff that they made their names with in their reunion years of the middle/late '50s, except that these sides have mostly been unheard for 51 years. Some of this music is topical and might have come off as dangerously confrontational in the reactionary political climate of 1949, but most of it would probably have slipped by on its sheer beauty and inventiveness, and much of it, if it could have been issued during the 1960s, would surely have found an audience. At least one song, "Dig My Grave," would even have qualified as "world music," had such a term existed at the time, drawing on a Bahamian source. Lee Hays' "Love Song Blues" and the group's original version of "The Hammer Song" (co-authored by Hays and Pete Seeger), which were never even issued by the Charter label, are worth a quarter of the price of this box, and they're only two of the highlights on the first disc. A March-April 1950 demo filled with more topical songs shows some of the material that they abandoned in favor of safer songs when they began recording for Decca the following month, so there is a bit of lost history here -- and the disc is rounded out by eight live performances from WNYC radio from 1949 and 1950, hosted by Oscar Brand, opening with the broadcast on which Lee Hays announces that the quartet have finally selected a name; these recordings preserve the sense of humor that put the quartet over the top with audiences at the Village Vanguard; the broadcast performance of "Love Song Blues" is, if anything, even more impressive than the unissued Charter recording; and despite a few technical flubs, Hayes' "Washington Square Blues" is also a highlight, featuring some killer harmonizing (in a blues idiom) and fascinating acoustic guitar and banjo flourishes. Discs two and three are given over to their history with Decca Records, which is usually maligned by folk purists --regardless of the pop music elements added by Gordon Jenkins, however, the quality of the singing and the care that went into it resound far more loudly than anything else on those records; they might not be ideal representations of what the Weavers were about, but the 54 Decca sides are mostly good and even occasionally superb recordings, displaying a wide-ranging array of musical influences in an era when most pop artists were looking for the safety of Tin Pan Alley and novelty tunes; those two discs include half a dozen previously unissued tracks. Disc four is made up of sides that the group cut for non-commercial release, most notably "The Peekskill Story," recorded in conjunction with Paul Robeson, telling of the riot that greeted the legendary black singer/activist in Peekskill, NY, at a 1949 rally, rounded out by solo and duo recordings by Hays, Fred Hellerman, and Ronnie Gilbert. Disc five is a DVD (playable on many computers) of five "telescription" performances done by the quartet in the early days of television -- performing live in front of the camera, the group is spontaneous and charming in their straight-laced, straightforward appeal, the 1950 equivalent of MTV Unplugged performances. The box also includes an accompanying hardcover book by Dave Samuelson (with addenda by Richard D. Cohen) that's about the most detailed account of the quartet's pre-1955 history ever published, with the usual thorough Bear Family discography as well. (AllMusic review by Bruce Eder)

This collection surveys the first 5 years of The Weavers career, starting with their Charter & Hootenanny sessions, going on to 16 unreleased audition acetates, a rare Christmas LP, a children's record & much more

==========================================================

ALL 

OR

ALL 

===========================================================

Track lists

Vol. 1

01 Weavers - Wasn't That A Time 2:59

02 Weavers - Dig My Grave 2:29

03 Weavers - Freight Train Blues 2:30

04 Weavers - Love Song Blues 3:17

05 Weavers - The Hammer Song 2:18

06 Weavers - No Irish Need Apply 2:22

07 Weavers - The Hammer Song 2:01

08 Weavers - Banks of Marble 2:55

09 Weavers - When The Saints Go Marching In 1:23

10 Weavers - Rock Island Line 1:24

11 Weavers - Lonesome Traveler 2:04

12 Weavers - I Dont Want to Get ADJusted 1:02

13 Weavers - Wasnt That A Time 2:53

14 Weavers - The Johnson Boys 1:26

15 Weavers - Goodnight Irene 2:35

16 Weavers - Lousy Dime 2:19

17 Weavers - Every Night When The Sun Goes Down 2:31

18 Weavers - Talking Blues 1:28

19 Weavers - East Virginia Blues 2:16

20 Weavers - Love Song Blues 2:57

21 Weavers - Tzena Tzena Tzena 2:15

22 Weavers - Quinte Regimento 1:47

23 Weavers - Wimoweh 2:09

24 Weavers - Around The World 2:43

25 Weavers - Poor Howards Dead and Gone 4:02

26 Weavers - Dig My Grave 3:09

27 Weavers - Love Song Blues 3:27

28 Weavers - Washington Square Blues 3:51

29 Weavers - Freight Train Blues 2:21

30 Weavers - The Johnson Boys 3:13

31 Weavers - Lousy Dime 1:56

32 Weavers - The Fireship 1:43


Vol. 2

01 Weavers - Around The World 2:34

02 Weavers - Tzena Tzena Tzena 2:10

03 Weavers - Tzena Tzena Tzena 2:45

04 Weavers - Goodnight Irene 3:23

05 Weavers - Lonesome Traveler 2:41

06 Weavers - So Long (Its Been Good to Know You) 3:22

07 Weavers - The Wreck of The John B 2:26

08 Weavers - Midnight Special 2:49

09 Weavers - The Roving Kind 2:46

10 Weavers - Follow The Drinking Gourd 3:05

11 Weavers - Trouble in Mind 3:09

12 Weavers - Along The Colorado Trail 3:03

13 Weavers - Suliram (Indonesian Lullaby) 2:55

14 Weavers - Hush Little Baby 1:14

15 Weavers - I Know Where Im Going 1:49

16 Weavers - Across The Wide Missouri 3:02

17 Weavers - On Top of Old Smokey 2:44

18 Weavers - The Frozen Logger 2:36

19 Weavers - Follow The Drinking Gourd 2:36

20 Weavers - Wake Up Darling Cory 2:08

21 Weavers - Greensleeves 1:45

22 Weavers - Easy Rider Blues 2:26

23 Weavers - Along The Colorado Trail 3:04

24 Weavers - Greensleeves 1:43

25 Weavers - When The Saints Go Marching In 2:42

26 Weavers - Run Home to Mama 2:45

27 Weavers - Quilting Bee 2:27

28 Weavers - Kisses Sweeter Than Wine 3:01

29 Weavers - Jig Along Home 2:56

30 Weavers - (Come on and ) Join Into The Game 3:01


Vol. 3

01 Weavers - Old Paint (Ride Around Little Dogies) 3:04

02 Weavers - Wimoweh 3:02

03 Weavers - Midnight Special 2:58

04 Weavers - The Gandy Dancers Ball 2:49

05 Weavers - Around The Corner (Beneath The Berry Tree) 2:28

06 Weavers - Hard Aint it Hard 3:06

07 Weavers - The Bay of Mexico 2:44

08 Weavers - True Love 2:31

09 Weavers - Clementine 2:53

10 Weavers - Down in The Valley 2:59

11 Weavers - Rock Island Line 2:35

12 Weavers - Benoni 2:44

13 Weavers - Taking it Easy 3:05

14 Weavers - Sylvie 2:47

15 Weavers - We Wish You A Merry Christmas 2:27

16 Weavers - Burgundian Carol 2:09

17 Weavers - God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen 1:19

18 Weavers - Go Tell it on The Mountain 2:31

19 Weavers - Twelve Days of Christmas 2:37

20 Weavers - Lulloo Lullay 2:05

21 Weavers - Its Almost Day 1:27

22 Weavers - One for The Little Bitty Baby 2:46

23 Weavers - Poor Little Jesus 2:05

24 Weavers - The Seven Blessings of Mary 2:52

25 Weavers - Joy to The World 0:54

26 Weavers - Masters in This Hall 1:15

27 Weavers - Goodnight Irene 3:14

28 Weavers - The Roving Kind 2:49

29 Weavers - Tzena Tzena Tzena 2:43

30 Weavers - Around The World 3:04

31 Weavers - So Long Its Been Good to Know You 3:06


Vol. 4

01 Weavers - The Trenton Six Parts 1 & 2 9:09

02 Weavers - The Peekskill Story Parts 1 & 2 6:25

03 Weavers - A Train to The Zoo Parts 1 & 2 7:05

04 Weavers - New York City 2:05

05 Weavers - We Shall Not Be Moved 1:00

06 Weavers - Old Man Atom 2:52

07 Weavers - Pity The Downtrodden Landlord 2:24

08 Weavers - (Ma Come Bali) Bella Bimba 2:24

09 Weavers - Calla Calla (The Bride) 2:42

10 Weavers - Flamenco 2:44

11 Weavers - Just One More Chance 3:06

12 Weavers - Goodnight Sweet Dreams 2:45

13 Weavers - Interview 8:49

=============================================================

=============================================================

6 comments:

  1. Thanks! A big gap in my collection that started bugging me a couple of months ago when I saw "A Complete Unknown." (I've since seen it a couple of more times. I can't help it I'm a Bobsessive!)

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hi BlueNote Cyberstar.
      Glad that this one hits the notes you're looking for.
      Cheers.

      Delete
  2. My dad. now 86, is a huge fan of The Weavers, and when I was young their Decca albums were in rotation on our turntable. I saw Pete Seeger on stage twice, once in the mid-70s for a kids' show at UCLA and again in 1983, when he performed at UC Berkeley. After the Berkeley performance I went backstage and had a chance to shake his hand and thank him for all of his music...and for just being him.

    Thanks for posting these albums, BB!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. My pleasure, BG.
      You just don't see acts like this being promoted much. They deserve to be seen.
      Your dad has good taste.
      Cheers.

      Delete