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Holly Near
HARP - A Time to Sing!

Holly Near, Arlo Guthrie,

Ronnie Gilbert & Pete Seeger

(2001)

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“Arlo and I were so influenced by Pete and Ronnie and The Weavers... Pete and Ronnie were influenced by the new perspectives that Arlo and I brought to the tradition. I think we all felt it was a huge honor to spend a week making music together.”  – Holly Near

track listing

1.Oh Mary Don't You Weep itunesbuy
2. Somos El Barco (We Are the Boat) itunesbuy
3. Singing with You itunesbuy
4. Oh Mom itunesbuy
5. Emma itunesbuy
6. You and Me itunesbuy
7 Mothers, Daughters, Wives itunesbuy
8. What's Going On/Foolish Notion itunesbuy
9. Jacob's Ladder itunesbuy
10. Take Back the Night itunesbuy
11. The Water is Wide itunesbuy
12. City of New Orleans itunesbuy
13. Wimoweh (Mbube) itunesbuy
Disc 2 itunesbuy
1. Twelve Gates to the City itunesbuy
2. Fine Time itunesbuy
3. Icicle Blue itunesbuy
4. Ghannu Ma'i itunesbuy
5. Tarantella itunesbuy
6. All Over the World itunesbuy
7. Small Business Blues itunesbuy
8. Estadio Chile itunesbuy
9. Guantanamera itunesbuy
10. Mr. Tambourine Man itunesbuy
11. Good for the World itunesbuy
12. Pallet on the Floor itunesbuy
13. Singing for Our Lives itunesbuy


 

 

Appleseed Recordings is delighted to inaugurate its new association with the groundbreaking singer/songwriter/feminist/activist Holly Near with the release of this historic 2-CD live set. Holly assembled an all-star team of folk musician friends to play a handful of concerts in the fall of 1984, and the recorded results were released in 1985 on her own label, Redwood Records (which has since closed its doors), as a 13-song album called HARP (an acronym bearing the first letter of each musician’s first name). When listening to past concert tapes recently, Holly found a trove of unreleased songs from the HARP shows. Between the quality of the rediscovered performances and the potential on CD for a longer, looser and more representative presentation of these great singers and musicians at play than in the original LP format, HARP doubled in size to 26 songs (plus previously excised onstage banter) on two discs for this delightful (and remastered) release, now subtitled A Time to Sing! The musicians had played together before in various combinations but never as a quartet, so there is much unique musical and personal interaction captured here. 

Former Weavers Pete Seeger and Ronnie Gilbert, the irrepressible Arlo Guthrie, and Holly all brought favorite songs to perform. Selections include various Near and Guthrie originals, traditional folk standards (“Wimoweh,” “Twelve Gates to the City,” a stunning rendition by Ronnie of “The Water is Wide”) and cover tunes ranging from Bob Dylan’s “Mr. Tambourine Man” (complete with trademark deadpan commentary by Arlo) to the late Steve Goodman’s “City of New Orleans” to Marvin Gaye’s “What’s Going On.” With primary instrumental support by Pete, Arlo and pianist/ composer/ musical arranger Jeff Langley, the four voices can be heard in varying configurations, sometimes uniting in a multi-generational rainbow of brilliant harmony. For the HARP shows, presented amidst the havoc of the Reagan administration, “it was a good time to sing,” remembers Holly. “These were very intense times. There were wars raging all over the world. The women’s movement was reeling from the defeat of the Equal Rights Amendment. AIDS was new and frightening. The gay rights movement was in full force. Here are four singers, different styles, different generations, same tradition. This is live and raw and real. And when I think about how spontaneous this recording is, I am impressed by the skill of this quartet. These are people who know how to sing and what to sing about.”

about Pete Seeger: click here

about Ronnie Gilbert: click here

about Arlo Guthrie:

Arlo Guthrie is, of course, the son of topical folksinger-songwriter legend Woody Guthrie. Embraced by the Baby Boomer Generation for his marathon talking blues, “Alice’s Restaurant (Massacree),” the irreverent anti-war anthem released in 1967, Arlo became a hip household name for his starring role in the movie based on the song and for his appearance at the Woodstock Festival in 1969. His version of Steve Goodman’s “City of New Orleans” unexpectedly became a radio standard in the ’70s. Arlo has maintained an international following through his tours, the dry wit of his storytelling, and an eclectic songbag of originals and covers. His other activities have included television acting roles, authoring an award-winning children’s book, founding his own record label (Rising Son Records), and overseeing the Guthrie Center and Guthrie Foundation, organizations dedicated to humanitarian, medical, environmental and educational issues.

Arlo has been a frequent guest on Appleseed CDs in collaboration with Pete Seeger, his father’s – and now his own – longtime friend. The duo performs “66 Highway Blues” and “This Old Car” on If I Had a Song: The Songs of Pete Seeger, Vol. 2, “Jarama Valley” on our Spain in My Heart: Songs of the Spanish Civil War collection, and, with Pete’s grandson Tao Rodriguez-Seeger sitting in, “Trouble at the Bottom” on Pete Seeger & Friends’ Seeds: The Songs of Pete Seeger, Vol. 3


 

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