Birds, Beasts, Bugs & Fishes (Little & Big) | |
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Compilation album by | |
Released | February 17, 1998 |
Genre | |
Length | 1:05:44 |
Label | Smithsonian Folkways |
Producer | Moses Asch |
Alternative Cover | |
Review scores | |
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Source | Rating |
AllMusic | [1] |
Birds, Beasts, Bugs & Fishes (Little & Big) is a 1998 compilation album by Pete Seeger and was released on Smithsonian Folkways as SFW45039.
This collection is a compilation of 28 songs and stories about animals that Pete Seeger released in 1955 on two short Folkways Records LPs: Birds, Beasts, Bugs and Little Fishes (Folkways FC 7610) and Birds, Beasts, Bugs & Bigger Fishes (Folkways FC 7611). [2] [3]
No. | Title | Length |
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1. | "Fly Through My Window" | 2:28 |
2. | "I Had A Rooster" | 3:51 |
3. | "Come All You Bold Sailormen" | 3:17 |
4. | "Old Grey Mule" | 1:57 |
5. | "Alligator, Hedgehog" | 0:41 |
6. | "Frog Went A-Courting" | 1:16 |
7. | "Raccoon's Got A Bushy Tail" | 1:16 |
8. | "I Know An Old Lady (Who Swallowed A Fly)" | 2:55 |
9. | "Ground Hog" | 2:09 |
10. | "Mister Rabbit" | 2:03 |
11. | "Grey Goose" | 2:19 |
12. | "Teency Weency Spider" | 0:23 |
13. | "The Old Hen" | 2:27 |
14. | "Skip To My Lou" | 1:30 |
15. | "My Little Kitty" | 1:23 |
16. | "The Little Black Bull" | 2:04 |
17. | "Leatherwing Bat" | 2:17 |
18. | "The Keeper And The Doe" | 2:06 |
19. | "The Darby Ram" | 2:21 |
20. | "Mole In The Ground" | 1:12 |
21. | "The Fox" | 1:44 |
22. | "Turtle Dove" | 1:51 |
23. | "Old Paint" | 2:09 |
24. | "The Elephant" | 0:31 |
25. | "The Foolish Frog" | 7:07 |
26. | "Little Dogies" | 4:15 |
27. | "Bear Hunt" | 3:34 |
28. | "Old Blue" | 2:18 |
Total length: | 1:05:44 |
Notes
Guy Hughes Carawan Jr. was an American folk musician and musicologist. He served as music director and song leader for the Highlander Research and Education Center in New Market, Tennessee.
Hazel Jane Dickens was an American bluegrass singer, songwriter, double bassist and guitarist. Her music was characterized not only by her high, lonesome singing style, but also by her provocative pro-union, feminist songs. Cultural blogger John Pietaro noted that "Dickens didn’t just sing the anthems of labor, she lived them and her place on many a picket line, staring down gunfire and goon squads, embedded her into the cause." The New York Times extolled her as "a clarion-voiced advocate for coal miners and working people and a pioneer among women in bluegrass music." With Alice Gerrard, Dickens was one of the first women to record a bluegrass album.
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Mike Seeger was an American folk musician and folklorist. He was a distinctive singer and an accomplished musician who played autoharp, banjo, fiddle, dulcimer, guitar, mouth harp, mandolin, dobro, jaw harp, and pan pipes. Seeger, a half-brother of Pete Seeger, produced more than 30 documentary recordings, and performed in more than 40 other recordings. He desired to make known the caretakers of culture that inspired and taught him.
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Smithsonian Folkways is the nonprofit record label of the Smithsonian Institution. It is a part of the Smithsonian's Smithsonian Center for Folklife and Cultural Heritage, located at Capital Gallery in downtown Washington, D.C. The label was founded in 1987 after the family of Moses Asch, founder of Folkways Records, donated the entire Folkways Records label to the Smithsonian. The donation was made on the condition that the Institution continue Asch's policy that each of the more than 2,000 albums of Folkways Records remain in print forever, regardless of sales. Since then, the label has expanded on Asch's vision of documenting the sounds of the world, adding six other record labels to the collection, as well as releasing over 300 new recordings. Some well-known artists have contributed to the Smithsonian Folkways collection, including Pete Seeger, Ella Jenkins, Woody Guthrie, and Lead Belly. Famous songs include "This Land Is Your Land", "Goodnight, Irene", and "Midnight Special". Due to the unique nature of its recordings, which include an extensive collection of traditional American music, children's music, and international music, Smithsonian Folkways has become an important collection to the musical community, especially to ethnomusicologists, who utilize the recordings of "people's music" from all over the world.
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Happy Traum is an American folk musician who started playing music in the 1950s and became a stalwart of the Greenwich Village music scene of the 1960s and the Woodstock music scene of the 1970s and 1980s. For several years, he studied blues guitar with Brownie McGhee, who was a big influence on his guitar style. Happy is most famously known as one half of Happy and Artie Traum, a duo he began with his brother. They released several albums, including Happy and Artie Traum, Double Back, and Hard Times In The Country. He has continued as a solo artist and as founder of Homespun Music Instruction.
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