Burl Ives Presents America's Musical Heritage | |
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Studio album Album Setby Burl Ives | |
Released | 1963 |
Genre | Folk |
Label | Longines Symphonette Recording Society |
Burl Ives Presents America's Musical Heritage, released in 1963 by the Longines Symphonette Recording Society, is a six-album box set by folk singer Burl Ives. [1] It is subtitled 114 Best Loved Songs & Ballads for Listening, Singing, and Reading and includes a 168-page book, titled The Burl Ives Sing-Along Song Book, which presents the lyrics for all of the songs and historical background about some of the songs. [2]
Burl Icle Ivanhoe Ives was an American singer and actor of stage, screen, radio and television.
Many of the songs can be found on Ives' six-album set Historical America in Song , released by Encyclopædia Britannica Films in 1950. The two sets are not identical, however. For example, while there is considerable overlapping between New Ballads and two of the albums in the 1950 set, there is almost no overlapping between Tales for Singing and the earlier set. The duplicated songs on the 1963 set seem to be fresh recordings. Certainly the sound is better on the six LPs that comprise the 1963 set than on the thirty 78 rpm records that make up the 1950 set. [3] [4]
Historical America in Song, released in 1950 by Encyclopædia Britannica Films, is an album set by folk singer Burl Ives. Each of the six albums consists of five 12-inch vinylite records, for a total of thirty 78 rpm records. Each album has its own cover with a drawing of the Washington Monument on it.
The Encyclopædia Britannica, formerly published by Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc., is a general knowledge English-language encyclopaedia. It was written by about 100 full-time editors and more than 4,000 contributors. The 2010 version of the 15th edition, which spans 32 volumes and 32,640 pages, was the last printed edition.
Side 1
Track | Song Title |
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1. | The Gallows Tree |
2. | The Keys of Canterbury |
3. | Billy Boy |
4. | My Boy Willie |
5. | The Wee Cooper O' Fife |
6. | Three Crowns |
7. | Barb'ry Allen |
8. | Sweet Kitty Klover |
9. | Mr. Froggie Went A-Courtin |
Side 2
Track | Song Title |
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1. | Edward |
2. | Waly, Waly |
3. | Gypsy's Wedding Day |
4. | Lily Munro |
5. | Widdicomb Fair |
6. | How Happy the Soldier |
7. | One Morning in May |
8. | Two Maidens Went Milking |
Side 1
Track | Song Title |
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1. | Captain Kidd |
2. | The Escape of Old John Webb |
3. | Free America |
4. | The Boston Tea Party |
5. | Johnny Has Gone for a Soldier |
6. | The Riflemen's Song at Bennington |
7. | The Battle of Saratoga |
8. | Sir Pete Parker |
9. | Cornwallis Country Dance |
Side 2
Track | Song Title |
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1. | The Yankee Man-o-War |
2. | High Barbaree |
3. | The Constitution and the Guerriere |
4. | The Hornet and the Peacock |
5. | Ye Parliaments of England |
6. | Patriotic Diggers |
7. | Hunters of Kentucky |
Side 1
Track | Song Title |
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1. | Home Boys Home |
2. | Shenandoah |
3. | Song of the Fishes |
4. | Blow ye Winds |
5. | Greenland Fisheries |
6. | Rollin' Home |
7. | Blow the Man Down |
Side 2
Track | Song Title |
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1. | Sacramento |
2. | A Ripping Trip |
3. | Ox-Driver's Song |
4. | The Hand Cart Song |
5. | Sweet Betsy from Pike |
6. | Come Yourselves and See |
7. | The Shady Old Camp |
8. | Joe Bowers |
Side 1
Track | Song Title |
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1. | Lolly Tu Dum |
2. | Down in the Valley |
3. | The Sow Took the Measles |
4. | Old Bangam |
5. | Mr. Rabbit |
6. | Hush Little Baby |
7. | Sourwood Mountain |
8. | Old Blue |
9. | Poor Little Turtle Dove |
10. | Careless Love |
Side 2
Track | Song Title |
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1. | John Henry |
2. | Buckeye Jim |
3. | The Leather-Winged Bat |
4. | Cotton-Eyed Joe |
5. | Darlin' Cory |
6. | Turkey in the Straw |
7. | I'm Goin' Away |
8. | Needle Eye |
9. | Go in and out the Window |
10. | Saturday Night and Sunday Too |
11. | Frankie and Johnny |
Side 1
Track | Song Title |
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1. | Unfornate Miss Bailey |
2. | The Pesky Sarpint |
3. | On Springfield Mountain |
4. | Long, Long Ago |
5. | Ben Bolt |
6. | Oh You New York Girls |
7. | The Blue Tail Fly |
8. | Uncle Ned |
9. | Darli' Nelly Gray |
10. | Wake Nicodemus |
11. | The Abolitionist Hymn |
Side 2
Track | Song Title |
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1. | Nobody Knows the Trouble I've Seen |
2. | John Brown |
3. | The Battle Cry of Freedom |
4. | Just before the Battle Mother |
5. | Tramp, Tramp, Tramp |
6. | When Johnny Comes Marching Home |
7. | All Quiet along the Potomac |
8. | Goober Peas |
9. | The Bonnie Blue Flag |
10. | The Battle of Bull Run |
11. | Little Brown Jug |
12. | Grandfather's Clock |
Side 1
Track | Song Title |
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1. | The Roving Gambler |
2. | Billy the Kid |
3. | Jesse James |
4. | John Hardy |
5. | Midnight Special |
6. | Sioux Indians |
7. | Patrick on the Railroad |
8. | The Utah Iron Horse |
9. | What Was Your Name in the States |
10. | The Lavender Cowboy |
11. | The Cowboy's Lament |
Side 2
Track | Song Title |
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1. | The Old Chisholm Trail |
2. | Old Paint |
3. | Git along Little Doggies |
4. | Oh Susanna |
5. | Green Grow the Lilacs |
6. | Little Old Sod Shanty |
7. | The Young Man Who Wouldn't Hoe Corn |
8. | Home on the Range |
9. | Red River Valley |
10. | Big Rock Candy Mountain |
11. | Goin' Down the Road Feelin' Bad |
The term American folk music encompasses numerous music genres, variously known as traditional music, traditional folk music, contemporary folk music, or roots music. Many traditional songs have been sung within the same family or folk group for generations, and sometimes trace back to such origins as Great Britain, Europe, or Africa. Musician Mike Seeger once famously commented that the definition of American folk music is "...all the music that fits between the cracks."
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Originally released in August 1941 on Okeh Records, Okeh Presents the Wayfaring Stranger is an album consisting of four 10-inch records by Burl Ives. This set marked Ives's debut as a recording artist. He accompanies himself on the guitar as he sings twelve folk songs.
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Australian Folk Songs is a 1958 album by Burl Ives. During his visit to Australia in 1952, invited there by the Australia Broadcasting Commission, Ives met the Reverend Percy Jones, a professor of music at the University of Melbourne. The two men compiled a book of Australian folk songs and Ives recorded an album, "collected and arranged" by Jones, which were later released in the United States and elsewhere as Australian Folk Songs.
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Susan Catherine Reed was an American singer, harpist, zitherist and actress. A regular on the New York folk scene, Life magazine dubbed her "the pet of Manhattan nightclubbers" in 1945.
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