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Bruce Springsteen Album - We Shall Overcome: The Seeger Sessions

Bruce Springsteen Album - We Shall Overcome: The Seeger Sessions (Front side)
Album Information :
Release Date:2006-04-25
Type:Audio CD
Genre:Americana, Contemporary Folk, Folk-Rock, Heartland Rock, Pop, Pop/Rock Music, Popular Music, Rock, Rock/Pop, Roots Rock, Singer/Songwriter
Label:Sony
UPC:828768286722
Approx. Price:$19.98 (USD)
Track Listing :
1 . Old Dan Tucker
2 . Jesse James
3 . Mrs. McGrath
4 . Oh, Mary, Don't You Weep
5 . John Henry
6 . Erie Canal
7 . Jacob's Ladder
8 . My Oklahoma Home
9 . Eyes On The Prize
10 . Shenandoah
11 . Pay Me My Money Down
12 . We Shall Overcome
13 . Froggie Went A Courtin'
14 . Buffalo Gals (bonus track)
15 . How Can I Keep From Singing (Bonus Track)
Description :
VIDEO

A 40-minute film about the recording of the album with artist commentary. Includes filmed performances of:

John Henry Pay Me My Money Down Buffalo Gals Erie Canal O Mary DonÂ’t You Weep JacobÂ’s Ladder Froggie Went A CourtinÂ’ Shenandoah

Plus four bonus live tour videos:

How Can A Poor Man Stand Such Times And Live (Bruce Springsteen Version) Bring Â’Em Home American Land Pay Me My Money Down

Review - Amazon.com :
The premise was simple. Bruce Springsteen invites a dozen or so New York City musicians--packing banjos, fiddles, accordions and the like--to his New Jersey farmhouse for a three-day hootenanny, and tape is rolling. The results are sublime, his 21st album featuring their versions of songs harvested from Springsteen's dog-eared LPs by Pete Seeger. Not all written by Seeger, the songs are how the American folk icon interpreted them, and these organic recordings, with no rehearsals or overdubs, pay tribute with the simplicity and spontaneity he intended. It's not hard to link Springsteen's dissatisfaction with American politics to the protest song "We Shall Overcome" or even the Irish ballad "Mrs. McGrath," where he alters the lyrics to read, "I'd rather have my son as he used to be/Than the King of America and his whole navy." But the beauty of these Seeger Sessions are pieces that underscore the mood of the bandleader, which borders on down-home amusement: the bluegrass outlaw ballad "Jesse James," the Dylanesque "Pay Me My Money Down" and the euphoric "Jacob's Ladder," a gumbo-and-whiskey-fueled romp that could pass for the closing hymn at the Church of Asbury Park. --Scott Holter
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