Home
Help
Contact Us
Connect With Us
Music
Recently Played
Contests
SHORE Club
Contest Rules & Regulations
On Air
Concerts
Concerts
Cineplex Today
Shore Club
Login
Join
Update
Search for
Peter, Paul and Mary
LifeLines
RELEASE
April 11, 1995
LABEL
Warner Bros.
GENRES
Folk, Traditional Folk, Folk-Pop, Contemporary Folk
Share This
Album Review
After leaving their longtime label home at Warner Bros. Records following the 1978 LP
Reunion
,
Peter, Paul & Mary
went the independent, self-releasing route before signing to start-up company Gold Castle for 1986's
No Easy to Walk to Freedom
. Two albums later, Gold Castle had gone belly up, and the trio returned to Warner on a one-off basis for their second children's album,
Peter, Paul & Mommy, Too
, in 1993. The project went sufficiently well for the group to re-sign to Warner for a lengthier term, and the first fruits of that contract is
LifeLines
, which seems intended as something of a rebirth of
Peter, Paul & Mary
as well as a re-affirmation of their place in popular music. The format is the familiar one of filling a disc with guest stars, but this time that format has been used not to add a sense of trendiness to a veteran act, but rather to position it within a tradition.
Peter, Paul & Mary
always served as a bridge, connecting the older folk tradition of
the Weavers
and
Woody Guthrie
to the '60s folk revival, connecting the commercial and topical wings of that revival, and connecting developing artists to larger audiences. They do all those things deliberately on
LifeLines
, and a few other things besides.
Peter Yarrow
's anthemic "River of Jordan," which first appeared on his solo album
Peter
in 1972, concludes the album by combining
Peter, Paul & Mary
with the surviving
Weavers
,
Pete Seeger
,
Fred Hellerman
, and
Ronnie Gilbert
; three songs earlier, they had brought in
Guthrie
protégé
Ramblin' Jack Elliott
to join them on
Guthrie
's "Deportee." They also mix things up with some of their contemporaries:
Dave Van Ronk
joins in on a medley of "Wanderin'" and "Nobody Knows You When You're Down and Out";
Judy Collins
duets with
Yarrow
on his "Take the Chance"; and
Yarrow
combines with
Richie Havens
and
the Simon Sisters
(
Carly Simon
and
Lucy Simon
) on his evergreen "The Great Mandala (The Wheel of Life)," first heard on
Peter, Paul & Mary
's
Album 1700
in 1967. And they are joined by artists they have influenced:
Noel Paul Stookey
sings his "For the Love of it All" with
Emmylou Harris
; and
Mary Travers
duets with
Holly Near
on "Home Is Where the Heart Is" and with
John Gorka
on "24 Green Street." (In a match-up without category, she also pairs with
B.B. King
on "House of the Rising Sun.") Just as they introduced many '60s listeners to songwriters
Gordon Lightfoot
and
John Denver
, here
Peter, Paul & Mary
showcase up-and-comers
Buddy Mondlock
("The Kid"),
Sally Fingerett
("Home Is Where the Heart Is"),
John Fischer
("24 Green Street"), and
Cheryl Wheeler
("75 Septembers"), all worthy writers. And they also find time for their own compositions, among them
Stookey
's comic "Old Enough (Ode to an Aging Rocker)" and
Travers
' "But a Moment" (with music by
Stookey
). Of course, no
Peter, Paul & Mary
album would be worth the name without a heavy helping of social commentary, and this album has plenty. "For the Love of It All" is one of
Stookey
's Christian meditations; "Home Is Where the Heart Is" preaches tolerance for homosexuality; and "But a Moment" takes on Alzheimer's disease. ("Deportee" sadly remains a relevant reflection on migrant workers.) But the philosophical and political aspects of the music seem less important this time around than the communion of musicians who work well with
Peter, Paul & Mary
, supporting them when called upon, but leaving them the spotlight on such characteristic tracks as the medley of "Babylon" and "Oh Sinner Man," which could have been on any one of their albums dating back to the early '60s. Thirty-five years into their career,
LifeLines
is a major statement of who they are now and who they have been all along.
–
William Ruhlmann, Rovi
Track Listing
The Kid
Wanderin'/Nobody Knows You When You're Down and Out
For the Love of It All
Home Is Where the Heart Is
Babylon/Oh, Sinner Man
House of the Rising Sun
Take the Chance
September Song
Old Enough (Ode to an Aging Rocker)
24 Green Street
Great Mandala (The Wheel of Life)
Deportee
75 Septembers
But a Moment
River of Jordan
Similar Albums
The Journeymen
New Directions in Folk Music
Joan Baez
Very Early Joan
Peter, Paul and Mary
In Concert
Leonard Cohen
New Skin for the Old Ceremony
Burl Ives
Have a Holly Jolly Christmas
Bill Staines
Going to the West
Various Artists
Folk Duets
Patty Griffin
Flaming Red
The Limeliters
Until We Get It Right
Glenn Yarbrough
Come Sit by My Side