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
The Weavers
Together Again
RELEASE
1984
LABEL
Loom Records
GENRES
Folk, Political Folk, Traditional Folk, Folksongs, Folk Revival
Share This
Album Review
The Weavers formed in 1948 and broke up in 1953 for political reasons; they reunited in 1955 and stayed together, with shifting personnel, until 1964, when they broke up for personal and professional reasons. In 1980, the original quartet, Pete Seeger,
Lee Hays
, Fred Hellerman, and Ronnie Gilbert, reunited one last time to commemorate the 25th anniversary of their first reunion in the place they had held that reunion, Carnegie Hall in New York. The two concerts, on November 28 and 29, 1980, were recorded, and
Together Again
is culled from the shows. Naturally, it features some of the group’s old favorites, such as “Goodnight Irene,” “Kisses Sweeter than Wine,” and “Wimoweh.” It also provides some of their international flavor in such selections as “Venga Jaleo.” That is a song dating from the Spanish Civil War, which brings in the group’s political element. It was inevitable, given that aspect of the Weavers, that they would have at least something to say about the election of the conservative Republican Ronald Reagan as president only weeks earlier, and of course, they do, referring to it in newly added lyrics to Seeger’s wry song about aging, “Get Up and Go,” after Hays, still the Weavers’ comedian, had alluded to the circumstances in his introductory remarks. “This too shall pass,” he said. “I’ve had kidney stones, and I know.” The inclusion of the Seeger song (introduced on his 1964 solo album Broadsides: Songs and Ballads) signals the group’s desire to feature new material, not just the old warhorses. Hellerman, for example, contributes a lovely song describing a father’s wonder about a newborn child, “Tomorrow Lies in the Cradle,” while Gilbert, a supporter of topical folksinger Holly Near, brings in two Near compositions on political themes, “Hay Una Mujer,” about Chilean oppression, and “Something About the Women,” a song for the women’s liberation movement. The enraptured audience shares the group’s political viewpoint and revels in both the old and new material. Hays, the oldest member at 66 and clearly ailing (he appeared onstage in a wheelchair), nevertheless is the most humorous, and the others leave the stage remarks largely to him. He doesn’t have the singing voice he once did, but he was never the best singer in the group, anyway, and the harmonies still work fine.
Together Again
is a special, one-time effort that puts a bow on a career that had its ups and downs, but produced some wonderful music.
–
William Ruhlmann, Rovi
Track Listing
Darling Corey
In a Jocular Vein
Get Up and Go
Tomorrow Lies in the Cradle
Wasn't That a Time
Dark as a Dungeon
Hay Una Mujer
Venga Jaleo
Kisses Sweeter Than Wine
When I'm Down for the Count
All Night Long
Something About the Women
We Wish You a Merry Christmas
Wimoweh
Goodnight Irene
purchase full album
Similar Albums
Joan Baez
Joan Baez
Elizabeth Cotton
Freight Train and Other North Carolina Folk Songs
Woody Guthrie
Woody Guthrie Sings Folk Songs
The Weavers
The Weavers at Carnegie Hall
Pete Seeger
American Folk Songs for Children
Various Artists
Greatest Folksingers of the '60s
Ramblin' Jack Elliott & Derrol Adams
America
Alan Lomax
The Ballad Operas: The Martins & The Coys
Peggy Seeger
Three Score and Ten
Bob Dylan
Bob Dylan