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
Pete Seeger
I Can See a New Day
RELEASE
November 16, 1964
LABEL
Columbia
GENRES
Folk, Folksongs, Political Folk, Folk Revival, Traditional Folk
Share This
Album Review
I Can See a New Day
is
Pete Seeger
's fifth album for Columbia Records and, like its four predecessors, was recorded live in concert. But where his previous four Columbia LPs were pegged to specific venues, all in New York City --
Story Songs
at the Village Gate,
The Bitter and the Sweet
at the Bitter End,
Children's Concert
at Town Hall, and
We Shall Overcome
at Carnegie Hall -- no place of performance is indicated here. The inference is that
I Can See a New Day
has been assembled from various live tapes, and probably from unused songs recorded at the shows that provided the other albums. In fact, the characteristic echo of Carnegie Hall, clearly audible on many tracks, suggests that a good half of the disc is excerpted from the same June 8, 1963, show that led to
We Shall Overcome
. But if these are performances that were overlooked the first time around, that is not to say they are unworthy. Rather, this is a typical
Seeger
show, mixing folk standards like the opener,
Woody Guthrie
's "This Land Is Your Land," with spirituals ("Oh What a Beautiful City," "Follow the Drinkin' Gourd"), and politically oriented material ranging from "Viva la Quince Brigada" (Long Live the 15th Brigade), which recalls the Spanish Civil War and gets a howlingly positive response from what sounds like an audience full of Old Lefties, to the mineworkers' laments "The Bells of Rhymney" (clearly not from the Carnegie show) and "Mrs. Clara Sullivan's Letter," both of which come from poems
Seeger
set to music. Of course, war is also decried, notably in the old folk song "Mrs. McGrath" (whose son comes back from war without his legs) and "I Come and Stand at Every Door," the cry of a Hiroshima victim. As all this suggests, the overall tone of the disc is serious and somewhat downcast, with only the title song, "How Can I Keep from Singing," and the new "Healing River" (co-written by
Seeger
's old
Weavers
bandmate
Fred Hellerman
) providing some consolation and hope. Nevertheless, the audiences sing along in solidarity, and
Seeger
is as earnest as ever.
–
William Ruhlmann, Rovi
Track Listing
This Land Is Your Land
Oh What a Beautiful City
Healing River
Follow the Drinkin' Gourd
Viva la Quince Brigada
Oh Louisianna
The Bells of Rhymney
Go Down Old Hannah
How Can I Keep from Singing
Mrs. McGrath
Mrs. Clara Sullivan's Letter
(The Ring on My Finger Is) Johnny Give Me
I Come and Stand at Every Door
I Can See a New Day
Similar Albums
Paul Clayton
Whaling and Sailing Songs from the Days of Moby Dick
Woody Guthrie
Nursery Days
Joan Baez
Joan Baez in Concert, Pt. 1
Elizabeth Cotton
Freight Train and Other North Carolina Folk Songs
The Weavers
The Weavers at Carnegie Hall
Various Artists
Newport Folk Festival
Ramblin' Jack Elliott & Derrol Adams
America
Peggy Seeger
Period Pieces: Women's Songs for Men & Women
Alan Lomax
The Ballad Operas: The Martins & The Coys
Pete Seeger
In Prague 1964