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Joan Baez - Folksingers Round Harvard Square (1959)

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Joan Baez - Folksingers Round Harvard Square (1959)

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A1 	–Joan Baez 	On The Banks Of The Ohio 	
A2 	–Joan Baez 	O What A Beautiful City 	
A3 	–Joan Baez 	Sail Away Ladies 	
A4 	–Joan Baez 	Black Is The Color 	
A5 	–Joan Baez 	Lowlands 	
A6 	–Joan Baez 	What You Gonna Call Your Pretty Little Baby 	
A7 	–Joan Baez & Bill Wood 	Kitty 	
A8 	–Joan Baez & Bill Wood  	So Soon In The Morning 	
A9 	–Joan Baez & Bill Wood  	Careless Love 	
B1 	–Bill Wood 	Le Cheval Dans La Beignoire 	
B2 	–Bill Wood  	John Henry 	
B3 	–Bill Wood  	Travelin' Shoes 	
B4 	–Bill Wood  	The Bold Soldier 	
B5 	–Ted Alevizos 	Walie Walie 	
B6 	–Ted Alevizos 	Rejected Lover 	
B7 	–Ted Alevizos 	Astrapsen 	
B8 	–Ted Alevizos 	Lass From The Low Country 	
B9 	–Joan Baez & Bill Wood & Ted Alevizos 	Don't Weep After Me

 

Recorded in a basement with Bill Wood and Ted Alevizos, Folksingers Round Harvard Square is technically the first album Joan Baez recorded. Although not a major success at the time of release (although it would chart four years later when re-released illegally) , it proved crucial in enabling Joan to get a major label deal with Vanguard. Hallmark. ---Editorial Reviews, amazon.com

 

In the late '50s, prior to signing with Vanguard, Joan Baez recorded this album in a basement, sometimes performing with Bill Wood and Ted Alevizos. It wasn't wholly Baez' album, as only six of the 13 tracks were Baez solo performances. On two she performed with Wood, and on one she performed with Wood and Alevizos; two of the tracks featured Wood solo, and two Alevizos solo. Baez was already handling traditional material such as "Black Is the Color," and her voice was a little less strident than it would become when she rose to national visibility. It's a basic recording that is primarily of historical interest, although -- as those things go -- it has definite value. In 1963, it was issued by Squire Records as The Best of Joan Baez, but was withdrawn after it had made the Top 50, when Baez took legal action against it. --- Richie Unterberger, AllMusic Review

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