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| | Farewell, Angelina | | | Music Artist : | | Joan Baez | | Music Style : | | General | | Record Label : | | Vanguard Records | | Release Date : | | 2002-07-09 | | Store Price : | | $17.98 | | Artistopia's Price: $13.99 | | Usually ships in 24 hours | | |
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Other Artist Albums
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Customer Reviews of This Album/CD |
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Joan 5 years into her career... Submitted on: 2009-10-26 |
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| ...and going strong. Farewell Angelina and Hello Joan-whose records and voice never cease to amaze me! |
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It's great!! Submitted on: 2008-09-06 |
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| This Cd is very good, I recommend it to anyone who likes to hear the beautiful voice of Joan Baez. I studied German in college, so it was fun to hear "Sagt mir wo die Blumen Sind" (Where Have all the Flowers Gone?). I am fond of folk music and enjoy hearing songs sung in languages other than English. |
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More accessible and less dark, but no less beautiful Submitted on: 2008-07-25 |
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For her fifth album "Farewell, Angelina", Joan Baez, by now an established star with Top Ten albums in both Britain and the United States, moved away from the spare, dark and atmospheric renditions of traditional folk material that had dominated her first five albums, of which the two live releases In Concert and In Concert, Part 2 had been the best.
"Farewell, Angelina" ornamented Baez' voice and guitar with acoustic double bass on all twelve tracks and half also featured Bruce Langhorn on electric guitar. Whilst this did make for a less dark atmosphere that may be easier to digest for listeners my age who never were exposed to American folk this traditional, such songs as the title track and "Hard Rain's A-Gonna-Fall" (which I knew from the brilliant 1973 Bryan Ferry rendition) showed Baez singing in a way that reaches the heart in a way seldom equalled.
The more traditional numbers themselves, like "The Wild Mountain Thyme", lost little from the changed approach of Baez and producer Maynard Solomon because Joan obviously possessed such complete confidence that she could tackle styles of music well beyond basic guitar-and-voice folk with wonderful ease - shown later on her last really good album Baptism where she lost no beauty when speaking poetry. With my knowledge of linguistics I see humour in Baez' failure to properly pronounce the front rounded vowels in "Sagt mir, wo die Blumen Sind"! "Satisfied Mind", the darkest track on the album, is made really cryptic by Baez' and Solomon's penchant for deep, beautiful arrangements.
All in all, this is a change of direction, but one with which Baez clearly was totally confident. Definitely recommended for fans of traditional folk. |
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retro enjoyment, as good as you remember Submitted on: 2008-06-03 |
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| After Eight Belles was put down at the Derby, I remembered the lyrics in Stewball, about don't bet on the little grey mare, most likely she'll stumble, most likely she'll fall... and she does, ....and pulled out my old Baez songbook, my guitar, and records. Then I ordered a few of the same but CDs. They are as good as I remember, and now I cry for Eight Belles when I hear "Stewball"."There But for fortune" is as relevent now as then, all of them are priceless, what a voice! |
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Joan Baez Submitted on: 2007-03-15 |
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| Haunting voice, lots of Bob Dylan tunes. I miss folkand this reminds why. |
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