If I Had a Hammer: Songs of Hope and Struggle

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If I Had a Hammer: Songs of Hope and Struggle album cover
Album Information
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Total Tracks: 26   Total Length: 71:09

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Fight for what's right

WitnArt

Protest and Seeger go hand in hand this album highlights a lifetime of trying to change opinions and hearts, to establish a better planet and fair treatment of one another of us living on that planet. It's a small world after all ! as Disney would say

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A great recording

z9611

This recording gives the essence of Pete Seeger. His clarity and courage are still admirable.

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great music

michaelleebailey

Pete Seeger's voice is one of the good things in the world! These songs may bring back a lot of memories, or make a person think.

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Pete Seeger

By Dave Marsh, eMusic Contributor

Pete Seeger comes from a generation of performers to whom making records was an afterthought. Most of his creative life has been lived on stages, from union halls to Carnegie Hall. More than with performers whose careers began after World War II, he made records for specific purposes. His Folkways albums are almost always groups of songs organized thematically — children's songs or work songs or songs of protest. To celebrate Pete Seeger as a political… more »

They Say All Music Guide

Pete Seeger’s repertoire was not limited to songs with specific sociopolitical goals, and the most familiar versions of his most popular tunes were done for Columbia. Still, it’s hard to imagine doing better than this compilation of Folkways recordings (most from the late ’50s and ’60s) if you want evidence of Seeger’s importance and skills as a spokesperson for worthy causes. Dividing into segments addressing “unions and labor,” “peace,” “civil rights,” and “hope,” this has the original 1956 versions of “If I Had a Hammer” and “Where Have All the Flowers Gone,” along with other tunes identified with Seeger like “We Shall Overcome” and “Turn! Turn! Turn!” (the last from an unreleased tape of unspecified vintage). The liner notes explain the origins of each song, as well as how their structures have evolved over the years; a couple of 1998 tracks show his spirit intact, but his voice (as he himself admits) losing strength. – Richie Unterberger

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