Those Were the Days

Dolly Parton - Those Were the Days

Those Were the Days
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Music CD Cover

Artist: Dolly Parton
Edition: Music CD
CD Release Date: 2005-10-11
Music Label: Sugarhill [Country]
Soundtracks:
  1. Those Were The Days
  2. Blowin' In The Wind
  3. Where Have All The Flowers Gone
  4. Twelfth Of Never
  5. Where Do The Children Play
  6. Me And Bobby McGee
  7. Crimson And Clover
  8. The Cruel War
  9. Turn, Turn, Turn
  10. If I Were A Carpenter
  11. Both Sides Now
  12. Imagine

Free Music Notes for Those Were the Days

Free Music Review: Outstanding covers album
Hit: 5 Stars

This is often regarded as Dolly's third covers album (after Great pretender and Treasures), but Dolly also recorded a Christmas covers album (Home for Christmas) and a gospel covers album (Precious memories) as well as an album of Porter Wagoner songs (My favorite songwriter Porter Wagoner). Nevertheless, if you're going to make comparisons, Great pretender (recorded during the Hollywood phase of Dolly's career) and Treasures (recorded during the mid-nineties when Dolly's albums weren't selling well) are the obvious albums to compare with. Actually, each of these albums differ in style so much that comparisons are pointless, even though one song (Turn turn turn) from Great pretender is reprised here.

I see from other reviews that while many people enjoy this album, others don't like it for a variety of reasons. I can understand that, but my tastes in music are fairly eclectic. Furthermore, I've spent more time through the years listening to Dolly's music than I have listening to any other artist, so I know not to have any preconceived ideas about what she records. This particular album features songs from the fifties, sixties and seventies recorded with country and bluegrass instrumentation. A stellar cast of supporting guests looks very impressive, though fans of those guests shouldn't buy the album in the hope of hearing their favorites because they'd have a hard job making most of them out. The prominence given to the names of some of the guests on the front cover may lead people to believe that this is a duets album, but there are only two duets here. The other tracks here are Dolly solos although some of the backing singers on these tracks are easier to discern than others.

One thing I learned from reading other reviews is that Dolly intended this to be an anti-war album, but that this concept would escape most people. Well, it certainly would have escaped me if I hadn't read those reviews. There are some obvious anti-war songs (Blowin' in the wind, Where have all the flowers gone, The cruel war, Imagine) and maybe some of the others can be interpreted that way, but I don't see the connection. One of the other songs (Turn turn turn), which is an extract from the biblical book of Ecclesiastes, actually acknowledges that there is a time for war as well as a time for peace. Another song (Where the children play) is about environmental destruction. While war certainly causes that, the song specifically mentions roads and their vehicles (lorries) as the villians. The title track is about memories of good times past, which could be interpreted as remembering how things were before the war, but there are no references in the lyrics to suggest it. So maybe Dolly felt that four out of twelve songs were sufficient to get her message across, or maybe she saw some ant-war sentiment in the other songs that I don't. But it doesn't really matter because most people buying this aren't likely to be looking for an anti-war album anyway. Indeed, this album comes across as a good-time, fun album.

The title track has alway been one of my favorite songs. Originally a Russian folk song, the Limeliters (an American folk group) recorded an English language version in the sixties but their version was never released as a single. Welsh folk-pop singer Mary Hopkin launched her career with her cover of the song and scored a huge worldwide hit wit it, going all the way to number one in Britain. Mary contributed vocals (recorded in the Welsh capital, Cardiff) to Dolly's cover, but other singers also joined the supporting cast on this track including the Opry Gang (Jack Greene, George Hamilton IV, Jan Howard, Brenda Lee, Mel McDaniel, Jimmy C Newman, Jeannie Seely, Pam Tillis, Porter Wagoner and Billy Walker) and a choir. Despite (or maybe because of) the abundant backing vocalists, this track works very well. I've heard a few versions of this song including Dalida's French version (Le temps de fleurs) but not (yet) the Limeliters. This one is as good as any version I've heard.

The title track sets the standard for the album, not only for the quality (outstanding) but also for the mainly feel-good mood, although none of the other tracks feature as many backing vocalists. Blowin' in the wind (with backing by Nickel Creek and others), Where have all the flowers gone (with Lee Ann Womack and Norah Jones), Both sides now (with Judy Collins and Rhonda Vincent) and Turn turn turn are all brilliant, as are Twelfth of never (with Keith Urban) and If I were a carpenter (with Joe Nichols), which are both genuine duets - you can clearly hear the male vocals on these songs. Of all the songs here, I've heard more versions of Me and Bobby McGee than any other song here, but Dolly brings a freshness to this song that I find most welcome.

This is unquestionably an outstanding album that will appeal to most (but not all) of Dolly's committed fans as well as plenty of people who have never bothered with her music previously.

Those Were the Days Poster

Like 1996's Treasures, this covers collection by Dolly Parton might seem, on the surface, to be a gimmicky filler in her prestigious catalog of some of country's finest originals. Yet it's a vast improvement. Those Were the Days, largely bluegrass-inspired and featuring a plethora of famous duet and harmony partners, has more than a few sterling moments. And that's not just because songs like "Where Have All the Flowers Gone?," "Blowin' in the Wind," "Both Sides Now," and "Twelfth of Never" find her paired with the likes of Norah Jones, Lee Ann Womack, Nickel Creek, Judy Collins, and Keith Urban. If Parton takes John Lennon's "Imagine" too far over the top, she rescues Tommy James's overly processed "Crimson and Clover" from its original reverb hell, her understated banjo/Dobro/fiddle arrangement imbuing it with dignity. Other selections seem an obvious fit. "Me and Bobby McGee" (with a charmed Kris Kristofferson) resonates with longing and loss, while "If I Were a Carpenter," a duet with Joe Nichols, finds sensual heat smoldering above its solid musical underpinning. But the gem here is her rendering of "The Cruel War," on which Alison Krauss, Dan Tyminski, and Mindy Smith add feathery harmony vocals to Parton's gossamer lead--a performance so authentically poignant and heartfelt as to melt an Arctic ice cap. No matter how this odd collection hits you, give the Cantilevered One credit for being brave enough to tackle it, as well as extra kudos for coaxing two very special guests into the studio--Parton's old partner and one-time nemesis Porter Wagoner on the title track, and Yusuf Islam, a.k.a. Cat Stevens, who plays acoustic guitar on his own "Where Do the Children Play." You just never know what the Wigged Wonder will do next. --Alanna Nash

Recommended Dolly Parton


Trio, with Emmylou Harris and Linda Ronstadt

The Grass Is Blue

Little Sparrow

The Essential Dolly Parton

Mission Chapel Memories 1971-1975

20 Greatest Hits, with Porter Wagoner


A year in the making, this album of era-defining songs from the 1960s and 1970s is an astonishing collection of indispensable classics, performed in Dolly Parton's signature style with a top-notch list of friends.

Parton, who produced the album, invited several of the artists who wrote or made these songs famous to sing with her. Renowned musicians Roger McGuinn (of the Byrds), Kris Kristofferson, Judy Collins, and Tommy James make appearances on Those Were the Days. She also asked recent chart-topping artists Norah Jones, Keith Urban, Nickel Creek, Lee Ann Womack, Rhonda Vincent, Joe Nichols, and Alison Krauss to join her in the studio.

The Country Music Hall of Famer, Grammy winner, and Oscar nominee said, "I am really very proud of this album. I love all of these songs and all of the artists who performed, it just felt special from the moment the concept came to my mind. I knew I had to produce it myself in order to get all of my ideas across exactly as I wanted them to be presented. I really hope people enjoy it. I know I enjoyed making it."

Recorded in Nashville, Those Were the Days retains the bluegrass-inspired sound that earned her two Grammys and a new generation of fans for her previous four albums on Sugar Hill Records. The album includes a group sing featuring a menagerie of Grand Ole Opry legends. Capping off the album is Parton's unique version of "Imagine."

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