Free Music Notes for First Ten Years

Joan Baez - First Ten Years

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Free Music Notes for First Ten Years

Free Music Review: The Anti-Diva!
Hit: 5 Stars

Joan Baez `s clarity and sincerity simply radiate on this compilation. She has a fine voice, singing in the upper ranges with little tremolo; the effect is art rather than artifice. This CD displays her understated yet powerful voice in just over 70 minutes of peace and protest. (By the way, I hear from someone who's met her that she's very nice.)

Some of the finest songs here are those written by Bob Dylan, "You Ain't Goin' Nowhere" is revealed as a sexy love song (even with all that stuff about "Genghis Khan"). "Don't Think Twice, It's Alright" is probably the best song on the CD, she captures the complex emotions with wonderfully expressive singing and guitar--it's the best version I've ever heard. She also does a compelling version of "A Hard Rain's A-Gonna Fall"; she illuminates Dylan's lengthy standard, and it sounds fresh and immediate.

The first song, "Ghetto," is unfortunately also the worst. The singing is fine, but the bass line sounds right out of (the worst of) an Elvis show. It also sounds dated lyrically, as Ms. Baez sings about rising to the revolution, and in "building a new Jerusalem there will be no more ghetto at all." Oh well, it's an honest reflection of the decade's optimism and promise.

"If I were a Carpenter" sounds less sexist when sung by a woman, and its treatment here is soft and loving. The country guitar work on "Love is Just a Four-Letter" word is not to my tastes, but again, her voice rises above this. "If I Knew" is a more up-tempo work, with excellent accompaniment (I wish the players on each track were listed), and a satisfying bridge. She also does a nice, slightly country, version of the Stones' "No Expectations."

Joan Baez also plays guitar beautifully, in the same effective yet unembellished style of her singing: "There but For Fortune" and "John Riley" are fine examples. She seemingly transcends time on traditional folk songs like "Mary Hamilton" (there's a nice little lilt to her voice here), and live recordings of "Geordie," and the flamenco-tinged "Te Ador." The singing is angelic. Her own "Sweet Sir Galahad" and Dylan's "Farewell Angelina" are also beautiful examples of her work. There are so many excellent songs to enjoy!

Simple, beautiful, and thought-provoking, Joan Baez's `first decade' CD is a welcome look back at one of our national treasures.


Free Music Review: Wonderful Compliation Of Her First Ten Years!
Hit: 5 Stars

This is a great collection of Joan Baez's amazing work over the first ten years of her recording career. It is not what one could rightfully call her greatest hits, for she was not an artist who released many singles or who got an awful lot of exposure on AM radio during the 1960s and early 1970s. Instead, she was mainly played on hip FM stations, and of course, was played incessantly by folkies in their record players, so that her music wafted through the dormitories and off the college campuses of the time. So, although there are a few songs included here like "love Is Just A Four Letter Word" that were on the charts, most of them are known better as songs from albums one listened to again and again.

Thus, we have songs like "Ghetto", "There But For Fortune", and Dylan's "With God On Our Side", all beautifully done and wonderful to listen to, but certainly not songs that ever had much time on the popular airwaves of the times. So too with songs like "Sweet Sir Galahad", a song written by Joan describing her sister Mimi finally beginning to recover from the loss of her husband Richard Farina in a tragic motorcycle accident, or "No Expectations", a wonderful folksy interpretation of the Mick Jagger-Keith Richards song. There are a number of traditional songs here like "Farewell Angelina", "John Riley", and "Mary Hamilton". And as an added benefit, there are a number of other Bob Dylan songs, such as "Don't Think Twice, It's All Right", "A Hard Rain's A-Gonna Fall", and "You Ain't Going Nowhere". All in all, this is a great collection and a fair representation of the veritable mountain of recording work Joan accomplished in the first ten years of her career.


Free Music Review: Beyond a greatest hits album
Hit: 5 Stars

This one is a "must buy" for people intoxicated by Joan Baez's gorgeous voice: the perfect vibrato, the stunning range, the sweet notes and the soulful notes. What's wonderful about this particular album is that it contains songs that even die-hard fans may not have already, yet none of them are fillers.

Joan's version of Hard-Rains-A-Gonna-Fall brings out the power and the beauty of the lyrics in a way that even Bob Dylan must have cheered at. "Mary Hamilton" is an understated ballad, sung in the sweetest, highest voice that gets more powerful with every listen. Don't be scared off by the un-Joan-like "Ghetto" as the opening number of this album. It's just a little introduction. Soon, you'll be swept away into greater magnificence like "Sweet Sir Gallahad" which is almost tearful in its romance. And of course, "With God on our Side" is one of the great anti-war ballads. It goes on and on ... but not for long enough! Pacifists will be laughing and cheering by midway through the song.

In some ways, this is a subtle folk album, aside from her powerful singing voice, which lends something elaborate to even the simplest songs. But it's subtle in the sense that it doesn't have a whole lot of "oh, yeah, I remember that one" songs on it. Yet it is a MUST for fans. You do not want to be a Joan Baez fan without songs like "John Riley", which will tear out your heart in the hands of her exquisite rendition.


Free Music Review: One of the best sixties folk singers
Hit: 5 Stars

This compilation covers the ten years that Joan spent recording for Vanguard. She had some success after she left, but the Vanguard recordings remain the most important of her career.

She occasionally wrote her own songs (represented here by Sweet Sir Galahad) but mostly she recorded the songs of others. Her biggest influence was Bob Dylan, who wrote six of the songs here. Apparently, Bob never recorded Love is just a four letter word, but it is a lovely song. I first heard With God on our side by Manfred Mann, a sixties group who also recorded several Bob Dylan songs. Many people have recorded Don't think twice it's all right, including Johnny Cash - another singer who has made several raids on the Bob Dylan songbook. You ain't going nowhere, Farewell Angelina and A hard rain's gonna fall are his other songs here.

Other covers by Joan here include There but for fortune (Phil Ochs), No expectations (Rolling stones), Turquoise (Donovan) and the often covered If I were a carpenter. There are also some traditional folk songs - Mary Hamilton, Geordie and Te ador - so old that their writers are unknown.

Joan recorded so many great songs that eighteen tracks cannot possibly include everything worth having, but this is a good sampling of Joan's music. If you only want one of Joan's albums, this is a good one to choose.


Free Music Review: Her voice is exquisite like no other
Hit: 5 Stars

What I have always love about Joan Baez is her exquisite and crystal clear voice. She is a dream to listen to and her songs fit her vocal range just perfect. This album is excellent all the way through and the songs included on the CD is the best of her repertoire from 1960 to 1970, which is why the album is called THE FIRST TEN YEARS. All of the songs on this collection are great but there are six tracks that are truly wonderful and is why I bought this album aside from the fact that she has a beautiful voice. The songs that I love from this great recording are "Ghetto", "If I Were A Carpenter", "If I Knew", "No Expectations" (which is a cover of the Stones original and she sounds far better than Mick on this one.) "Sweet Sir Galahad" and "Love Is Just A Four-Letter Word". They are all excellent and as I said before perfect for her glorious soprano voice. This is a great album to have and enjoy for many years to come and if you're a Joan Baez fan than this one is a must for your collection. GREAT and EXHILIRATING.
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