Joan Baez - Joan
Product Information
Track List: Joan
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- Be Not Too HardDownload & Buy
- Eleanor RigbyDownload & Buy
- TurquoiseDownload & Buy
- La Colombe-The DoveDownload & Buy
- Dangling ConversationDownload & Buy
- The Lady Came From BaltimoreDownload & Buy
- NorthDownload & Buy
- Children Of DarknessDownload & Buy
- The Greenwood SideDownload & Buy
- If You Were A CarpenterDownload & Buy
- Annabel LeeDownload & Buy
- Saigon BrideDownload & Buy
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Album Details: Joan
- Release Date:
- 01/01/1967
- Label:
- Vanguard Records
- UPC:
- 015707972024
Pro Reviews: Joan
| EXPERT RATING: From AMG Reviews Joan was very much an album of its time in terms of its sound and production, more so than any other album that Joan Baez ever recorded. In 1967, rock, folk, folk-rock, and pop all seemed to be headed in new and ever-more-ornate directions, and Joan was a response to that change and, not coincidentally, is also the most self-consciously beautiful record that Baez ever cut. Arranger/conductor Peter Schickele, who had previously worked with Baez on her Christmas album, provides generally restrained orchestral accompaniment on ten of the 12 songs here. The latter, in sharp contrast to Baez's earlier work, are mostly drawn from a wide range of such popular composers as John Lennon and Paul McCartney, Donovan, Paul Simon, and Jacques Brel, as well as Tim Hardin and Baez's late brother-in-law, Richard Farina. Several of these tracks -- "Turquoise" with its gorgeous parts for the harps and the horns, "Children of Darkness" with its beautiful writing for the reeds, and "Saigon Bride" with its haunting brass part -- are profoundly beautiful. Others, such as "Eleanor Rigby" and "Dangling Conversation," don't come off nearly as well, in part because they're competing against fairly ornate originals and also -- in the case of the Paul Simon song -- because of Baez's decision to alter the words. If Joan has one unfortunate attribute, it lies in the singer's Sinatra-like tendency to alter the lyrics of the songs that she's chosen to cover, if only by a single word ("is the theater really dead" becomes "is the church really dead," for no reason that anyone but the singer has ever been able to fathom); that and her overly strident singing (mated to an overly strident brass-laden arrangement) of Jacques Brel's "La Colombe" constitute the low point of this otherwise very fine album. Additionally, Baez shows off the two earliest-published products of her career as a songwriter, in the form of "North" and "Saigon Bride," the latter a particularly poignant anti-war song that expresses the futility of the Vietnam War about as well as anything this side of Phil Ochs' "White Boots Marching in a Yellow Land." - Bruce Eder, All Music Guide |
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Roots & Influences
Joan Baez Biography
The most accomplished interpretive folksinger of the 1960s, Joan Baez has influenced nearly every aspect of popular music in a career still going strong after more than 35 years. Baez is possessed of a onceinalifetime soprano, which, since the late '...Full Joan Baez Biography
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