Something to Sing About (album)
Appearance
Something to Sing About! | |
---|---|
Compilation album by Various artists | |
Released | 1968 |
Recorded | 1968 |
Genre | Traditional folk |
Producer | Milt Okun |
Something to Sing About! is a compilation album including specially recorded songs by American singer-songwriters John Denver and Tom Paxton. It was produced by Milt Okun and released in 1968.
Track listing
[edit]- Josh White – "St. James Infirmary"
- Ian and Sylvia – "Four Strong Winds"
- Odetta Holmes – "John Henry"
- Mississippi John Hurt – "Candy Man Blues"
- John Denver – "The Wagoner Lad"
- The Rooftop Singers – "Walk Right In"
- Arlo Guthrie – "The Motorcycle Song"
- Judy Collins – "The Cruel Mother"
- Joan Baez & Bob Gibson – "The Virgin Mary Had One Son"
- The Weavers – "When the Saints Go Marching In"
- The Weavers – "Wimoweh"
- Mary Travers – "Motherless Child (Without a Country)"
- Peter Yarrow – "I Don't Want Your Millions Mister & East Virginia"
- Noel Paul Stookey – "Minstrel Boy"
- Ian and Sylvia – "When First Unto This Country"
- Joan Baez – "All My Trials"
- Tom Paxton – "Little Mohee"
- Tom Paxton – "The Marvelous Toy"
- The Smothers Brothers – "The Fox"
- Milton Okun – "Hush, Little Baby"
- Jean Ritchie – "March Down to Old Tennessee"
- John Denver – "Old MacDonald Had a Farm"
- Phil Ochs – "The Power and the Glory"
- Ramblin' Jack Elliott – "More Pretty Girls Than One"
- The Chad Mitchell Trio – "The Virgin Mary"
- The Chad Mitchell Trio – "Forest Lawn"
- The Chad Mitchell Trio – "The Bonnie Streets of Fyvie-O"
- The Chad Mitchell Trio – "The Battle Hymn of the Republic Brought Down to Date" (written by Mark Twain)
- Theodore Bikel – "Peat Bog Soldiers"
- Glenn Yarbrough – "Johnny, I Hardly Knew You"
- Jean Ritchie – "The Day Is Past and Gone"
- Ronnie Gilbert – "Go From My Window"
- Tom Paxton – "Spanish is the Loving Tongue"
- Tom Paxton – "Danville Girl"
- Tom Paxton – "Shenandoah"
- Jean Ritchie – "Pretty Polly"
- Jean Ritchie – "Dear Companion"
- John Denver – "The Great Selkie of Sule Skerry"