Showing posts with label Mary Travers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mary Travers. Show all posts

Friday, March 25, 2016

Noel Paul Stookey – At Home: The Maine Tour



NOEL PAUL STOOKEY
At Home: The Maine Tour
Neworld

As I’ve noted before, I was too young to have been caught up in the wave of commercial folk groups – like the Kingston Trio and Limeliters – that became hugely popular in the late-1950s. But several groups that came along just a little bit later – in particular Ian & Sylvia and Peter, Paul & Mary – did have a huge impact on me as my interest in music, and especially folk music, developed in the ‘60s. Years later, I got to know Noel Paul Stookey a little and, through him, met Peter Yarrow and Mary Travers, when Peter, Paul & Mary performed in Montreal in the ‘80s.

Along with the many Peter, Paul & Mary albums, Noel has also recorded many solo albums and his latest, At Home: The Maine Tour, is a warm and intimate, extended live set – 24 songs running 79 minutes – recorded during a tour of Maine, his home state for the past four decades. It’s an entirely solo affair – no back-up musicians or singers – with the spotlight all on his voice and very accomplished guitar arrangements.

The set is a CD/DVD combo with the songs on the CD and videos of them recorded at the concerts on the DVD. Some of the songs are numbers I’ve never heard before while others are new versions of songs from Peter, Paul & Mary or earlier solo albums. (I think one of the songs, the then-unreleased “Facets of the Jewel,” may have had its world premiere when Noel was my guest on the Folk Roots/Folk Branches radio program in 1999.)

The most moving pieces on At Home, are “Jean Claude,” a reflection on the Holocaust from the perspective of an old French man who, as a boy, witnessed his friend, a Jewish boy named Michel, shipped off to a Nazi death camp; “Familia Del Corazon,” an inspiring song I’d never heard before that’s an important reminder of what countries like the United States and Canada truly represent to ourselves and to the rest of the world (and an important message in these Trumpian times); and “Not That Kind of Music,” a tribute to Pete Seeger written a couple of years before Pete passed away.

Among my other favorites in this set are such classics as “Wedding Song (There is Love),” a beautiful piece he wrote to sing at Peter Yarrow’s wedding; “Whatshername,” a jazzy reminiscence, many years later, of one who got away (I’m sure most everyone has a whatshername to recall); “Virtual Party,” a witty, delightful spoof of anonymity in the digital age; and “Glory Train,” Noel’s adaptation of the traditional “This Train,” which brings the set back to the first Peter, Paul & Mary LP 54 or so years ago.

Near the end of the album, Noel sings “In These Times,” and it strikes me that At Home: The Maine Tour is a timeless collection from an artist with a deep understanding of his times.

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--Mike Regenstreif

Friday, December 5, 2014

Peter, Paul and Mary – Discovered: Live in Concert



PETER, PAUL AND MARY
Discovered: Live in Concert
Warner Bros./Rhino

I was too young to have been caught up in the wave of commercial folk groups – like the Kingston Trio and Limeliters – that became hugely popular in the late-1950s. But several groups that came along just a little bit later – in particular Ian & Sylvia and Peter, Paul & Mary – did have a huge impact on me as my interest in music, and especially folk music, developed in the ‘60s.

My first Peter, Paul & Mary album was Late Again, which I bought when it was brand new in 1968. Soon I had all their earlier albums as well. Years later, I got to know Noel Paul Stookey a little and, through him, met Peter Yarrow and Mary Travers, when Peter, Paul & Mary performed in Montreal in the ‘80s.

Speaking of the ‘80s – Peter, Paul & Mary began to record their concerts in those years and put the tapes away. Now, they have released Discovered: Live in Concert, a 13-track set of songs from those concert tapes that were never included on any of their albums (although one song, “Mi Caballo Blanco,” was included in their box set, Carry It On), as part of the 2014 celebration of their 50th anniversary – there is also a new PBS pledge drive special and a book – as a group.

As is typical of many Peter, Paul & Mary albums, Discovered: Live in Concert includes some traditional material, some original songs, and their interpretations of material drawn from a variety of contemporary folk-rooted songwriters. And, like most of their concerts, a little silly comedy.

My favorite songs on the CD include Kate Wolf’s beautiful love song, “Give Yourself to Love”; Sarah Elizabeth Campbell’s moving song about homelessness, “Geraldine and Ruthie Mae”; “Cactus in a Coffee Can,” a touching story of a woman’s relationship with her difficult mother written by Steve Seskin and James Shamblin; and John Gorka’s very poignant piece about a wounded World War II vet whose deepest wounds, “the wounds that never heal,” were on the inside.

Peter, Paul & Mary were the most enduring of the commercial folk groups of the 1950s and ‘60s and a big reason for that endurance was that they never just rested on their laurels and constantly refreshed their repertoire with songs, such as those I’ve mentioned, by contemporary songwriters.

I’m guessing these recordings were made through on a line off the sound board at various concerts. As such, it lacks the fidelity you would expect in a professionally-recorded live album. And since the recordings were made at different times in different venues, some do sound better than others.

I mentioned that my first Peter, Paul & Mary album was Late Again. Well, since he trio was formed in 1961 and released their first album in 1962, they were late again in marking their 50th anniversary in 2014.

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--Mike Regenstreif

Wednesday, September 16, 2009

Mary Travers 1936-2009


I’m sad to report that Mary Travers passed away tonight at age 72. She’d been battling leukemia for several years.

Mary, of course, was one-third of Peter, Paul and Mary with Peter Yarrow and Noel Paul Stookey. Of all the folk-boom groups, Peter, Paul and Mary were the most enduring and the one that I’ve always continued listening to.

I didn’t really know Mary very well. Noel introduced us backstage at a concert in Montreal in the early-1980s and I met her a few more times in later years. She was always very gracious.

--Mike Regenstreif

Here’s a message from Peter Yarrow:

"Surrounded by love with a spirit of quiet, grateful, celebration amongst many friends who had gathered to be with her, Mary chose to leave us a few minutes before 7:30 pm, this evening.

She was in no pain and was able to understand and respond to spoken words even up to some time late in the afternoon, just a few hours before her pasing.

I was able to convey the thoughts, messages of appreciation and love, from many of you who contacted me.

It was an honor and a blessing to have been with Mary in this last, powerful chapter in her life. She was Mary to a "T" until the end, nodding yesterday when asked if she wanted to go shopping with the girls at the Mall, gently (but clearly) slapping away the arm of a nurse who didn't stop doing something to Mary when she asked her not to (all this with her eyes unopened). I could sense her delight when I came to sit with her, massage her fingers as I always did on tour, and tell her all the things worth saying to express my love, for quite a long period of time during the day.

She was a giant of a person, in spirit and heart, till the end. Missing her has only just begun.

Love to you all,

Peter"