Joan Baez in Concert
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Joan Baez in Concert | ||
Live album by Joan Baez | ||
Released | September 1962 | |
Recorded | 1962 U.S. concert tour | |
Genre | Folk | |
Length | 49:08 | |
Label | Vanguard | |
Producer(s) | Maynard Solomon | |
Professional reviews | ||
---|---|---|
Joan Baez chronology | ||
Joan Baez, Vol. 2 (1961) |
Joan Baez in Concert (1962) |
Joan Baez in Concert, Part 2 (1963) |
Joan Baez in Concert was a live album taken from the singer's 1962 concert tours. It was Baez's version of Babe, I'm Gonna Leave You, more commonly associated with Led Zeppelin, that brought the song to Jimmy Page and Robert Plant's attention (Page played on two other versions of the song with Marianne Faithfull and Steve Winwood (1968)). Malvina Reynolds' "What Have They Done to the Rain" (about nuclear fallout) was the first "topical" song Baez ever recorded.
Até Amanhã is a Brazilian love song and is sung entirely in Portuguese.
The Vanguard reissue contains three previously unreleased tracks, "Streets Of Laredo" (later covered by Johnny Cash on 2002's The Man Comes Around) "My Good Old Man" and "My Lord What A Morning."
[edit] Track listing
- Babe, I'm Gonna Leave You (A. Bredon)
- Geordie (traditional)
- Copper Kettle (A. F. Beddoe)
- Kumbaya (traditional)
- What Have They Done To The Rain (Malvina Reynolds)
- Black Is The Color of my True Love's Hair (traditional)
- Danger Waters (J. Browne, A. S. Alberts)
- Gospel Ship (H. Buffum)
- The House Carpenter (traditional)
- Pretty Boy Floyd (Woody Guthrie)
- Lady Mary (traditional)
- Até Amanhã (traditional)
- Matty Groves (traditional)