Honest Lullaby

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Honest Lullaby
Honest Lullaby cover
Studio album by Joan Baez
Released July 1979
Recorded 1979
Genre Folk
Length ?:?
Label Columbia
Producer Barry Beckett
Professional reviews
Joan Baez chronology
Best of Joan C. Baez
(1977)
Honest Lullaby
(1979)
Live -Europe '83
(1984)

Honest Lullaby was a 1979 album by Joan Baez. It would be her final album for CBS Records, and her last new studio album issued in the US until 1987. The title song was written for her son, Gabriel Harris. In her 1987 memoir, "And a Voice to Sing With", Baez speculated that she was likely dropped from her record label due to a political disagreement she'd had with the then president of CBS Records. "Let Your Love Flow" was originally a 1974 hit for the Bellamy Brothers.

Baez dedicated the album to the memory of journalist John L. Wasserman. (Wasserman, who had died the previous February, had written the liner notes to Baez' 1977 compilation, The Best of Joan C. Baez.)

Cover photos were taken by famed photographer Yousuf Karsh.

[edit] Track listing

  1. Let Your Love Flow (Larry E. Williams)
  2. No Woman No Cry (Bob Marley)
  3. Light a Light (Janis Ian)
  4. Song at the End of the Movie (Pierce Pettis)
  5. Before the Deluge (Jackson Browne)
  6. Honest Lullaby (Joan Baez)
  7. Michael (Joan Baez)
  8. For Sasha (Joan Baez)
  9. For All We Know (S.M.Lewis, J.F.Coots)
  10. Free at Last (Joan Baez/George Jackson)

[edit] References

  • Baez, Joan. 1987. And a Voice to Sing With: A Memoir. Century Hutchinson, London. ISBN 0-7126-1827-9