CD Details
Synopsis
Album DescriptionAppleseed Recordings celebrates its first decade with a 2-CD, 37-track sampler including exclusive new recordings by Bruce Springsteen & Pete Seeger (their first-ever collaboration), Ani DiFranco, Donovan and more. Established in 1997 to "explore the roots and branches of folk and world music and sow the seeds of social justice through music," the independent label has released 85 CDs so far that present new music by folk giants such as Pete Seeger, Tom Paxton, Donovan, David Bromberg, Al Stewart and Eric Andersen, ascendant talents like The Kennedys, Tim Eriksen, and Lizzie West, and has attracted guest artists Bruce Springsteen, Jackson Browne, Judy Collins, and many more. "Sowing the Seeds - The 10th Anniversary" is Appleseed's first sampler and captures many of the label's highlights, as well as nine new tracks recorded specifically for this birthday celebration. The 2-CD set is split into two "themed" discs of new and old songs by a veritable Who's Who of socially aware musicians. Disc 1, "And Justice for All," features politically charged songs that were among the first to confront the Iraq War and the Bush Administration, as well as addressing economic hard times, the environment, and other sociopolitical issues. There are classics from our catalogue like Pete Seeger's "Bring Them Home (If You Love Your Uncle Sam)" with guests Billy Bragg, Ani DiFranco, and Steve Earle, 9/11 meditations by Tom Paxton and Lizzie West ("19 Miles to Baghdad," a recent "Democracy Now" radio/TV favorite), and a Latin-flavored Jackson Browne & Joan Baez duet. New songs here include the first collaboration between Bruce Springsteen and Pete Seeger on Springsteen's haunting "Ghost of Tom Joad," Ani DiFranco's blistering take on Seeger's "Waist Deep in the Big Muddy," Donovan's re-recording of his 1965 hit, "Universal Soldier," and four new Pete Seeger tracks, including the hilarious "Ross Perot (George Bush) Guide to Embarrassing Questions." Sowing's second disc, "Love Hope and Appleseed," presents a somewhat broader selection of themes and styles. The CD features songs of optimism, perseverance and meditations on love. There's folk-rock from both sides of the Atlantic by Al Stewart, Donovan, The Kennedys, and John Stewart. There's traditional acoustic folk from ex-Byrds leader and Rock & Roll Hall of Fame member Roger McGuinn, David Bromberg, and Tim Eriksen. Other artists include Eric Andersen with guest Lou Reed, Judy Collins, Pat Humphries (her classic "Swimming to the Other Side"), and more.
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Member CD Reviews
Mary M. (Ceresmary) from COLUMBUS, OH Reviewed on 5/4/2011... I rarely like compelation albums, because you get a lot of filler songs, some done by folks you've never heard of before and won't again. Pete Seeger, who put this together with Appleseed Recordings, did a fantastic job. The music is extremely "tight" (meaning well played, well executed), the songs phenominal, and some real rare pieces and jewels in this mix. One in particular I would like to mention, is the song "The Water is Wide" or otherwise known in the folk circle as "Waly, Waly" that dates back to the 1260's as far as anyone can figure. This song has been done by just about every singer, from James Taylor to Karla Bonnoff (and while well done by these artists) does not even come close to this rendition with as close to the original lyrics (it's a ballad) as possible.
This album is a gem. It is well orchestrated, well produced, and the songs make sense for the album, rather than a miss mash quilt of various songs. Worth owning.
CD Reviews
Music plus Message(s) David Hill | Alabama | 05/23/2010 (4 out of 5 stars) "Liberal in outlook and acoustic, this is unashamedly opinionated folk music and I like it." A Folk Tip Of The Hat Alfred Johnson | boston, ma | 06/25/2010 (4 out of 5 stars) "Most of the musical reviews in this space center on individual and group performers or particular musical genres, especially folk, blues and classic rock and roll. Very occasionally this space salutes record labels like Chess, Sun, Rounder, Smithsonian/Folkway, Red House, and here, Appleseed Records. On those occasions the record label may be as important to the genre as the performances of the artists because they established a genre, drove it forward, keep it alive or acted as a repository, or all of the above. That is the case here with a CD salute to the 10th Anniversary of Appleseed Records (2007).
For the history of the label there is a more than informative booklet that comes with the 2-disc CD set, including plenty of discology-type information about each track. I want to concentrate here on the performers and the performances to give the reader who may not be familiar with any of this some sense of what the label has tried to do. I will just drop the name Pete Seeger in first place here because it is his spirit that has driven this project, his sense of the desperate necessity of preserving and continuing the folk and political protest traditions and because many of the songs here are performed by him, or are covered by other artists. Beyond that the litany of performers range form "born again" folkie Bruce Springsteen, actor and activist Tim Robbins, Pete's half-sister , Peggy, a folk legend in her own right, old time folkies Eric Andersen, Tom Paxton and some newer folkies like Ani DiFranco. A nice mix.
Of course, that description begs the question of what is good here. What do you need to listen to get the essence of the Appleseed tradition? Well, Pete and Bruce on Bruce's "Ghost Of Tom Joad" that evokes the original Great Depression "Grapes Of Wrath" pathos (and very timely today when such messages are needed). A patriotic (too patriotic for my tastes) Pete on "Bring Them Home". Tom Paxton's heartfelt and justified tribute to the fallen New York 9/11fire fighters, "The Bravest". David Bromberg's rousing, bluesy "Try Me One More Time". And a today very appropriate Pete Seeger tune, "The Emperor is Naked Today".
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