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Waist Deep in the Big Muddy and Other Love Songs
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Waist Deep in the Big Muddy and Other Love Songs
Current price: $13.99


Barnes and Noble
Waist Deep in the Big Muddy and Other Love Songs
Current price: $13.99
Size: OS
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One of
Pete Seeger
's most well-known protest albums -- he provoked a storm of controversy when
CBS
censors would not allow the
singer/songwriter
to perform
"Waist Deep in the Big Muddy,"
a Vietnam parable based on an actual incident that occurred during World War II when a soldier who couldn't swim drowned when his commanding officer forced him to ford a river without knowing how deep it was, on
The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour
--
Waist Deep in the Big Muddy and Other Love Songs
is intriguing for other reasons as well. Just two years after
Seeger
supposedly threatened to take an axe to the power supply during
Bob Dylan
's electric set at
the 1965 Newport Folk Festival
, side one of this album features
and his acoustic guitar backed by electric guitarist
Danny Kalb
(of
the Blues Project
) and a rockish rhythm section. (The opening
"Oh Yes I'd Climb"
adds a middle-of-the-road string section for good measure!) The electric instruments are actually most tasteful in their integration, if not downright wimpy. You'll be hard-pressed to actually hear the bass player most of the time. Side two is more
traditional
for
, strictly acoustic material including a couple of
songs interspersed among some less-than-subtle protest material, including
"My Name Is Liza Kalvelage,"
its lyrics taken almost verbatim from a television news story about San Jose housewives picketing a nearby napalm storage yard, and
"Those Three Are on My Mind,"
about the murders of civil rights workers in Mississippi in 1963. Overall, this is probably a better album than the similar
Dangerous Songs!
from 1966, with a higher number of trenchant observations and a little less finger-pointing. ~ Stewart Mason
Pete Seeger
's most well-known protest albums -- he provoked a storm of controversy when
CBS
censors would not allow the
singer/songwriter
to perform
"Waist Deep in the Big Muddy,"
a Vietnam parable based on an actual incident that occurred during World War II when a soldier who couldn't swim drowned when his commanding officer forced him to ford a river without knowing how deep it was, on
The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour
--
Waist Deep in the Big Muddy and Other Love Songs
is intriguing for other reasons as well. Just two years after
Seeger
supposedly threatened to take an axe to the power supply during
Bob Dylan
's electric set at
the 1965 Newport Folk Festival
, side one of this album features
and his acoustic guitar backed by electric guitarist
Danny Kalb
(of
the Blues Project
) and a rockish rhythm section. (The opening
"Oh Yes I'd Climb"
adds a middle-of-the-road string section for good measure!) The electric instruments are actually most tasteful in their integration, if not downright wimpy. You'll be hard-pressed to actually hear the bass player most of the time. Side two is more
traditional
for
, strictly acoustic material including a couple of
songs interspersed among some less-than-subtle protest material, including
"My Name Is Liza Kalvelage,"
its lyrics taken almost verbatim from a television news story about San Jose housewives picketing a nearby napalm storage yard, and
"Those Three Are on My Mind,"
about the murders of civil rights workers in Mississippi in 1963. Overall, this is probably a better album than the similar
Dangerous Songs!
from 1966, with a higher number of trenchant observations and a little less finger-pointing. ~ Stewart Mason