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With Young People in Mind
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With Young People in Mind
Current price: $13.99
Barnes and Noble
With Young People in Mind
Current price: $13.99
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Ostensibly this might have been geared toward children, but it's actually for the most part traditional English ballads and American folk songs that were pretty typical of
Dyer-Bennet
's repertoire. Thus it's a folk album that could be appropriate for either kids (not necessarily real young ones) or adults, sung and performed plainly by
on guitar. There are a few selections more suited for children's singing than others, like
"The Tailor and the Mouse,"
a traditional English children's song,
"Little Pigs"
(with the animal noises common to several children's folk albums, such as those by
Pete Seeger
), and
"The Hole in the Bottom of the Sea."
It's dated in its stilted 1950s folk way, but is pleasant, and differentiated from some other similar recordings of the era by the gentle British Isles lilt in
's vocals. Could famous British radio DJ
John Peel
, who changed his name from
John Ravenscroft
, have gotten the idea from the English fox-hunting song
"John Peel,"
performed here? The album was reissued on CD by
Smithsonian Folkways
in 2000. ~ Richie Unterberger
Dyer-Bennet
's repertoire. Thus it's a folk album that could be appropriate for either kids (not necessarily real young ones) or adults, sung and performed plainly by
on guitar. There are a few selections more suited for children's singing than others, like
"The Tailor and the Mouse,"
a traditional English children's song,
"Little Pigs"
(with the animal noises common to several children's folk albums, such as those by
Pete Seeger
), and
"The Hole in the Bottom of the Sea."
It's dated in its stilted 1950s folk way, but is pleasant, and differentiated from some other similar recordings of the era by the gentle British Isles lilt in
's vocals. Could famous British radio DJ
John Peel
, who changed his name from
John Ravenscroft
, have gotten the idea from the English fox-hunting song
"John Peel,"
performed here? The album was reissued on CD by
Smithsonian Folkways
in 2000. ~ Richie Unterberger