While the neophyte might be better advised to start with the 20-track 1972 Columbia compilation
The World of Pete Seeger, this collection would make a good second purchase to hear the highlights of
Seeger's major-label sojourn. Eschewing such favorites as "Little Boxes" (
Seeger's sole chart single) and "If I Had a Hammer" (which
Seeger co-wrote), but including many other familiar performances (among them "Turn! Turn! Turn!" and "Where Have All the Flowers Gone?"), the set is thematically organized into story songs, political songs, biographical songs, and children's songs. This separation sometimes seems arbitrary -- "Waist Deep in the Big Muddy" and "Harry Sims" (about a mine workers' union organizer) would seem to fit better in the political column than as stories or biographies -- and in concert, where much of this material was recorded,
Seeger deliberately mixes his songs up while drawing on at least a few other categories. But for the most part, the grouping works on disc, and along with classics like "We Shall Overcome" and "This Land Is Your Land," there are some pleasant discoveries, such as the story of "Aimee Semple McPherson," from
Seeger's debut Columbia album Story Songs, and
Woody Guthrie's "Belle Star," a duet with
Ramblin' Jack Elliott from The Badmen. At a running time well under two hours, the album could have been more comprehensive, and the liner notes, spread among seven writers, amount to little more than superficial tribute. So, this is not the kind of retrospective
Seeger deserves. But it gives a good sense of the range of his talent, and it is full of enlightening, entertaining songs and performances. ~ William Ruhlmann