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Songs by Stephen Foster, Vol. 1-2
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Songs by Stephen Foster, Vol. 1-2  (Audio CD) 
by Leslie Guinn

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Product Details:
Audio CD Release Date: May 28, 1992
Studio: Nonesuch
Composer: Stephen [1] Foster
Conductor: Joan Reinthaler
Number Of Discs: 1
Average Customer Rating: based on 9 reviews
Track Listing:
1. I Dream of Jeannie With the Light Brown Hair
2. There's a Good Time Coming
3. Was My Brother in the Battle?
4. Sweetly She Sleeps, My Alice Fair
5. If You've Got a Moustache
6. Gentle Annie
7. Wilt Thou Be Gone, Love?
8. That's What's the Matter
9. Ah! May the Red Rose Live Alway!
10. I'm Nothing But a Plain Old Soldier
11. Beautiful Dreamer
12. Mr. And Mrs. Brown
13. Slumber My Darling
14. Some Folks
15. We Are Coming, Father Abraham, 300,000 More
16. Linger in Blissful Repose
17. There Are Plenty of Fish in the Sea
18. Come Where My Love Lies Dreaming
19. Soirée Polka
20. Better Times Are Coming
21. Katy Bell
22. Hour for Thee and Me
23. Summer Longings
 
Customer Reviews:
Average Customer Review:4.5
Write an online review and share your thoughts with other customers.

5Foster would love this  Oct 03, 2009
I owned the original Nonesuch 33 1/3ds of these. A few of the comic ditties are missing here, but the glorious singing of Guinn and DeGaetani survives.

Foster made himself famous with folksy tunes starting with Oh Susanah. But Foster always wanted to become a more respectable upper class balladeer. He never realised that ambition, fiscally at least, as he was sold out by his publishers, and died abandoned by his family, alcoholic and alone in a New York skid row apartment.

Here is what Foster wanted to be. It's a never-was quiet, elegant middle class respectability, promoted on the eve of the Amercan cataclysm of Civil War.

Great stuff!

3 of 4 found the following review helpful:

4Give Me That Old Time Pop Music  Nov 25, 2007
I'm not sure popular music today tells you anything about American culture, except in the negation. But, popular music such as this describes a very beautiful world, of a gentility without cloying characteristics, a culture at ease with itself. That history had a lot in store for such a languid culture, does not undo the loveliness of that culture, precisely because history always has a lot in store for every culture. Healthy cultures take what is good in them, admit faults and move on. Woe to the culture that destroys itself for whatever reason, even for the putatively good reason of social justice. One cannot listen to immensely charming music on this album and not feel that the popular vein in the American ethos has not lost something tremendous. There is nothing great here, but how great the feeling it conjures. I originally bought the LPs when I was a child. My mother was one of the first winners of the Jeannie with the Light Brown Hair competition run by the Steven Foster Memorial in White Springs, Florida. That was in the fifties, but when we visited the Steven Foster Memorial in the seventies it still felt very much like the South. At any rate, that this set is as beautiful as it is remains a real anomaly as far as I'm concerned. Two of the musicians involved Gilbert Kalish and Jan DeGaetani have elsewhere produced some of the worst records in the serious music catalogue. Kalish's Ives Violin and Piano sonatas are a particulary heinous reminder that sheer ugliness and clangor was actually a musical fashion statement. I can only attribute the difference here to the presence of Joan Reinthaler whose influence, I'm guessing, worked some magic. I can only assume this to be the same person who has dutifully written blurb-review music criticism for The Washington Post. That her blurb-reviews have always been uncommonly intelligent and informed as to music history argues in favor of her having been the health-giving influence in this recording. Having written a few words of criticism for the same paper, I can only see a connection between Reinthaler's molding of these Foster ditties, from something potentially quite banal into something quite lovely, to her ability to overcome the mind-numbing state of musical criticism today.

4 of 4 found the following review helpful:

5Time Capsule  Nov 30, 2006
The voices and instruments, like the songs, are straight from the mid-19th century. If you want to be transported back in time 150 years to a wonderful parlor performance of Foster's songs, this is the album to do it. The voices are marvelous and trained, and one must imagine that the strict phrasing and style are what one would have expected at the time. The cheap upright piano is perfect.

But the one perfect moment for me is the ONLY good extant rendition of "Was My Brother in the Battle?". Accompanied on a harmonium or pump reed organ, if this song doesn't tempt a tear, you simply aren't a romantic.

Very highly recommended.

3 of 12 found the following review helpful:

3Unexpected  Nov 26, 2005
Quality of this recording is fantastic! Performances are superb! However, they don't fit being an example of Foster's music and times. I was expecting banjos and a Mississippi Sound - therfore, very, very disappointed in this CD and consider and a waste of money. Be sure to LISTEN to a few examples to match what you are looking for and what the CD offers. I, unfortunately did not listen before I bought. I rate this low only because my expectations were shattered. This IS a fine CD if opera styles are ok for an example of this southern, 1800's composer's work.

7 of 7 found the following review helpful:

5An album to treasure  Sep 23, 2004
The landmark Library of Congress album, now on enhanced CD. Years
ago, I went on a six-months field assignment to a remote area of
Africa, where I could take only what music I could carry in a vest
pocket. I chose a tape player and two albums: a recital by Perlman
and this album on tape, and was content. If you love American
music, sung poetry, beautiful singing and deeply moving musicality,
this is an album you will treasure for a lifetime.

 
 
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