TURN! TURN! TURN! (To Everything There Is a Season) ? The Byrds
GO WHERE YOU WANNA GO ? The Mamas & the Papas
DON?T MAKE PROMISES ? Tim Hardin
SEASON OF THE WITCH ? Donovan
THAT?S THE BAG I?M IN ? Fred Neil
GET TOGETHER ? The Youngbloods
TODAY ? Jefferson Airplane
FOR WHAT IT?S WORTH ? Buffalo Springfield
I NEVER ASKED TO BE YOUR MOUNTAIN ? Tim Buckley
MORNING DEW ? Tim Rose
DIFFERENT DRUM ? The Stone Poneys
I SHALL BE RELEASED ? The Band
EVERYBODY?S TALKIN? ? Nilsson
Track Listings (17) - Disc #2
WOODEN SHIPS ? Crosby, Stills & Nash
FOTHERINGAY ? Fairport Convention
COMING INTO LOS ANGELES ? Arlo Guthrie
ANYWHERE LIKE HEAVEN ? James Taylor
JOHN BARLEYCORN ? Traffic
BOX OF RAIN ? Grateful Dead
ONE OF THESE THINGS FIRST ? Nick Drake
REASON TO BELIEVE ? Rod Stewart
AMERICAN PIE ? Don McLean
PEOPLE ON THE HIGHWAY ?Pentangle
ROCK ME ON THE WATER ? Jackson
BIRDS ? Linda Ronstadt
WHISKEY IN THE JAR ? Thin Lizzy
LOVE HAS NO PRIDE ? Bonnie
DIAMONDS AND RUST ? Joan Baez
ALL AROUND MY HAT ? Steeleye Span
GOLD DUST WOMAN ? Fleetwood Mac
Track Listings (18) - Disc #3
WALL OF DEATH ? Richard & Linda Thompson
COME ON EILEEN ? Dexys Midnight Runners
TALK ABOUT THE PASSION ? R.E.M.
WHAT?S SHE DONE TO YOUR MIND ? The Rain
PASS IT ON ? Lone
A PAIR OF BROWN EYES ? The Pogues
LOVE RADIATES AROUND ? The Roches
SOMEDAY ? Steve Earle
LUKA ? Suzanne
FOURTH OF JULY ? Dave Alvin
SEE HOW WE ARE ? X
LET IT RAIN ? The Dream Syndicate
DON?T TALK ? 10,000 Maniacs
FISHERMAN?S BLUES ? The Waterboys
HAZY SHADE OF WINTER ? Bangles
FIVE CUPS OF COFFEE ? The Jayhawks
PASSIONATE KISSES ? Lucinda Williams
PUT DOWN THE GUN ? Peter Case
Track Listings (18) - Disc #4
CAROLYN ? Steve Wynn
DRAWN TO THE RHYTHM ? Sarah McLachlan
ANGELS ? Peter Holsapple & Chris Stamey
STILL BE AROUND ? Uncle Tupelo
GALILEO ? Indigo Girls
FADE INTO YOU ? Mazzy Star
BOX FULL OF LETTERS ? Wilco
WHERE I GO ? Natalie Merchant
LOOSE STRING ? Son Volt
LOVE TO LOVE YOU ? The Corrs
SHREDDING THE DOCUMENT ? John Hiatt
SUNNY CAME HOME ? Shawn Colvin
SHE CAME ALONG TO ME ? Billy Bragg & Wilco
WE HAVE FORGOTTEN ? Sixpence None the Richer
BABYLON ? David Gray
CHIEF ? Patty Griffin (3:10)
STUPID ? Anne McCue
RAIN COME DOWN ? eastmountainsouth
With 71 tracks that run the gamut of folk rock, singersongwriter, — country rock, roots rock and Americana spanning over 40 years, Four Decades of Folk Rock is so — comprehensive that it not only includes the most important
... more »
songs of these genres, but also spotlights folk
tracks performed by rock bands, rock songs recorded by folk acts and experiments by both along the way.
Showcasing artists as diverse and influential as Bob Dylan, Bonnie Raitt, the Grateful Dead and Fleetwood
Mac, the collection takes in all the changes wrought by time and generations. With highlights from latter day champions like R.E.M., Natalie Merchant, the Indigo Girls,
John Hiatt, and Sarah McLachlan this set conclusively establishes
folk rock as a powerful, enduring form of music.« less
With 71 tracks that run the gamut of folk rock, singersongwriter,
country rock, roots rock and Americana spanning over 40 years, Four Decades of Folk Rock is so
comprehensive that it not only includes the most important
songs of these genres, but also spotlights folk
tracks performed by rock bands, rock songs recorded by folk acts and experiments by both along the way.
Showcasing artists as diverse and influential as Bob Dylan, Bonnie Raitt, the Grateful Dead and Fleetwood
Mac, the collection takes in all the changes wrought by time and generations. With highlights from latter day champions like R.E.M., Natalie Merchant, the Indigo Girls,
John Hiatt, and Sarah McLachlan this set conclusively establishes
folk rock as a powerful, enduring form of music.
"Just for clarification, this is a 4 disc set! Not sure why it's listed here as only 1 disc...
This is a great compilation for many reasons. Firstly, it successfully documents the journey that the Folk Rock genre has taken over the last four decades. This is an ambitious goal, to say the least, but Time Life does a great job here!
The first two discs, the '60s and '70s, are chock full of true classics. The track listing reads like a "Who's Who" of the most important artists of the time (the Turtles, The Lovin' Spoonful, The Band, The Byrds, The Mamas and The Papas, Jefferson Airplane, Crosby Stills & Nash, Arlo Guthrie, James Taylor, Grateful Dead, Rod Stewart, Jackson Browne, Linda Ronstadt, Fleetwood Mac, and on and on...) These are a must have for any rock collector period!
In my opinion, the next two discs (the '80s and '90s) are what truly make this set unique. These discs feature the artists who have made Folk Rock what it is today (Steve Earle, The Pogues, Richard & Linda Thompson, 10,000 Maniacs, Lucinda Williams, Uncle Tupelo, Natalie Merchant, Son Volt, John Hiatt, Billy Bragg, the great Wilco, and many more...)
This is a great opportunity for the younger generations to learn the roots of Folk Rock. With over 60 pages of liner notes written by Ted Meyers, who compiled the set, this is a truly educational package.
Thanks Time Life, you've done it again!
"
Great overview of the history of Folk Rock
Jeffrey A. Zitomer | VA | 09/11/2007
(5 out of 5 stars)
"This is an amazing box set - but Amazon's got it wrong - this is a FOUR DISC SET - not one disc!
The album contains 71 songs. The first disc (The 60's) include Bob Dylan, Buffalo Springfield, The Stone Poneys, Jefferson Airplane - and my favorite - Barry MCguire's Eve of Destruction. Disc 2 (The 70's), features James Taylor, Jackson Browne (another favorite), Joan Baez, Fleetweed Mac, Crosby Stills & Nash, and of course, The Grateful Dead. The 3rd Disc (The 80's) contained some surprises, with R.E.M., Suzanne Vega, 10,000 Maniacs, and The Roches. The final disc (The 90's & Beyond) Includes Wilco, Sarah McLachlan (a great choice), and the Indigo Girls.
The liner notes (60 pages!) trace the history of folk rock and include some great photos of Bob Dylan, Wilco, CSN, The Grateful Dead and more.
All in all, this is great set with something for everyone."
An expansive take on "folk rock"
hyperbolium | Earth, USA | 02/15/2009
(5 out of 5 stars)
"Time Life Records was founded in the early `60s as a division of Time Inc., but sold off in 2003 to operate independently as part of the international conglomerate Direct Holdings Worldwide. Though no longer a part of the Time media empire, the label continues to be a terrific voice in the music reissue market, selling its wares via the Internet, standard retail channels, and most famously through television informercials. The latter may give Time Life the taint of earlier reissue labels like Ronco and K-Tel, but the high quality of their sets puts them firmly in league with the cream of the reissue industry. The label scored a coup last year with the first official reissue of the Hank Williams "Mother's Finest" radio transcriptions, and their more recent anthology of music from the civil rights movement, Let Freedom Sing, was a tour de force.
This 2007 4-CD set explores the combination of folk and rock that sprang from the intersection of the late-50s/early-60s folk revival and the arrival of the Beatles on U.S. shores. Each of the four discs covers a decade (more or less), starting with the `60s on disc one and Dylan's explosive electrification of "Like a Rolling Stone." It might have made more sense to open with the Byrds' "Mr. Tambourine Man," which hit the charts in June of 1965, but the compilation producers' focus on Dylan pegs Newport as the pivotal moment; the Byrds are represented by their end-of-65 hit of Pete Seeger's "Turn! Turn! Turn!" Notable in their absence are the Beatles, Beau Brummels and Simon & Garfunkel. The `60s could easily have consumed all four discs (and virtually do so on the Folk Years set), so the producers chose to cover a generous helping of familiar bases and flesh out the first disc with brilliantly selected album sides by Tim Hardin, Fred Neil, Jefferson Airplane, Tim Buckley, The Band and Tim Rose. The latter's oft-covered "Morning Dew," is particularly impressive in this original incarnation.
Folk rock passed to singer-songwriters in the 1970s, the most commercially successful of which were more socially passive than their 1960s antecedents. There was still discontent to be found, but it was found on the more expansive and less commercially mainstream FM dial. Arlo Guthrie could lift a hit onto the charts with the non-contentious "City of New Orleans," but his counterculture "Flying into Los Angeles" flew under AM's radar. Disc two finds the social consciousness of folk rock's first wave transplanted, post-Woodstock, into heavier arrangements and picking up progressive sounds from British acts Fairport Convention, Traffic, Thin Lizzy, Nick Drake, Steeleye Span and Pentangle. U.S. singer-songwriters are heard here, but some of the sharper edges, like Joni Mitchell and John Prine are missing.
The moribund `70s provoked a punk backlash by decade's end, and the DIY aesthetic sparked a parallel movement of retro-pop and roots. The "Paisley Underground" in Los Angeles took cues from Gram Parsons, the Lovin' Spoonful and Buffalo Springfield, and as imitation spun into innovation, the Bangles, Dream Syndicate, Rain Parade and Dave Alvin each found original footings. At the same time, a second wave of country outlaws began to chafe against the crossover aspirations of `80s Nashville, and unencumbered by mass commercial concerns, stretched their roots to the same folk sources from which their musical ancestors had grown. For a time the artists stayed underground, even as their songs, such as Lucinda Williams' "Passionate Kisses," became hits for others (Mary Chapin Carpenter in this case). In the next two decades, the underground would find more direct channels to its listeners.
By the `90s, the media landscape changing, and by the `00s the marketing landscape was quickly losing the friction imposed by major record labels. Music radio had all but imploded, replaced by individually programmed channels of a listener's iPod, and streams of music found their way through film and television, commercials, on-line downloading (both legal and illegal), YouTube videos, and a wealth of Internet critics and bloggers clamoring to tout their latest discoveries. The directness with which artists could connect to listeners via MySpace returned the intimate fan connection of the `60s coffeehouse. Ironically, the underground flourished amidst the mass exposure of the Internet.
Though "folk rock" as a named genre is generally regarded as having only opened a brief window in the `60s, its influence trickled into many subsequent forms, as collected across discs two through four. It's may seem like a stretch to apply the label to country-tinged works such as found on disc four, but there is a line through the singer-songwriters of the `70s, the roots movement of the `80s and the emergence of Americana (or at least its labeling) in the `90s. It's that through-line, rather than a catalog of songs from mid-to-late `60s, that is this set's offering. Transiting around from Uncle Tupelo, Wilco and Son Volt to the Band's 1968 cover of Dylan's "I Shall Be Released" on disc one completes an unbroken circle. Disc one gives a solid shot of nostalgia, discs two through four carry forward the producers' theme and provide deep content for connoisseurs.
"I had recently heard Among the Oak & Ash, so was in no doubt that Folk Rock is still alive and flourishing. Listening to this box set, you might think it had long ago morphed into something quite different.
The evolutionary family tree of music is a complex, ever-changing proliferation of genres, sub-genres and sub-sub...etc genres. No two people will agree on how to categorize every song and indeed, the most interesting pieces are often those that do not neatly fit any classification. For what it's worth, this is how I remember it: The Folk revival (the foundations of which had been laid by Pete Seeger, Wood Guthrie and others) began with Lonnie Donegan, who had adopted Skiffle and had a major hit on both sides of the Atlantic with Rock Island Line. This was quickly followed up by The Kingston Trio, who really got the revival underway. Donegan was a major influence on the Beatles and other British groups, who eventually displaced the great man and mounted the British invasion. The Byrds, impressed by the Beatles, responded with what turned out to be the start of a new fusion genre, Folk Rock. Dylan wrote the Folk, the Byrds made it rock. From there, the genre has an unbroken lineage, and has been much more consistently recognizable than this collection would have you believe.
The first disc is pretty good. We could argue about the details - there are much better Donovan songs than Season of the Witch, for example, and the exclusion of Peter, Paul & Mary but the inclusion of Nilsson makes zero sense - but for the most part, it's a worthy selection of 60s Folk Rock.
The cracks begin to show in disc 2, the 70s. No Albion Band, either on this or subsequent disks? No Fiddler's Dram? And including Rod Stewart - much as I like the fellow - is a bit of a stretch. "Few would think of him as a folk rocker..." say the notes. Quite. But the essentials - Pentangle, Steeleye Span, Fairport Convention and others - are represented.
Disc 3 starts to get truly annoying. The Rain Parade has no place here. X is another stretch. The Dream Syndicate's Let it Rain is entirely out of place. No Oyster Band, still no Albion Band. Toto, I have the feeling we're not in Folk Rock anymore.
By disc 4 all pretence is abandoned and we merely have some Folk-Rock-influenced music. The main thread of the genre is entirely lost.
I'm afraid I found Bruce Pollock's A Partial History near-unreadable, with its meandering sentences and cutesy phrases. "...coming out of the static at the end of the FM dial...so underground it could have been offshore...like an SOS on a deserted island of the senses...in the traffic jam of life at the freeway toll plaza, going nowhere." is from a typical 90-word-plus sentence. His notes on individual tracks are much better - informative, clear and to the point.
There is plenty of good music in this collection, many rip-and-burn candidates, but it is absolutely not a representative selection of Folk Rock.
Listen to Mike Harding online on BBC Radio 2 if you really would like to know where Folk Rock stands today. For stand it does, as strong as the Oak & Ash.