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Song Samples (MP3
Format)
The Whiskey Shops Must Go (2.026
MB mp3 file)
If You Ain't Got The Do Re Mi
(2.176 MB mp3 file)
Rosie The Riveter (2.6 MB mp3
file)
CALIFORNIA SONGS with historical narration -
Volume Two - Twentieth Century
Forty-one songs depict California life in the
20th century.
Two CDs and Notes on the Songs (WEMCD607)
Total Playing Time: 1 hour, 40 minutes
Companion Songbook Now
Available. Buy Individual Songs/Disks Online.
Disk
1 Disk
2
"Each selection is introduced with interesting facts about the
pertinent historical period. The McNeils' performance is
characterized by clear lyrics and good technical qualities. The
accompanying guide indicates extensive research and provides
detailed background to the songs. This is an exceptional collection.
. .and a wonderful resource. . ."
Booklist
". . .These recordings also should be considered by theater
instructors as stage music, since they would provide effectual
background for any dramatic work that tells a story of the migration
West...This music absolutely belongs in a library...WEM Records has
dedicated itself to yesterday: making accessible so many obscure
songs to a new generation of students"
The
Electronic Review
Part one: Farmers and
Ranchers
As California enters the twentieth century, its wine
and citrus industries are flourishing. Basques from the Pyrenees
raise sheep. Cattle ranchers and cowboys sing songs from Mexican
California and from the southern Appalachian mountains.
The Songs: |
|
California Here I Come |
California Oranges |
|
Andre Madalen |
El Rancho Grande |
|
Come Day Go Day, Wish It Was Sunday |
Rye Whiskey |
|
Cindy |
The Strawberry
Roan | |
Part Two: Temperance and
Suffrage, Cars and Movie Stars
Women organize against heavy drinking, sing militant
songs. Women campaign for the right to vote. Californians sing of
their love for (and frustrations with) automobiles. The movie
industry moves to California, evolving from silent movies to
spectacular films.
The Songs: |
|
I'm On The Water Wagon Now |
The Whiskey Shops Must
Go (2.026 MB mp3 file) |
|
Some Little Bug Is Going To Find You Some Day |
Lydia Pinkham |
|
Where Is My Wanderin' Ma Tonight? |
He'll Have To Get Under - Get Out And Get
Under |
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The Jitney Bus |
In My Merry Oldsmobile |
|
Silent Movie Music |
San
Francisco | |
Part Three: Immigrants and Dust
Bowl Refugees
Immigrants arrive from Italy, Portugal, Armenia and
India to work on California's farms. The I.W.W. organizes farm
workers. Japanese immigrants buy land and compete with established
farmers. The Mexican Revolution sends thousands of refugees to
California. Mexican farm workers organize unions, are deported,
and replaced with workers from the Philippines. Dust storms on the
great plains displace thousands, bringing more job seekers to
California. Poverty is rampant.
The Songs: |
|
We're Coming Back To California |
Senza I Brazzi E Fuori |
|
The Preacher And The Slave |
The Mower's Song |
|
Canción Mixteca |
Los Deportados |
|
So Long, It's Been Good To Know You |
If You Ain't Got The Do
Re Mi (2.176 MB mp3 file) |
|
Ramblin' ‘Round Your
City | |
Part Four: World War Two, Songs
of the Cities
World War Two absorbs men into the armed services.
Women manufacture bombs, tanks, ships and airplanes.
Japanese-Americans are interned in concentration camps, and many
volunteer for military duty in Europe. The United States and
Mexico create the Bracero program. Californians write and sing
songs which reflect pride (and sometimes dismay), about their
cities.
The Songs: |
|
I Love You California |
Rosie The Riveter
(2.6 MB mp3 file) |
|
Don't Fence Me In |
442nd Infantry |
|
El Soldado Razo |
Plane Wreck At Los Gatos |
|
Kumbayah |
Nosotros Venceremos |
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Santa Maria (My Old Home Town) |
Brawley, The World's Largest City Beneath The Level
Of The Sea |
|
Simi Valley |
L. A. River |
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San Francisco (Be Sure To Wear Flowers In Your
Hair) |
You Who Don't Believe
It | |
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