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Phil Ochs - I Ain't Marching Anymore album

Phil Ochs - I Ain't Marching Anymore album

  • Performer: Phil Ochs
  • Genre: Folk music
  • Title: I Ain't Marching Anymore
  • Released: 1965
  • Style: Folk
  • Country: US
  • MP3 version size: 1737 mb
  • FLAC version size: 1329 mb
  • Other: MP1 AIFF MP4 VOC DTS MP2 VOX
  • Rating: 4.5
  • Votes: 246

Description

I Ain't Marching Anymore - Студийный альбом от Phil Ochs. В альбом вошло 14 треков. Продолжительность альбома: 51:46. I Ain't Marching Anymore.

I Ain't Marching Anymore. There But For Fortune. Авторы текста и музыки. WMG (от лица компании "Elektra 0591"); LatinAutor, UBEM, União Brasileira de Compositores, CMRRA, BMI - Broadcast Music In. LatinAutor - PeerMusic, UMPG Publishing, ASCAP" и другие авторские общества (6). Композиция. In The Heat Of The Summer. WMG; UMPG Publishing, LatinAutor - Warner Chappell, ASCAP, LatinAutor - UMPG, Warner Chappell, LatinAutor, CMRRA" и другие авторские общества (2).

I Ain't Marching Anymore is Phil Ochs' second LP, released on Elektra Records in 1965. Dispensing with second guitarist Danny Kalb, Ochs performs alone on twelve original songs, an interpretation of Alfred Noyes' "The Highwayman" set to music (much as Poe's "The Bells" had been set to music on the previous album) and a cover of Ewan MacColl's "The Ballad of the Carpenter".

Phil Ochs’ second album is a work of long-steeped fury at his country’s sins, naked in its scorn for a system showing its many fissures; still, it guards a flickering, tenacious hope. Though the cover shot of I Ain’t Marching Anymore is a graveyard of grim political rhetoric- Phil Ochs slumped against a wall of torn Barry Goldwater and Kenneth Keating posters, their slogans shredded and inscrutable-the back cover essays comprise a beatnik rhapsody for the ages

Ochs' first album, 1964's All the News That's Fit to Sing, has moments of beauty, but its topicality may be tied too closely to the events of its era for modern listeners. Marching, on the other hand, is mostly still right on so, in the case of "That's What I Want to Hear," where machines and outsourcing are taking jobs away. In the Heat of the Summer" is a brilliant lament of the awful conditions that lead to riots. If one wanted to own just one album to represent the political-protest folk-song movement of Greenwich Village in the '60s, Phil Ochs' I Ain't Marching Any More is among the best representations of that time and place. Ochs' first album, 1964's All the News That's Fit to Sing, has moments of beauty, but its topicality may be tied too closely to the events of its era for modern listeners.

Most importantly, while Ochs' songwriting was uneven but compelling in his first collection, I Ain't Marching Anymore finds him in consistently strong form throughout. The craft and the emotional weight of the material makes even the most dated material ("Draft Dodger Rag" and "Here's to the State of Mississippi") effective today, and a surprising number of the songs remain as potent (and sadly timely) today as in 1965, especially "Iron Maiden" and "That's What I Want to Hear. Modifier l'album Reporter une erreur. Liste des groupes Folk Rock Phil Ochs I Ain't Marching Anymore. ajouter les paroles de l'album. 1. 2. 12 years ago 12 years ago. Rock. Album release date: 10 January 2006.

What is the name of the song? "I ain't marching anymore". When was it recorded/ released? 1965. How do they relate to or reflect the time period? This song relates to how during the Vietnam War people started to "stop marching" or stop fighting and began to protest against the government. It reflects on how determined the American people were to restore peace. What is taking place in history when the song was recorded or popular?The Vietnam War is taking place and American leaders feel that we need to aid South Vietnam in the war so that they don't fall to Communism.

Tracklist

A1 I Ain't Marching Anymore 2:32
A2 In The Heat Of The Summer 3:01
A3 Draft Dodger Rag 2:07
A4 That's What I Want To Hear 3:06
A5 That Was The President 3:20
A6 Iron Lady 3:30
A7 The Highwayman 5:36
B1 Links On The Chain 4:18
B2 Hills Of West Virginia 3:21
B3 The Men Behind The Guns 3:00
B4 Talking Birmingham Jam 3:08
B5 Ballad Of The Carpenter 3:50
B6 Days Of Decision 3:12
B7 Here's To The State Of Mississippi 5:52

Credits

  • Artwork By [Cover Photo And Design] – William H. Harvey
  • Producer – Jac Holzman
  • Recorded By – Paul A. Rothchild

Notes

Sides denoted as 'A' and 'B'

Barcode and Other Identifiers

  • Matrix / Runout: EKS-7287A
  • Matrix / Runout: EKS-7287B

Other versions

Category Artist Title (Format) Label Category Country Year
EKL-287 Phil Ochs I Ain't Marching Anymore ‎(LP, Album, Mono) Elektra EKL-287 US 1965
HKS 541-45 Phil Ochs I Ain't Marching Anymore ‎(LP, Album) Elektra HKS 541-45 Spain 1976
EKS-7287 Phil Ochs I Ain't Marching Anymore ‎(LP, Album, RE) Elektra EKS-7287 US 1969
EKS-7287 Phil Ochs I Ain't Marching Anymore ‎(LP, Album, RE) Elektra EKS-7287 US 1969
CCM-616 Phil Ochs I Ain't Marching Anymore ‎(CD, Album, RE) Collectors' Choice Music CCM-616 US 2005

Video

Comments

uspeh uspeh
Amazing stuff!