All the Good Times Alice Stuart

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CD

  • Release Date: 11/26/2002
  • Original Release: 1964
  • Sales Rank: 92,815
  • Label: ARHOOLIE RECORDS
  • UPC: 096297903421

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  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Details & Credits
Track List
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All the Good Times

1LISTENLeavin' Home 2:25
2LISTENI'll Pawn You My Gold Watch & Chain 2:38
3LISTENBeatnik 2:35
4LISTENSeven Daffodils 3:24
5LISTENBlack Jack David 2:08
6LISTENJames Alley Blues 4:36
7LISTENEveryday Dirt 2:03
8LISTENOnce I Had a Sweetheart 3:04
9LISTENStackerlee 4:10
10LISTENBad Girl 3:09
11LISTENSeven Beers With the Wrong Woman 2:36
12LISTENI Can't Help But Wonder 3:15
13LISTENAll the Good Times 2:31
14LISTENNobody Knows You When You're Down and Out Bonus Track 3:15
15LISTENFollow Me Honey, I'll Turn Your Money Green Bonus Track 2:57
16LISTENLady Margaret Bonus Track 2:54
17LISTENKassie Jones Bonus Track 3:40
18LISTENTake It Slow and Easy Bonus Track 2:33
19LISTENThree Jolly Rogues Bonus Track 1:43
20LISTENWoman Blue Bonus Track 5:05
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About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

Alice Stuart's first album was a typical effort from the tail end of the early-to-mid-'60s folk revival, devoted almost entirely to competent renderings of various facets of the folk repertoire. There were blues ("Stackerlee"), country (the title cut), old-time music ("Leavin' Home"), a Weavers tune ("Seven Daffodils"), "Once I Had a Sweetheart," the Tom Paxton song "I Can't Help but Wonder Where I'm Bound," and a lone Stuart original, the routine period topical song "Beatnik." The only accompaniment is Stuart's guitar and, occasionally, autoharp. Although these were sung pleasantly and reverently, there's nothing to make her interpretations stand out amid numerous sub-Joan Baez coffeehouse performers of the era; in fact, they're rather characterless. The 2002 CD reissue adds eight songs that draw from a similarly wide breadth of traditional sources, recorded at the same sessions; one song ("Frankie and Johnny") has live audience response, though it's not explained in the liner notes whether that's from a separate recording setup. Richie Unterberger, All Music Guide

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