Track Listing 1. Early in the Morning 2. 500 Miles 3. Lemon Tree 4. If I Had a Hammer - (Single Version) 5. Where Have All the Flowers Gone 6. Puff, The Magic Dragon 7. Cruel War, The - (2nd Single Version) 8. This Land Is Your Land 9. Blowin' in the Wind 10. Stewball 11. Don't Think Twice, It's All Right 12. For Lovin' Me 13. For Baby (For Bobbie) 14. Times They Are a Changin', The - (live) 15. Early Morning Rain 16. Leaving on a Jet Plane 17. I Dig Rock and Roll Music 18. Too Much of Nothing 19. Great Mandala, The (The Wheel of Life) 20. Day Is Done - (live, Single Version) 21. El Salvador 22. Wedding Song (There Is Love) - (with Noel Paul Stookey) 23. Follow Me - (with Mary Travers) 24. Weave Me the Sunshine - (with Peter Yarrow) 25. Don't Laugh at Me
| Details | | Producer: | Albert B. Grossman, John Court, Milton Okun, Peter, Paul & Mary (Compilation), Phil Ramone | | Distributor: | WEA (Distributor) | | Recording Type: | Studio | | Recording Mode: | Stereo | | SPAR Code: | n/a |
Album Notes Peter, Paul & Mary: Noel "Paul" Stookey, Peter Yarrow (vocals, acoustic guitar); Mary Travers (vocals). Recording information: 1962 - 2003. With their beautiful harmony vocals and gentle melodies, Peter, Paul & Mary were the most popular folk act of the 1960s. While Bob Dylan was unquestionably the genre's most influential and revered performer by the mid-1960s, it was Peter Yarrow, Noel Paul Stookey, and Mary Travers who helped him to reach a larger audience with their accessible '63 renditions of his "Blowin' in the Wind" and "Don't Think Twice, It's All Right." In addition to Dylan, the group also championed the work of Gordon Lightfoot and John Denver, most notably with the wanderlust tales "For Lovin' Me" and "Leaving on a Jet Plane" (a runaway hit in '69), respectively. All of the aforementioned tunes are presented on THE VERY BEST OF PETER, PAUL & MARY, a 25-track set carefully compiled by the trio itself. This 2005 collection focuses almost exclusively on the '60s and '70s work of PP&M, with the exception of the deceptively breezy "El Salvador" (from '86) and 2003's "Don't Laugh at Me," which finds the threesome in fine voice more than 40 years after the group was founded in New York City's Greenwich Village. Also included are three early-'70s solo tracks--one apiece by Yarrow, Stookey, and Travers--rounding out this wonderfully selected disc, which is a must for any folk collection.
Editorial Reviews [I]t's fun to see the group really lay its politics on the line in 'El Salvador,' and 'Weave Me the Sunshine' is as vibrant as anything Peter, Paul, and Mary ever recorded. Dirty Linen
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