Phil Ochs - There But For Fortune (Reissue) (1964-66/1989)

  • 19 Feb, 21:25
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Artist:
Title: There But For Fortune
Year Of Release: 1964-66/1989
Label: Elektra
Genre: Acoustic, Folk Rock
Quality: Mp3 320 / Flac (tracks, .cue, log)
Total Time: 01:11:44
Total Size: 177/392 Mb (covers)
WebSite:

Phil Ochs - There But For Fortune (Reissue) (1964-66/1989)


Tracklist:

01. What's That I Hear?
02. One More Parade
03. Too Many Martyrs
04. Power and the Glory
05. I Ain't Marching Anymore
06. Draft Dodger Rag
07. The Highwayman
08. Here's to the State of Mississippi
09. There But for Fortune
10. I'm Going to Say It Now
11. Is There Anybody Here?
12. Cops of the World
13. Ringing of Revolution
14. Santo Domingo
15. Bracero
16. Love Me, I'm a Liberal
17. Changes
18. When I'm Gone

It's often difficult to create a compilation album that does a musician justice when they recorded for more than one label, and this is certainly the case with Phil Ochs. Ochs' first three albums for Elektra were the work of a gifted but earnest topical songwriter armed with an acoustic guitar, while the five albums that followed for A&M found Ochs exploring both personal as well as political issues, and broadening his musical approach. Unfortunately, outside of the three-disc box set Farewells & Fantasies and the out of print double-LP collection Chords of Fame, none of the many Ochs compilations that have emerged have featured material from both periods of his recording career, and There but for Fortune devotes itself strictly to Ochs' Elektra recordings, with a special emphasis on his best known political songs. Given its boundaries, There but for Fortune is a fine collection that cherry-picks much of the best material from this catalog, with a special emphasis on the excellent Phil Ochs in Concert -- all but one of its 11 songs appear on this disc, though sadly most of his witty between-song banter has been left on the cutting-room floor. If you're looking for a definitive Ochs anthology, you're going to have to shell out the big bucks for Farewells & Fantasies, but There but for Fortune does a fine job of skimming the highlights of Ochs' early political material, and demonstrates why he was considered second only to Bob Dylan as the leading protest balladeer of the day.


  • oakland
  •  21:40
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Superb! Thanks a lot.
  • whiskers
  •  22:17
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Many Thanks
  • mufty77
  •  00:46
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Many thanks for lossless.