Latest news with #TheFirstTimeEverISawYourFace
Yahoo
16-05-2025
- Entertainment
- Yahoo
Barbra Streisand's star-studded new duets album to feature some of pop's biggest names
Barbra Streisand is releasing a star-studded album of duets, The Secret of Life: Partners, Volume Two, set for release this June. The 11-track collection features collaborations with musical icons including Paul McCartney, Bob Dylan, James Taylor, Sting, Seal, Tim McGraw, Mariah Carey, and Ariana Grande, among others. Leading the album is a rendition of "The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face" with Hozier. The song, originally penned by Ewan MacColl for Peggy Seeger, gained widespread recognition through Roberta Flack's version (famously featured in Clint Eastwood's Play Misty for Me). 'I've always loved singing duets with gifted artists. They inspire me in unique and different ways … and make our time in the studio a joy," Streisand said in a statement. "I admire all of them … and I hope that you'll enjoy listening to our collaborations as much as I enjoyed recording with all of my wonderful partners.' The Secret of Life: Partners, Volume Two comprises both covers and original tracks. It will be released on June 25. The album is a sequel to Streisand's 34th studio album Partners, which was released in 2014. That record features duets with Billy Joel, Stevie Wonder, Andrea Bocelli, John Mayer, and John Legend, among others. It also features a version of 'Love Me Tender', sung alongside a vocal sample of a 1956 Elvis recording. 1. 'The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face' with Hozier 2. 'My Valentine' with Paul McCartney 3. 'To Lose You Again' with Sam Smith 4. 'The Very Thought of You' with Bob Dylan 5. 'Letter to my 13-year-old Self' with Laufey 6. 'One Heart, One Voice' with Mariah Carey and Ariana Grande 7. 'I Love Us' with Tim McGraw 8. 'Secret O' Life' with James Taylor 9. 'Fragile' with Sting 10. 'Where Do I Go From You?' with Josh Groban 11. 'Love Will Survive' with Seal
Yahoo
15-05-2025
- Entertainment
- Yahoo
Folk music legend loving life in 'iconic' village
"I rent in an iconic village in south east Oxford and I've become part of the community." Folk music legend Peggy Seeger, 89, is about to hit the road for one last tour of the UK and Ireland with her 25th solo album Teleology. She said while she misses the stage, she now enjoys walks in Iffley, Oxfordshire, where she has been living since 2013. After more than 70 years of music-making and activism, Seeger said she "never tried to be famous" but just "do what I do, as good as possible". "I've had some absolutely wonderful feedback from people and they seem to really know how to listen to it because it's not an easy album," she said of her latest album. Teleology contains nine new songs and two reinterpretations, one of which is The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face - a timeless love song that folk singer, broadcaster and activist Ewan MacColl wrote for her in 1956. The pair went on to make more than 40 albums together, marry and have children. She said: "It's a strange thing because people think that my husband and I both fell disastrously in love with each other, but we didn't. "I ran away from him for three years, he was not my idea of what I wanted to do with my life." But despite her resistance and a 20-year age difference, they got together and Seeger said the truth about it was written in her memoir. "The first kiss I got from him just curled my toes," she said. Peggy Seeger on her husband Ewan MacColl Peggy Seeger: The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face How Folk Songs Should Be Sung But in a Radio 4 interview, she said she had become "weary" of talking about the past. After MacColl's death in 1989, she moved back to America where she decided that "really, my true home where I wanted to live until I die, was the UK". "My children and my grandchildren are here and I know this country better than I know the United States," she said. "I love this country - all four nations of it." She said that in Iffley, it was the "first time I've been really part of a community", adding: "I'm now on the village committee and my job is to raise money." She also continues to be involved in environmental concerns, joining a campaign against building on two green fields. She has made a film called The Mother, which she said will be shown around Oxford "because it's important to save as much of Oxford's green land that we can". Seeger said she "loves" walking along the River Thames, going down to the Iffley lock, meeting "some absolutely wonderful friends" and visiting the village shop. "But I don't get up to much in Oxford because I'm not very fit," she said. "I love the Christ Church garden but, generally, I will go outside of Oxford because I can't park [in the city], so I'll maybe go out to Waterperry Gardens or drive up to Burford." Seeger said her upcoming tour "is going to be fabulous". She said: "Part of it grieves me because there's going to be so many friends there and I won't have time to see them. "I miss the stage but I'm not physically up to it anymore." Her message to budding musicians, she said, would be: "Examine your reasons. "It's almost impossible to make living from it - venues closed down one after the other when Covid hit ... the competition is fierce and you have to really be something different to capture the audience." Seeger said that when she came to the UK, she had "the right combination of who I was". "I was female, young, reasonably good-looking," she said. "I was American and I played a longneck banjo and I was greeted by one of the main folklorists in the world. "I've never tried to be famous, I don't want to be, I just want to do what I do as good as possible." You can follow BBC Oxfordshire on Facebook, X (Twitter), or Instagram. Fishing industry play inspired by 1960s radio show Folk anthem's lost verse to be revealed after 75 years The trespass and the folk legend


NZ Herald
14-05-2025
- Entertainment
- NZ Herald
Marlon Williams brings te reo album tour to Gisborne's War Memorial Theatre
Williams then began his own set also in darkness with his commanding lone voice setting the tone, soon accompanied by his skilled band The Yarra Benders, which includes multi-instrumentalist Dave Khan, Ben Woolley and Gus Agars. Williams explained that his album came out a month ago and there was also a premiere in Auckland for his documentary Ngā Ao E Rua – Two Worlds (directed by Ursula Grace Williams), where many whānau from Gisborne went up for the premiere. A lot of the set was songs in te reo from the new album, but Williams also threw in favourites such as My Boy from the album of the same name and his own version of The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face, a hit for Roberta Flack in 1972. Williams also performed a song he said was written by the late songwriter, musician and academic Hirini Melbourne, that was also in te reo, as well as his own song Arahura, which he dedicated to those in the South Island. It was his third time at Gisborne's War Memorial Theatre. 'It's good to be back in whānau land.' KOMMI came back to the stage to sing several more songs with the band and Williams and the band closed out the set to a standing ovation. Williams' right-hand man, the talented Khan (who has played with the likes of Neil Finn, Sir Dave Dobbyn and Reb Fountain), proved himself able with the double-bass and guitar, and his strength as a musician was to the fore. The tour continues in Rotorua and Hamilton this week, before a stint in Australia, followed by gigs at Auckland's Spark Arena, Dunedin and Christchurch next month. Hopefully it won't be too before he heads back to Tairāwhiti to delight again.
Yahoo
06-05-2025
- Entertainment
- Yahoo
Barbra Streisand Unites With Bob Dylan, Paul McCartney, Ariana Grande for New Duets Album
Yahoo is using AI to generate takeaways from this article. This means the info may not always match what's in the article. Reporting mistakes helps us improve the experience. Yahoo is using AI to generate takeaways from this article. This means the info may not always match what's in the article. Reporting mistakes helps us improve the experience. Yahoo is using AI to generate takeaways from this article. This means the info may not always match what's in the article. Reporting mistakes helps us improve the experience. Generate Key Takeaways Barbra Streisand performing at Madison Square Garden in New York in August 2019 - Credit:/BSB Barbra Streisand's upcoming album, The Secret of Life: Partners, Volume Two, is a collaborative effort that will feature duets with Bob Dylan, Paul McCartney, James Taylor, Sting, Hozier, Laufey, Sam Smith, Tim McGraw, Josh Groban, Seal, and Mariah Carey and Ariana Grande. It arrives in stores on June 27, but Streisand released her first single, 'The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face,' featuring Hozier, today. More from Rolling Stone 'I've always loved singing duets with gifted artists,' Streisand says in a statement. 'They inspire me in unique and different ways … and make our time in the studio a joy! My new album gave me the chance to work and play with some of my old friends, label mates, and new artists too. I admire all of them … and I hope that you'll enjoy listening to our collaborations as much as I enjoyed recording with all of my wonderful partners.' Streisand and Dylan have never appeared on a song together before. But a 1971 letter from Dylan to his friend Tony Glover surfaced in 2020 that said 'Lay Lady Lay' was originally written for Streisand. And in 2016, The New York Times revealed that Dylan saved a 1978 letter from Streisand thanking her for sending flowers, and suggesting they record a song together. 'I was so touched to find out he had saved a note from me,' she wrote in response to The New York Times. 'It prompted me to go back into my own archive and retrieve a letter I had saved from him. As I remember it, first he sent me flowers and a lovely note, asking me if I would like to sing with him. In return, I sent him the note that's in his archive, thanking him for the flowers and the invitation. But for whatever reason, it never happened at the time.' It's taken 47 years, but the Dylan/Streisand collaboration dreamed up in 1978 is taking the form of a duet on the Thirties pop standard 'The Very Thought of You.' (By coincidence, Dylan recorded an original song in 1985 also called 'The Very Thought of You.') Streisand also teams up on the album with McCartney for 'My Valentine,' 'One Heart, One Voice' with both Carey and Grande, 'To Lose You Again' with Smith, 'I Love Us' with McGraw, 'Fragile' with Sting, 'Where Do I Go From Here?' with Groban, 'Love Will Survive' with Seal, 'Secret O' Life' with Taylor, and 'Letter to My 13 Year Old Self' with Laufey. The Secret of Life: Partners, Volume Two was produced by Walter Afanasieff and Peter Asher. It was recorded at the Streisand Scoring Stage in Culver City, California, and at Abbey Road Studios in London with the London Symphony Orchestra. Best of Rolling Stone Sign up for RollingStone's Newsletter. For the latest news, follow us on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.


The Guardian
04-05-2025
- Entertainment
- The Guardian
Post your questions for folk music legend Peggy Seeger
After a long career which has established her as one of the most significant folk singers on both sides of the Atlantic, Peggy Seeger is about to celebrate her 90th birthday with a final tour and album – and will answer your questions. Born in New York to a musicologist father and a modernist composer, and with siblings including future folk legend Pete Seeger, she started out on piano at seven years old, eventually adding guitar, banjo, autoharp, dulcimer and concertina to her skillset. She has lived in the UK for more than 60 years after travelling to London in 1956 for a job offer to be a singer and banjoist with folk group the Ramblers, where she met her future husband and folk singer Ewan MacColl. The two started an affair and in 1957 MacColl wrote the song The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face for Seeger, performing it for her over a long distance phone call (it was later a No 1 hit in the US for Roberta Flack). Seeger often performed with MacColl by her side until his death in 1989. She then married singer Irene Pyper-Scott, after forming an intense connection – she later described herself as 'uncontrollably in love'. Seeger is also widely recognised as a feminist icon and an activist on issues from the environment to war and workers' rights. Her song I'm Gonna Be an Engineer became a feminist anthem thanks to scathing lyrics such as: 'She's smart – for a woman, I wonder how she got that way / You get no choice, you get no voice / Just stay mum, pretend you're dumb.' It's a remarkable career, and one that's coming to an end: her latest album Teleology, out now, is being billed as her last, and she is doing a 25-date farewell tour of the UK and Ireland from 14 May. Before she brings the curtain down, what would you like to know about her songwriting, her activism, her loves and losses, and the rest of her richly lived life? Post your questions in the comments before Wednesday 7 May, and her answers will be published on Friday 16 May.