More Pure Folk Recordings

- Excellent sound for Baez’s debut album, with both sides of this early MONO Vanguard pressing earning Double Plus (A++) grades
- Both of these sides boast glorious All Tube chain recording quality that will be very hard to beat
- One of Joan Baez’s best sounding albums in our experience, shockingly free of artificiality – play it against your favorite female vocal album to hear the difference
- A TAS list Super Disc that actually deserves to be on a Super Disc list, how about that
- Problems in the vinyl are sometimes the nature of the beast with these early pressings, but once you hear just how superb sounding this copy is, you might be inclined, as we were, to stop counting ticks and pops and just be swept away by the music
- 140 weeks on the charts and Five Stars on AMG: “…a brace of traditional songs (most notably ‘East Virginia’ and ‘Mary Hamilton’) with an urgency and sincerity that makes the listener feel as though they were being sung for the first time…”
This former member of the TAS list is the kind of recording that has everything going for it: Golden Age equipment in a live acoustic with a simple arrangement for voice and guitar (or two).
The voice and the material come together nicely. If I were to recommend only one Joan Baez record it would surely have to be this one. Diamonds and Rust is a nice pop album but I think if you go back and play it today you will find that it sounds somewhat dated. Good folk tunes like the ones found on this album, however, never seem to go out of style.
The record sounds like a live demo session because that is exactly what it is:
In 1983 Baez described the making of the album to Rolling Stone’s Kurt Loder:”…It took four days. We recorded it in the ballroom of some hotel in New York, way up by the river. We could use the room every day except Tuesday, because they played Bingo there on Tuesdays. It was just me on this filthy rug. There were two microphones, one for the voice and one for the guitar. I just did my set. It was probably all I knew how to do at that point. I did ‘Mary Hamilton’ once and that was it…That’s the way we made ’em in the old days. As long as a dog didn’t run through the room or something, you had it…”






