Collector's Choice
2006
Five & Twenty Questions
About This Album
Five & Twenty Questions, 24-year-old Mark Spoelstra's third album, marked a creative leap for him. Following his two albums for tiny Folkways Records, Mark Spoelstra Recorded at Club 47 Inc. and Songs of Mark Spoelstra with Twelve-String Guitar (both 1963), it was his first LP to be released by a big independent label, Elektra Records, and it found him making the changeover to original material that had become the dividing line between the older folk singers and the new crop of topical singer/songwriters who were his peers, such as his friend Bob Dylan and his labelmates Phil Ochs and Tom Paxton. The title song, which led off the disc, was in a sense Spoelstra's version of Dylan's "Blowin' in the Wind," a philosophical, questioning song that pointed to the need for social changes. Elsewhere, Spoelstra, who had been raised a Quaker and become a conscientious objector, and who was fulfilling two years of alternative service when he cut this album during a brief vacation, deplored war, notably in "White Winged Dove." In the record's longest song, "Ballad of 12th Avenue," he examined the murderous effects of poverty much as Dylan had in "North Country Blues.
Track List (try tracks 1,2,5,9 and 11)

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