Turn! Turn! Turn!
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Categories: Pete Seeger songs | 1950s songs | Billboard Hot 100 number-one singles | 1965 singles | 1966 singles | The Byrds songs | Dolly Parton songs | Jim Witter songs | Nina Simone songs
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"Turn! Turn! Turn! (To Everything There Is a Season)", often abbreviated to "Turn! Turn! Turn!", is a song written and composed by Pete Seeger in the 1950s. Seeger waited until 1962 to record it, releasing the song on his album The Bitter and The Sweet on Columbia Records.
Lyrics and titleThe lyrics are taken almost verbatim from the King James version of the Bible (Ecclesiastes 3, verses 1–8). The Biblical text posits there being a time and place for all things: laughter and sorrow, healing and killing, war and peace, and so on. The lines are open to myriad interpretations, but as a song they are commonly performed as a plea for world peace, with stress on the closing line: "a time for peace, I swear it's not too late," the latter phrase being the only part of the lyric written by Seeger himself. The song is one of a few mainstream songs to set a large portion of scripture to music, other examples being Boney M's "Rivers of Babylon", Sister Janet Mead's "The Lord's Prayer (Sister Janet Mead song)" and U2's ""40"" Handwritten lyrics to the song were among the documents donated to New York University by the Communist Party USA in March 2007[1]. Early folk versionsThe song first appeared several months before the Seeger version, on an album by the folk group The Limeliters on RCA Records, Folk Matinee, under the title "To Everything There Is a Season". One of their backing musicians, Jim McGuinn (a.k.a. Roger McGuinn), would later work with folk singer Judy Collins, rearranging the song to suit her style, now entitled "Turn! Turn! Turn! (To Everything There Is a Season)", for her Elektra album of 1964, Judy Collins #3. The Byrds recordingThe most successful recorded version of the song is the chart-topping single by McGuinn's pioneering folk-rock band The Byrds, released in October of 1965. Featuring the characteristic "jingle-jangle" sound of Roger McGuinn's 12-string Rickenbacker guitar, this recording is considered by many to be one of the defining records of the entire decade[2]. Nearly three decades after the Byrds released the song as a single, the recording featured prominently in the 1994 movie Forrest Gump. After Joe Cocker's With a Little Help from My Friends, the song was the first to play on the first episode of The Wonder Years series. Other cover versionsThe song has been covered by a number of other artists.
MisattributionsSometimes this song is misattributed to The Mamas and the Papas but they have never recorded a version of this song. Notes
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