About "CHINA"
Speaking of Dreams is the twenty-first studio album (and twenty-third overall) by Joan Baez, released in 1989. It mixed personal compositions like the title song with political statements like "China", which was inspired by the Tiananmen Square protests of 1989. (Baez also dedicated the album to the students of Tiananmen Square who "nonviolently, and at an enormous price, have changed the face of China forever.") The album featured collaborations with Paul Simon, Jackson Browne and the Gipsy Kings, and marked the beginning of a period where Baez notes she put her music ahead of the political activism that had preoccupied her for much of the prior decade.
Top songs by Joan Baez
- Imagine
- Don't Cry For Me Argentina
- Farewell Angelina
- We Shall Overcome
- Diamonds And Rust
- Lily
- The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down
- Me And Bobby Mcgee
- Lady Di And I
- Joe Hill
- Kingdom Of Childhood
- Where Have All The Flowers Gone
- Honest Lullaby
- The Ballad Of Sacco And Vanzetti, Part Three
- Caruso
- The Ballad Of Sacco And Vanzetti, Part Two
- John Riley
- If You Were A Carpenter
- All The Weary Mothers Of The Earth
- The Dream Song
- A Heartfelt Line Or Two
- Edge Of Glory
- Don't Blame My Mother
- Luba, The Baroness
- In The Morning Light
- Happy Birthday, Leonid Brezhnev
- China
- Gulf Winds
- Coconuts
- The Partisan
- Children And All That Jazz
- Isaac & Abraham
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