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List Price: $11.98
Our Price: $6.68
Your Save: $ 5.30 ( 44% )
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Manufacturer: Arista
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Average Customer Rating:     

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Binding: Audio CD EAN: 0828768031322 Format: Original recording remastered Label: Arista Manufacturer: Arista Number Of Discs: 1 Publisher: Arista Release Date: 2006-05-09 Studio: Arista
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Spotlight customer reviews:
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Customer Rating:      Summary: A Classic Kids' Album Comment: Great songs and funny skits from TV and comedy stars like Mel Brooks. Teaches kids good, progressive values using catchy, folky tunes even adults can enjoy.
Customer Rating:      Summary: An Oldie but a Goody Comment: I have fond memories of this soundtrack from my childhood and it is still relevant today. I purchased it for my 4 year old - he isn't crazy about any of the songs but he LOVES track 2 with the babies. He has it memorized. He also likes the track about the boy who cries in front of the principal, and the track of the boy who wants a doll. I think the messages are subtle but they still get through.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Good for the Parents maybe.. but not the kids Comment: This CD was a little old for my son. He prefers more of the nursery rhymes. Good quality but just not for us.
Customer Rating:      Summary: A classic - kids still love it Comment: Bought this as a present for my 3 y.o. nephew. He loves it even though he hasn't seen the movie. Some of the songs don't make a lot of sense outside of the context of the movie but that doesn't seen to matter to him. It has become the no. 1 soundtrack in the family minivan.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Still a "must have" Comment: Bought this for my 7 month old grandson--he LOVES the musical parts --sings and grins (so to speak) as soon as the title song comes on, and I know he will enjoy the sentiments as he grows older.
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Editorial Reviews:
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There are thousands upon thousands of children's albums out there, but the one that quietly left its mark with more '70s children than perhaps any other album was this disc. Free to Be...You and Me was a pet project of proud feminist Marlo Thomas (a.k.a. "That Girl"), and it was born--according to the liner notes--by the desire to provide her niece with music "to celebrate who she was and who she could be." Harry Belafonte sings "Parents Are People," ex-football great Rosie Grier offers an incredible, touching melody titled "It's All Right to Cry," and Diana Ross waxes future-positive on "When We Grow Up." A great hour of brain food for young--and not-so-young--children. --Denise Sheppard
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