Malvina
Reynolds (August 23, 1900 – March 17, 1978) was an American folk/blues
singer-songwriter and political activist, best known for her song writing,
particularly the song, "Little Boxes."
Malvina
Milder was born in San Francisco to David and Abagail Milder, Jewish and
socialist immigrants, who opposed involvement in World War I.
She
married William ("Bud") Reynolds, a carpenter and labour organizer, in
1934. They had one child, Nancy Reynolds Schimmel (a songwriter and performer
in her own right), in 1935. She had earned her Bachelor of Arts and Master of
Arts in English from the University of California, Berkeley, and later earned a
doctorate there, finishing her dissertation in 1938. She could not find a job
teaching at the college level. She became a social worker and a columnist for
the People's World and, when World War II started, an assembly-line worker at a
bomb factory. When her father died, she and her husband took over her parents'
naval tailor shop in Long Beach, California.
Though
she played violin in a dance band in her twenties, she began her song writing
career late in life. She was in her late 40s when she met Earl Robinson, Pete
Seeger, and other folk singers and songwriters. She returned to Berkeley, and
to the University, where she took music theory classes in the early fifties.
She
went on to write several popular songs, including "Little Boxes,"
"What Have They Done to the Rain," recorded by The Searchers and Joan
Baez (about nuclear fallout), "It Isn't Nice" (a civil rights
anthem), "Turn Around" (about children growing up, later sung by
Harry Belafonte), and "There's a Bottom Below" (about depression).
Reynolds was also a noted composer of children's songs, including "Magic
Penny" and "Morningtown Ride," a top five UK single (December
66) recorded by The Seekers. She wrote songs for Women for Peace, the Nestle
Boycott, the sit-ins in San Francisco on auto row and at the Sheraton-Palace,
the fight against putting a freeway through Golden Gate Park and other causes.
Here’s
“The Albatross” released 1969. Accompanying Malvina is Bill Lee on bass and Eric
Weissberg on Lead Guitar.
Four
collections of her music are available on compact disc. The Smithsonian
Folkways label released Another County Heard From (Folkways 02524) and Ear to
the Ground (Smithsonian Folkways 40124), and the Omni Recording Corporation in
Australia issued Malvina Reynolds (Omni 112) and "Malvina Reynolds Sings
the Truth" (Omni 114).
"Little
Boxes" was inspired visually by the houses of Daly City, California. Nancy
Reynolds Schimmel, daughter of Malvina Reynolds, explained:
"My mother and father were driving South
from San Francisco through Daly City when my mom got the idea for the song. She
asked my dad to take the wheel, and she wrote it on the way to the gathering in
La Honda where she was going to sing for the Friends Committee on Legislation.
When Time Magazine wanted a photo of her pointing to the very place, she
couldn't find those houses because so many more had been built around them that
the hillsides were totally covered."
In
her later years, Malvina Reynolds contributed songs and material to PBS's
Sesame Street, on which she made occasional appearances as a character called
"Kate." (Info edited from Wikipedia & Sisterschoice)
Here's Malvina with Pete Seeger and Ramblin' Jack Elliot
For Malvina Reynolds – Ear To The Ground Topical Songs 1960 - 1978 go here:
ReplyDeletehttp://www.mediafire.com/download/cpq7zzsy3y5za0d/Malvina+Reynolds+-+Ear+To+The+Ground+Topical+Songs+1960-1978.zip
1 It Isn't Nice 2:19
2 On The Rim Of The World 3:20
3 What Have They Done To The Rain? 2:14
4 Look On The Sunny Side 2:45
5 The World's Gone Beautiful 2:51
6 Spoken Introduction To Little Boxes 0:53
7 Little Boxes 2:07
8 Little Red Hen 2:08
9 Dialectic 1:32
10 Bury Me In My Overalls 2:49
11 There's A Bottom Below 3:01
12 The Little Mouse 3:14
13 Rosie Jane 3:09
14 The Money Crop 1:27
15 Magic Penny 1:57
16 The Albatross 3:42
17 Skagit Valley Forever 3:26
18 Spoken Introduction To The Judge Said 0:57
19 The Judge Said 2:42
20 Mario's Duck 5:43
21 Carolina Cotton Mill Song 3:38
22 Boraxo 2:46
23 This World