Woodrow Wilson Guthrie ( July 14, 1912 – October 3, 1967) was an American singer, songwriter, and composer widely considered to be one of the most significant figures in American folk music. His work focused on themes of American socialism and anti-fascism and has inspired many generations both politically and musically with songs such as "This Land Is Your Land" and "Tear the Fascists Down".
Guthrie, the third of five children, was the son of a onetime cowboy, land speculator, and local Democratic politician who named him after Pres. Woodrow Wilson. His mother, who introduced her children to a wide variety of music, was thought to be mentally ill and was institutionalized when Guthrie was a teenager. Her erratic behavior was actually caused by Huntington disease, a hereditary neurological disorder about which little was known at the time and which would later afflict Guthrie too. The family lived near the relocated Creek nation in Okemah, Oklahoma, a small agricultural and railroad town that boomed in the 1920s when oil was discovered in the area. The effect on the town and its people of the decline that followed the boom sensitized the young Guthrie to others’ suffering, which he had also experienced firsthand through the calamities that befell his splintering family.
Soon after his mother’s institutionalization, Guthrie began “rambling” for the first time, coming to love life on the road. Though he often left Okemah to travel during his teens, he always returned to continue his high school education. At age 19 he relocated to Pampa, Texas, where he married Mary Jennings, with whom he had three children. When the Great Depression deepened and drought turned a large section of the Great Plains into the Dust Bowl, making it impossible for Guthrie to support his family, he again took to the road.
Like so many other displaced people from the region (collectively called “Okies” regardless of whether they were Oklahomans), he headed for California, playing his guitar and harmonica and singing in taverns, taking odd jobs, and visiting hobo camps as he traveled by freight train, hitchhiked, or simply walked westward. In Los Angeles in 1937, he landed a spot performing on the radio, first with his cousin, Jack Guthrie, then with Maxine Crissman, who called herself Lefty Lou. At that time Guthrie began songwriting in earnest, giving voice to the struggles of the dispossessed and downtrodden while celebrating their indomitable spirit in songs such as “Do Re Mi,” “Pretty Boy Floyd,” and“Dust Bowl Refugee.”
Guthrie’s politics became increasingly leftist, and by the time he moved to New York City in 1940 he had become an important musical spokesman for labor and populist sentiments, embraced by left-leaning intellectuals and courted by communists. In New York, to which he had brought his family, Guthrie became one of the principal songwriters for the Almanac Singers, a group of activist performers—including Leadbelly, Pete Seeger, Sonny Terry, Brownie McGhee, and Cisco Houston—who used their music to attack fascism and support humanitarian and leftist causes.
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Woody & Marjorie |
In 1941 Guthrie made his first recordings, with folklorist Alan Lomax, and traveled to the Pacific Northwest, where a commission to write songs in support of federal dam building and electrification projects produced such well-known compositions as “Grand Coulee Dam” and “Roll On Columbia.” Back in New York after serving as a merchant marine during World War II, his first marriage having ended in divorce, Guthrie married Marjorie (Greenblatt) Mazia, a Martha Graham Dance Company dancer with whom he would have four children (including son Arlo, who would become an important singer-songwriter in his own right in the 1960s).
As the political tide in the United States turned conservative and then reactionary during the 1950s, Guthrie and his folksinger friends in New York kept alive the flame of activist music making. He continued writing and performing politically charged songs that inspired the American folk revival of the 1960s, at the head of which were performers such as Bob Dylan, Joan Baez, and Phil Ochs, who came to pay homage to Guthrie in his hospital room in New Jersey, to which he was confined beginning in 1954, after his increasingly erratic actions were finally and correctly diagnosed as the result of Huntington disease.
Increasingly unable to control his muscles, Guthrie was hospitalized at Greystone Park Psychiatric Hospital in Morris County, New Jersey, from 1956 to 1961; at Brooklyn State Hospital (now Kingsboro Psychiatric Center) in East Flatbush until 1966. By now he was unable to speak, often moving his arms or rolling his eyes to communicate. He was finally moved to Creedmoor Psychiatric Center in Queens Village, New York, until his death on October 3, 1967.
(Edited from Britannica & Wikipedia)
3 comments:
A big thank you goes to Denis for suggesting today’s birthday folk singer and for the loan of the triple CD box set below.
For “Woody Guthrie – Woody At 100 (The Woody Guthrie Centennial Collection) (2012 Smithsonian)” go here:
https://pixeldrain.com/u/sPxWi6Gg
Cd1
1. This Land Is Your Land (Alternate Version) 2:44
2. Pastures Of Plenty 2:25
3. Riding In My Car (Car Song) 1:49
4. The Grand Coulee Dam 2:10
5. Talking Dust Bowl 1:51
6. So Long, It's Been Good To Know Yuh (Dusty Old Dust) 3:40
7. Ramblin' Round 2:14
8. Philadelphia Lawyer 2:28
9. Hard Travelin' 2:31
10. Pretty Boy Floyd 3:00
11. Hobo's Lullaby 2:23
12. Talking Columbia 2:28
13. The Sinking Of The Reuben James 3:00
14. Jesus Christ 2:37
15. Gypsy Davy 2:49
16. New York Town 2:35
17. Going Down The Road (Feeling Bad) 2:56
18. Hard, Ain't It Hard 2:42
19. The Biggest Thing That Man Has Ever Done (The Great Historical Bum) 2:17
20. This Land Is Your Land (Standard Version) 2:16
21. Jarama Valley 2:52
22. Why, Oh Why? 3:27
23. I've Got To Know 5:32
Cd2
1. Better World A-Comin' 3:05
2. When That Great Ship Went Down (The Great Ship) 3:17
3. A Dollar Down And A Dollar A Week 1:35
4. Talking Centralia 3:24
5. 1913 Massacre 3:35
6. Dirty Overalls 1:55
7. My Daddy (Flies A Ship In The Sky) 2:33
8. Worried Man Blues 2:58
9. Hangknot, Slipknot 2:30
10. Buffalo Skinners 2:16
11. Howdi Do 1:40
12. Jackhammer John 2:36
13. The Ranger's Command 2:49
14. So Long, It's Been Good To Know You (Wwii Version) 2:45
15. What Are We Waiting On? 2:07
16. Lindbergh 3:10
17. Ludlow Massacre 3:28
18. Bad Lee Brown (Cocaine Blues) 2:14
19. Two Good Men 3:45
20. Farmer-Labor Train 2:49
21. The Jolly Banker 2:50
22. We Shall Be Free 3:01
Cd3
The Los Angeles Recordings
1. I Ain't Got No Home (In This World Anymore)* 3:26
2. Them Big City Ways** 2:27
3. Do Re Mi* 3:33
4. Skid Row Serenade** 3:00
5. Radio Program :
The Ballad Gazette With Woody Guthrie 14:20
This Land Is Your Land*
What Did The Deep Sea Say?*
Blow Ye Winds*
Trouble On The Waters**
Blow The Man Down
Normandy Was Her Name**
The Sinking Of The Reuben James*
6. Children's Hour July 7, 1944 10:19
Intro-Wabash Cannonball*
900 Miles*
Stagger Lee*
Pretty Boy Floyd*
7. People's Songs Hootenanny 8:53
Ladies Auxiliary
Weaver's Life*
8. WNYC Radio Program: Folk Songs Of America December 12, 1940 16:24
John Hardy*
Jesse James*
Tom Joad*
9. Reckless Talk** 1:42
10. All Work Together 2:39
11. My Little Seed 2:30
12. Goodnight Little Cathy** 2:20
* Previously Unreleased
** Previously Unreleased Original Song
This comprehensive set contains 57 tracks, including Woody's most important recordings such as the complete version of "This Land Is Your Land", "Pretty Boy Floyd"," I Ain't Got No Home in This World Anymore" and "Riding In My Car", plus 21 previously unreleased performances and six never-before-heard original songs, including Woody’s first known and recently discovered recordings from 1937.
Here’s my contribution…..available on the usual streamers (@ 192)
Woody Guthrie – The Asch Recordings Vol. 1-4 (1999 Smithsonian)
For Vols 1 & 2 go here:
https://pixeldrain.com/u/xtEbujab
For Vols 3 & 4 go here:
https://pixeldrain.com/u/ux4SATrC
This Land Is Your Land: The Asch Recordings, Vol. 1
1-1 This Land Is Your Land 2:16
1-2 Car Song 1:49
1-3 Ramblin' Round 2:13
1-4 Talking Fishing Blues 3:03
1-5 Philadelphia Lawyer 2:28
1-6 Lindbergh 3:10
1-7 Hobo's Lullaby 2:22
1-8 Pastures Of Plenty 2:24
1-9 Grand Coulee Dam 2:09
1-10 End Of The Line 2:49
1-11 New York Town 2:35
1-12 Gypsy Davy 2:48
1-13 Jesus Christ 2:36
1-14 This Land Is Your Land 2:43
1-15 Do-Re-Mi 2:30
1-16 Jarama Valley 2:51
1-17 The Biggest Thing Man Has Ever Done 2:17
1-18 Picture From Life's Other Side 3:05
1-19 Jesse James 2:57
1-20 Talking Hard Work 3:22
1-21 When That Great Ship Went Down 3:17
1-22 Hard, Ain't It Hard 2:41
1-23 Going Down The Road Feeling Bad 2:55
1-24 I Ain't Got Nobody 2:31
1-25 Sinking Of The Reuben James 2:58
1-26 Why, Oh Why? 3:27
1-27 This Land Is Your Land 0:52
Muleskinner Blues: The Asch Recordings, Vol. 2
2-1 Muleskinner Blues 2:49
2-2 Wreck Of The Old 97 2:11
2-3 Sally Goodin' 2:26
2-4 Little Black Train 2:29
2-5 Who's Gonna Shoe Your Pretty Little Feet 2:28
2-6 Baltimore To Washington 2:53
2-7 Rubber Dolly 2:11
2-8 21 Years 3:13
2-9 Sowing On The Mountain 2:23
2-10 Bed On The Floor 2:21
2-11 Take A Whiff On Me 2:41
2-12 Stepstone 2:53
2-13 Put My Little Shoes Away 2:44
2-14 Hen Cackle 2:16
2-15 Poor Boy 2:26
2-16 Stackolee 2:57
2-17 Johnny Hart 2:27
2-18 Worried Man Blues 2:57
2-19 Danville Girl 2:58
2-20 Gambling Man 2:19
2-21 Rye Straw 2:46
2-22 Crawdad Song 2:52
2-23 Ida Red 2:59
2-24 Keep My Skillet Good And Greasy 2:43
2-25 Train 45 2:39
Hard Travelin': The Asch Recordings, Vol. 3
3-1 Hard Travelin' 2:31
3-2 Farmer-Labor Train 2:48
3-3 Howdjadoo 1:39
3-4 Ship In The Sky 2:32
3-5 I Ain't Got No Home In This World Anymore 2:43
3-6 Mean Talking Blues 3:45
3-7 Better World A-Comin' 3:04
3-8 Miss Pavlichencko 2:28
3-9 So Long It's Been Good To Know You (WWII Version) 2:44
3-10 New Found Land 2:05
3-11 Oregon Trail 2:44
3-12 Vigilante Man 3:22
3-13 1913 Massacre 3:35
3-14 Talking Columbia 2:28
3-15 Two Good Men 3:45
3-16 Sally Don't You Grieve 2:22
3-17 Talking Sailor 3:01
3-18 What Are We Waiting On? 2:06
3-19 Railroad Blues 3:13
3-20 Ludlow Massacre 3:27
3-21 Ladies Auxiliary 2:09
3-22 Miner's Song 2:09
3-23 When The Yanks Go Marching In 2:45
3-24 Union Maid (Excerpt) 0:42
3-25 Rubaiyat 3:40
3-26 Many And The Few 5:33
3-27 Hanukkah Dance 1:24
Buffalo Skinners: The Asch Recordings, Vol. 4
4-1 Ranger's Command 2:48
4-2 Buffalo Skinners 3:15
4-3 Billy The Kid 2:00
4-4 Cowboy Waltz 2:03
4-5 Pretty Boy Floyd 2:58
4-6 Along In The Sun And The Rain 2:27
4-7 Whoopie Ti-Yi-Yo Get Along Little Dogies 2:48
4-8 Froggie Went A-Courtin' 3:26
4-9 Buffalo Gals 2:32
4-10 I Ride An Old Paint 2:56
4-11 Dead Or Alive 2:53
4-12 Slipknot 2:30
4-13 Cocaine Blues 2:13
4-14 Go Tell Aunt Rhody 2:49
4-15 Chisholm Trail 2:24
4-16 Stewball 3:26
4-17 Wild Cyclone 3:57
4-18 Train Blues 3:31
4-19 Red River Valley 2:52
4-20 Fastest Of Ponies 4:15
4-21 Stewball 2:27
4-22 Snow Deer 2:31
4-23 When The Curfew Blows 1:42
4-24 Little Darling 2:12
4-25 Blowing Down That Old Dusty Road 3:02
4-26 Return Of Rocky Mountain Slim And Desert Rat Shorty 2:34
The Asch Recordings, recorded between 1944 and 1949, are a series of albums featuring some of the most famous recordings of US folk musician Woody Guthrie. These sessions were recorded by Moses "Moe" Asch in New York City.
The Smithsonian Folkways label repackaged and arranged these sessions in a series of 4 discs between 1997 and 1999. The first volume focuses on Guthrie's original compositions, the second on folk and country covers, the third on topical songs, and the fourth on cowboy and western music.
Thanks, Bob - this is amazingly comprehensive.
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