Showing posts with label folksong. Show all posts
Showing posts with label folksong. Show all posts

Monday, January 06, 2025

1960s, Dylan, folk music & me ...


I haven't even seen the A Complete Unknown Dylan-goes-electric movie yet, but Facebook discussions around it and conversations online with 1960s music scene survivors have really sent me down a week-long memory search and musical rabbit hole. (Come to think of it, I'm much more successful at being a complete unknown than he is.) 
For one of those Facebook conversations, I assembled this musical still-life photograph, which brought back more memories, eventually hypertext-assisted into this blog post. But I started out slow, drawn back into playing old songs from those books for the living room furniture. For instance, I couldn't believe that the 1963 M. Witmark and Sons portfolio of songs from Dylan's second album (purchased new, when $1.95 was a non-trivial sum for a high school kid) came with piano arrangements, with little chord diagrams for guitar players. I also have the similar volume for his third album.
 Guitarists reading this will be charmed to learn that book gave the guitar chords for playing "Blowin' in the Wind" in the key of Eb -- without suggesting use of a capo. "Girl of the North Country" was in Ab. (I still have never mastered the Db chord fingering it suggested, although the Eb 7th fingering has come in handy, pushed up a half step.) In any case, these were not keys I could play or sing in, so the book was a fine education in chord transposition. 
However, "With God on Our Side" was presented in the key of C, where Dylan played it, and I see pencil notes indicating that 16-year-old me was already figuring out the harmonica solo! Unfortunately, or fortunately, my voice couldn't hit the high notes in that one, which may be why I backed off on the idea of singing it in a 1964 "hootenanny" at my high school. Or maybe I was just chicken. It was a Catholic high school, better at teaching grammar than progressive politics, although mimeo copies of "The John Birch Society" were circulating thanks to one teacher, making me a Chad Mitchell Trio fan. 
I did sing San Francisco Bay Blues in that hootenanny, with the guitar and the harmonica, and some classmate introduced me saying I sounded "something like Bob Dylan, but that's not a bad thing." Actually, I learned the Jesse Fuller song from a transcription of a Ramblin' Jack Elliott performance, not from Dylan, and I don't think the emcee had never heard me sing or play; I think he was just judging by the hardware around my neck.
Thanks to Jeannie Brand-Derienzo, another Facebook friend, for sending me that mint copy of her dad Oscar Brand's instruction book, which was where I started learning to play the guitar. I think I traded away my original copy, and my first guitar, for my first banjo -- while I was still in high school. I still have an LP of Oscar singing historical satirical songs like, "A dollar ain't a dollar anymore" and "The Dodger Song," which still seem quite timely. (Feel free to join in while you read the rest of this. The lyrics are on those two links, one an Aaron Copland arrangement, but I prefer Oscar's singing below.) I also have several of Oscar's books and song collections.


I never did get to meet Oscar Brand, or even see him in person, but his books, records and broadcasting career were a huge part of my 1960s folk music education -- and I appreciate his work even more recently, thanks to YouTube's sharing of clips from his Canadian television show, "Let's Sing Out," with guests including musical heroes of mine who I never saw on American TV, including Dave Van Ronk, Joni Mitchell and the Jim Kweskin Jug Band. Oscar's WNYC  radio show "Folk Song Festival" is online in bits and pieces too, including clips from his 1961 interview with a very young Bob Dylan, making up stories about his past.
But over the years coffee houses (The Exit in New Haven, the Sounding Board in Hartford), plus bars, clubs and concerts did give me a chance to hear -- and even meet -- some of those musical heroes in person. And get on stage myself. At Pinewoods, along with the banjo lessons with Paul Brown, I took classes with the great Irish sean nos singer Joe Heaney, Janette Carter (founder of the Carter Family Fold here in Virginia), west coast oldtime music encyclopedia Hank Bradley,  singer and dance caller & teacher Sandy Bradley from Seattle, the Horse Flies from Ithaca, and more. Some of those other Pinewoods faces have reappeared in other states and other decades, including a hammered dulcimer player I met at a Blacksburg jam session who figured out we had been "campers" at Pinewoods that same week some 35 years earlier. 
That banjo had hung on the wall for a dozen years before I took learning it seriously, first from books by Pete Seeger and Peggy Seeger, then some recorded lessons by the late Happy Traum, whose Homespun Tapes banjo course I won in a photo contest at Pickin' magazine. My entry was a picture of Connecticut fiddler Will Welling at a New England Fiddle Contest in Hartford. Will gave me a copy of his tune book in return for a copy of the picture, and I had it in my guitar case when I went to Pinewoods, which was also where I acquired my first mandolin and started to pick tunes out of that book over the coming weeks -- and years.
But guitar with Hank Bradley and banjo with Paul Brown were my official instrumental classes at Pinewoods in 1978 or '79. Paul played more fiddle in the next class I took with him, with Terri McMurray playing banjo and banjo-uke, and both of them sharing wonderful stories about the old-time musicians they had learned from in the '60s and '70s. That class was in 2015 at the Augusta Heritage Workshops in Elkins, West Virginia. (Paul and I had a lot of catching up to do come including two journalism careers, his with NPR, mine with newspapers and magazines. And now he's writing his own thoughtful newsletter about public affairs, while I dither around on Facebook and three intermittent blogs.)
I emphasized Paul in the Facebook post this longer essay is partly copied and pasted from, because he and I have a lot of mutual Facebook friends. And his banjo class really was great, but the two-week stay at Pinewoods also included folksong classes with older singers I admired, my first Appalachian clogging class with Bob Dalsemar (teacher) and Ruth Pershing (teacher, caller, and dance ethnograper), and meeting lots of new friends and dance partner. 
Dance partners, especially. Come to think of it, "You'll love it; it's like Club Med in the woods," was a friend's motivating line that probably has never appeared in the Country Dance and Song Society brochures. CDSS was and is a great dance and music community, and I did try commuting from Hartford to New York on Amtrak for most of a year to keep a romance going with someone I met at Pinewoods. But the music pulled me in another direction -- grad school in anthropology and ethnomusicology at Wesleyan, which I started at the rate of a course a semester, my tuition paid by the newspaper where I worked -- whose generous fringe benefits probably helped keep away unions for 200+ years. 
After a couple years of part-time study at Wesleyan, I'd been at the Hartford Courant for 11 years, and was able to "retire" the year the paper was sold to a chain. I cashed in my employee stock so that I could finish off my studies full-time, including a 10-week research summer in County Mayo, Ireland, meeting great folks like John Hoban. To learn some jigs and reels, and accompany John Prine songs in the pub, I carried along that mandolin I'd bought at Pinewoods from a great guitar player named John Pearse. It was an old Martin with a broken side he had repaired while working for the Martin guitar company. He left to found his own company, making guitar strings among other things until his death in 2008. I still use the strings with his picture on the package. Greg Ryan, from New York, was my mandolin teacher in Ireland, picking up where I'd left off with classmate Jim Cowdery at Wesleyan. I kept that mandolin for 40 years before selling it to a friend who still plays it on stage and at jam sessions here in Southwestern Virginia. 
Unlike Dylan, I did not take to songwriting or get very good at singing or entertaining audiences, or ever get to play on stage at the Newport Folk Festival.  But, ironically, after I stumbled back into journalism, I did wind up on stage at Newport once, in the early 1990s. I was there taking pictures of my favorite harmony-singing trio, The Roches (shown earlier). I was trying to find a photo angle that would put enough pretty sailboats in the background to convince the editor of Soundings, a boating magazine, to put the picture on the cover, along with my article about "boats and music." Her reply, "Nope, boats have to be in the foreground on the cover." 
But the article and a few pictures did run inside the magazine, and living around the corner from Soundings in Essex, Conn., also put me around the corner from the Griswold Inn, which briefly landed me and that old mandolin in a sea chantey singing group (Cliff Haslam & the Jovial Crew). We even played the Mystic Sea Music Festival once, around 1992, before I went off to grad school again, at UNC in Chapel Hill... which in a roundabout way brought me here to Southwestern Virginia, retired from teaching journalism, and playing old time music at jam sessions and dances. (Maybe this is the summer I'll get to the Mystic festival's successor, the Connecticut Sea Music Festival, with its roots in Cliff Haslam's Griswold Inn sessions. Alas, it's usually the same weekend as the Mount Airy Fiddler's Convention in North Carolina, which has become an annual ritual for me too.)
No wonder my house and brain are so cluttered with instruments and the musical memories sampled in that photograph. By the way, only the Burl Ives book and the 1930s Kay mandolin in that picture were acquired "second-hand," but it is all secondhand music, full of memories and history, and that's what I like about it.
It's not entirely relevant to this musical discussion, but (also in a roundabout way) my 1978-83 master's degree in ethnomusicology led to a 1988 master's about hypertext, which is why there are 30 or more links here to Web pages, YouTube videos and podcasts. A late-in-life diagnosis of ADHD may have more than a little to do with it too, and I hope some readers find them as  enjoyably distracting as I did. Onward... 


Sunday, February 11, 2018

Remembering Josh White

Happy birthday to Josh White!
(February 11, 1914 – September 5, 1969)
I saw him on the old ABC Hootenanny TV show, and soon scraped together the price of a couple of his LPs. (Ones whose album covers weren't too risque to bring into the house; it was years before I got "Empty bed blues," and I don't think I ever let my mother see it.)
I also bought a 191-page Josh White Song Book to show my guitar teacher, who had started me on classical lessons because my first guitar had nylon strings. (Nylon was recommended by the Oscar Brand book I had started teaching myself out of a year earlier. I got a new guitar, with steel strings that Christmas after convincing my parents I was going to stick with it more than I had with the accordion a few years earlier. It was a long time before I could afford a Martin OO 21 like the one Josh played on his albums, but I got it eventually.)
Unfortunately, Josh's book wasn't a guitar instruction book. The $2.95 volume (pricey in 1963; my first Dylan songbook was $1.95) featured piano transcriptions of the songs, not his original guitar arrangements. 
I did learn something about music watching my teacher try to work things back to the guitar at my novice level. And I learned other things from the text by Robert Shelton, folk music critic at the New York Times (yes, that was a job then!), who provided song commentaries and a biography of Josh.
It wasn't as thorough as Elijah Wald's "Josh White, Society Blues" several decades later, but it made me feel like a folk blues insider... and, come to think of it, those song book introductory chapters were probably the only biography of a black person that I read in high school, two years before Alex Haley published "The Autobiography of Malcolm X."
Smithsonian Folkways Recordings shared a link to a Spotify playlist with a birthday post today, inspiring my reminiscence..
https://m.facebook.com/story.php?story_fbid=10157545963179815&id=10367554814
Rather than using Facebook to share a Spotify playlist, why doesn't Smithsonian Folkways just share a link to its own web page that sells a classic Josh White album, and lets you download its 14-page LP size booklet as a free PDF? I hope it's because Folkways makes some money from Spotify. Curiously, when I tried to post that question to the Smithsonian account on Facebook, Facebook marked my comment as spam! That reminded me to put my thoughts out here on the more open web, not just in Facebook's controlled space.

Friday, November 19, 2010

Bells to celebrate many seasons

Mostly I'm celebrating the discovery that Ellen Kushner's "Sound and Spirit" radio program is available online. I used to be a regular listener to her wonderful mixture of music and stories, but lost track of it when I moved from one NPR/PRI station's listening area to another.

Her website has players and "embed" code for individual episodes. This is my first try at embedding one in a Blogger page. Utterly painless... Odd that it looks like a video player when only audio is involved. The program logo didn't show up properly when I first posted this, but the audio plays -- and that is the point.







Wednesday, May 06, 2009

Sing a song of press-titution?

With layoffs, buyouts and closings, these days it seems fewer newspapermen each month are "meeting interesting people..." But a friend pointed me to this 2006 video after I posted my blog item (and a flutter of tweets) about Pete Seeger's birthday concert. I haven't heard that this song fit into the program. It would need a pretty serious update, since it dates back to the days of flagpole sitters. I was writing for my school newspaper the first time I heard the song, and found a copy in the old People's Songbook, related to the still-publishing Sing Out!, the folksong magazine. I should renew my subscription and see if anyone has set Phil Meyer's The Vanishing Newspaper to music yet...

Pete doesn't mention it on the video, but the later verses of Vern Partlow's song make it clear it has roots in the early -- and better -- days of the Newspaper Guild union. Now that Pete has taught you the tune, everybody sing...:
Oh, publishers are such interesting people!
Their policy's an acrobatic thing.
They shout they represent the common people.
It's funny Wall Street never has complained.
But publishers have worries, for publishers must go
To working folks for readers, and big shots for their dough.
Oh, publishers are such interesting people!
It could be press-titution, I don't know.

Ting-a-ling-a-ling, advertising.
Ting-a-ling-a-ling, circulation.
Get that payoff, keep those readers;
What a headache, what a mess.
Yes, publishers are such interesting people!
Let's give three cheers for freedom of the press.

Oh, newspapermen are such interesting people!
They used to work like hell just for romance,
But finally, the movies notwithstanding,
They all got tired of patches on their pants.
They organized a union, and got a living wage.
They joined progressive actors upon a living stage.
Now newspapermen meet such interesting people,
Who know they've got a people's fight to wage.

[big rousing chorus now...]

Ting-a-ling-a-ling, Newspaper Guild,
We got a free new world to build;
Meet the people, that's a thrill,
All together fits the bill.
Oh a newspaperman meets such interesting people!
It's wonderful to represent the Guild.
Lyrics from the Digital Tradition database at Mudcat.org

Just a coincidence... Here's the latest on the Guild negotiations at The Boston Globe.

Saturday, May 02, 2009

Happy 90th Birthday, Pete!

An amazing birthday concert is scheduled in New York City tomorrow for folksinger's folksinger, Pete Seeger, but I like the celebration page his local newspaper's Web site has posted up the Hudson a bit from Madison Square Garden:

Times Herald-Record - Pete Seeger Birthday

(Update: NY Daily News covers the show in words and pictures; The New York Times review of the show. More from NPR.)

Meanwhile, here in Virginia, I hear there's a hootenanny -- yes, a hootenanny -- in Richmond.

Now that's a word I haven't seen in the headlines in a LONG time -- one that Pete helped popularize. Ironically, he was blacklisted from the pop/commercial TV show by that name, during what he and others have called the "great folk scare of the sixties."

Pete eventually had his own show -- on PBS, some of which is now around YouTube, if you look for "Rainbow Quest," including interview jam sessions with some folks I never knew were captured on video, and this wonderful duet on one of Pete's songs, with him backing up Judy Collins, who also celebrated a hard-to-believe birthday this weekend. Speaking of Judy, she and the Smothers Brothers were on that original Hootenanny show at times, and both Judy -- and Pete, in a blacklist breakthrough -- were eventually on the Brothers own show. (And now everybody is on YouTube!)

(Disclaimer: OK, I'll admit it. Those folks, that hootenanny thing, and its less commercial echoes in the seventies (especially at this place and that place and other places) left me with a bunch of guitars, ukuleles, mandolins and, yes, banjos that I even play a little.)

Tuesday, January 27, 2009

Folksongs and singers in the news

A folksong-savvy friend in Boston alerted me to this month's stories about William Zantzinger, just as I was about to talk about oral traditions in news reporting in my Media History class. Here's the link he provided and a few more:

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/01/10/us/10zantzinger.html

http://www.newyorker.com/talk/2009/01/26/090126ta_talk_simon




http://www.motherjones.com/commentary/slant/2004/11/10_200.html

http://web.cecs.pdx.edu/~trent/ochs/hattie-carroll.html

http://www.bobdylan.com/#/songs/lonesome-death-hattie-carroll

http://www.peteseeger.net/Brdside1.htm

Since my search brought me to Pete Seeger's site for an old issue of Broadside, the 1960s folksong magazine, I can't avoid pointing out Pete's most recent performance.

YouTube had taken one copy of a video of that song offline, so I went looking for alternatives. This one is still there via video.aol.com, but not high quality. Is that from an international station's copy of the HBO footage? Does HBO have a free "official" copy? Is this "not currently available" notice all there is?

Aha... found it. There are some official clips posted on YouTube by "Inauguration," and Pete and Bruce are there with "This Land is Your Land" (followed by Beyonce doing "America the Beautiful") in the final ten minutes of this two-hour coverage: We Are One: Opening Inaugural Ceremonies at the Lincoln Memorial.



But I've come in late on this controversy. We may have to come back to this for discussion of private property and copyright law... or maybe that's a whole other course. Come to think of it, maybe that Dylan video is a copyright violation that YouTube will be "taking down" sometime.