*****This Land IS Your Land- With Folk Troubadour Woody Guthrie In Mind
By Bradley
Fox
Back in 2014,
the summer of 2014 Josh Breslin the now retired old-time alternative newspaper and
small journal writer from Olde Saco, Maine was sitting with his friend Sam Lowell
from Carver out in Concord in the field behind the Old Manse where the Greater
Boston Folk Society was holding its annual tribute to folksinger Woody Guthrie
he had thought about all the connections that he, they had to Woody Guthrie
from back in the 1960s folk minute revival and before. He mentioned that to
thought to Sam whom he queried on the subject, wanted to know his personal take
on when he first heard Woody (and to Laura Perkins, Sam ‘s long-time companion sitting
between them whom Josh had an on-going half flame going back who knows how far
but who made it clear to Josh on more than one occasion that she was true blue
to Sam although she had thanked him for the attention compliment. Sam was aware
of Josh’s interest but also of Laura’s position and so he and Josh got along,
had in any case been back and forth with some many collective wives and
girlfriends that attracted both of them since they had similar tastes going
back to ex-surfer girl Butterfly Swirl that they just took it in stride.) Here is what Sam had to say:
Some songs, no, let’s
go a little wider, some music sticks with you from an early age which even
fifty years later you can sing the words out chapter and verse. Like those
church hymns that you were forced to sit through with your little Sunday best
Robert Hall white suit complete with tie on or fi a girl your best frilly dress
on when you would have rather been outside playing, or maybe doing anything
else but sitting in that forlorn pew, before you got that good dose of religion
drilled into by Sunday schoolteachers, parents, hell and brimstone reverends
which made the hymns make sense.
Like as well the bits
of music you picked up in school from silly children’s songs in elementary
school (Farmer In The Dell, Old MacDonald, Ring Around Something) to
that latter time in junior high school when you got your first dose of the
survey of the American and world songbook once a week for the school year when
you learned about Mozart, Brahms, Beethoven, classic guys, Stephen Foster and a
lot on stuff by guys named Traditional and Anonymous. Or more pleasantly your
coming of age music, maybe like me that 1950s classic age of rock and roll when
a certain musician named Berry, first name Chuck, black as night out of Saint Lou
with a golden guitar in hand and some kind of backbeat that made you two left
feet you want to get up and dance, told Mr. Beethoven, you know the classical music
guy, and his ilk, Mozart, Brahms, Liszt, to move on over there was a new
sheriff in town, was certain songs were associated with certain rites of
passage, mainly about boy-girl things.
One such song from my
youth, and maybe yours too, was Woody Guthrie surrogate “national anthem,” This
Land is Your Land. (Surrogate in response to Irving Berlin’s God Bless
America in the throes of the Great Depression that came through America, came
through his Oklahoma like a blazing dust ball wind). Although I had immersed
myself in the folk minute scene of the early 1960s as it passed through the
coffeehouses and clubs of Harvard Square that is not where I first heard or
learned the song (and where the song had gotten full program play complete with
folk DJs on the radio telling you the genesis of a lot of the music if you had
the luck to find them when you flipped the dial on your transistor radio or the
air was just right some vagabond Sunday night and for a time on television, after
the scene had been established in the underground and some producer learned
about it from his grandkids, via the Hootenanny show, which indicated by
that time like with the just previous “beat” scene that you were close to the
death-knell of the folk moment).
No, for that one song
the time and place was in seventh grade in junior high school, down at Myles
Standish in Carver where I grew up, when Mr. Dasher would each week in Music
Appreciation class teach us a song and then the next week expect us to be able
to sing it without looking at a paper. He was kind of a nut for this kind of
thing, for making us learn songs from difference genres (except the loathed,
his loathed, our to die for, rock and roll which he thought, erroneously and
wastefully he could wean us from with this wholesome twaddle) like Some
Enchanted Evening from South Pacific, Stephen Foster’s My Old
Kentucky Home, or Irving Berlin’s Easter Parade and stuff like that.
So that is where I learned it.
Mr. Dasher might have
mentioned some information about the songwriter or other details on these
things but I did not really pick up on Woody Guthrie’s importance to the
American songbook until I got to that folk minute I mentioned where everybody
revered him (including most prominently Bob Dylan who sat at his knee,
literally, Pete Seeger, the transmission belt from the old interest in roots
music to the then new interest, and Ramblin’ Jack Elliott who as an acolyte
made a nice career out of continued worshipping at that shrine) not so much for
that song but for the million other songs that he produced seemingly at the
drop of a hat before the dreaded Huntington’s disease got the better of him. He
spoke of dust bowl refugees of course, being one himself, talked of outlaws and
legends of outlaws being a man of the West growing up on such tales right
around the time Oklahoma was heading toward tranquil statehood and oil gushers,
talked of the sorrow-filled deportees and refugees working under the hot sun
for some gringo Mister, spoke of the whole fellahin world if it came right down
to it. Spoke, for pay, of the great man-made marvels of the West and how those
marvels tamed the wilds. Spoke too of peace and war (that tempered by his
support for the American communists, and their line which came to depend more
and more on the machinations of Joe Stalin and his Commissariat of Foreign
Affairs), and great battles in the Jarama Valley in Spain where it counted.
Hell, wrote kids’ stuff too just like that Old MacDonald stuff we learned in
school.
The important thing
though is that almost everybody covered Woody then, wrote poems and songs about
him (Dylan a classic Song to Woody well worth reading and hearing on one
of his earliest records), affected his easy ah shucks mannerisms, sat at his
feet in order to learn the simple way, three chords mostly, recycled the same
melody on many songs so it was not that aspect of the song that grabbed you but
the sentiment, that he gave to entertain the people, that vast fellahin world
mentioned previously (although in the 1960s folk minute Second Coming it was
not the downtrodden and afflicted who found solace but the young, mainly
college students in big tent cities and sheltered college campuses who were
looking for authenticity, for roots).
It was not until
sometime later that I began to understand the drift of his early life, the life
of a nomadic troubadour singing and writing his way across the land for nickels
and dimes and for the pure hell of it (although not all of the iterant hobo
legend holds up since he had a brother who ran a radio station in California
and that platform gave him a very helpful leg up which singing in the
Okie/Arkie “from hunger” migrant stoop labor camps never could have done). That
laconic style is what the serious folk singers were trying to emulate, that
“keep on moving” rolling stone gathers no moss thing that Woody perfected as he
headed out of the played-out dustbowl Oklahoma night, wrote plenty of good
dustbowl ballads about that too, evoking the ghost of Tom Joad in John
Steinbeck’s’ The Grapes Of Wrath as he went along. Yeah, you could
almost see old Tom, beaten down in the dustbowl looking for a new start out in
the frontier’s end Pacific, mixing it up with braceros-drivers, straw bosses, railroad
“bulls,” in Woody and making quick work of it too.
Yeah, Woody wrote of
the hard life of the generations drifting West to scratch out some kind of
existence on the land, tame that West a bit. Wrote too of political things
going on, the need for working people to unionize, the need to take care of the
desperate Mexico braceros brought in to bring in the harvest and then abused
and left hanging, spoke too of truth to power about some men robbing you with a
gun others with a fountain pen, about the beauty of America if only the robber
barons, the greedy, the spirit-destroyers would let it be. Wrote too about the
wide continent from New York Harbor to the painted deserts, to the fruitful
orchards, all the way to the California line, no further if you did not have
the do-re-mi called America and how this land was ours, the whole fellahin
bunch of us, if we knew how to keep it. No wonder I remembered that song
chapter and
verse.
No comments:
Post a Comment