***Those
Old Dust Bowl Wandering Blues-Woody Guthrie’s Bound For Glory
DVD
Review
From
The Pen Of Frank Jackman
Bound
For Glory, starring David Carradine, 1976
Of
course everybody, everybody who is interested in such matters, learns the different
genre of the American Songbook in different ways. For example, one, probably
without knowing it, learned many of the most popular Broadway-inspired tunes
through going to the movies as a kid where the denizens of Tin Pan Alley held
forth and provide many memorable lyrics which we hum almost unconsciously. Other
genre like folk music (including mountain music and country and western)and its
various sub-genre like talking blues came via more thoughtful appreciation of the music,
or that we got caught up in, those of us from the generation of ‘68 anyway , as
part of our break-out from our parents’ music in the early 1960s. And in that
folk tradition one strand followed a certain genealogy from Woody Guthrie in
the 1930s, the subject of the film under review Bound
For Glory, through the guidance of Pete Seeger and on through Bob Dylan (and
to a lesser extent Ramblin’ Jack Elliott).
No
question the 1930s, the time of the Great Depression that affected the parents
of the generation of ’68, those who got by the best way they could during that
time and then slogged through the bloodshed of World War II, cried out for a
troubadour to sing, like Walt Whitman did a couple of generations before, of
the great troubles in the land. The plague of the dust bowls of the plains, the
hard picking of the orchards and the fields, the plight of the Oakies, Arkies, and
any other peoples afflicted by the economic downturn while others feasted on
the goods produced by others. They needed a voice, as the story line in the film
develops, who had been through it all, been choked by the plains dust, been
forced to trample along by freight train, had been turned back at the “garden
of Eden” California, and much more. A rolling stone for lack of a better word as
this film amply demonstrates who could sing of new generation’s concerns using
talking blues, simple but powerful lyrics, and the news of the day as his calling
card. A voice who could speak to the better instincts of humankind without being
foolish about such sentiments.
Of
course Bound For Glory, based in part
on Woody’s own autobiography from a specific period of his life includes the struggle
to gain recognition for his form of expression without losing his integrity,
his voice of the people. And hones in as well on his rather stormy personal
life, including a failed marriage, his struggle to remain a master-less man in
a period when such men were becoming a very scarce commodity indeed. Oh yes, and
to fill American songbook with many, many classic songs that spoke (and speak)
to the downtrodden, the sick, the homeless and those who have no voice like This Land Is My Land, Pretty Boy Floyd, Dust
Bowl Blues, Do Re Mi, and Union Maid
. See this one if only for the great soundtrack, and the message that Woody was
trying to bring forth.
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