This
Land IS Your Land- With Folk Troubadour Woody Guthrie In Mind.
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 (when you would have rather been outside
playing before you got that good dose of religion which made the hymns make
sense), like the bits of music you picked up in school from silly children’s
songs in elementary school to that latter time in junior high school when you
got your first does of the survey of the American and world songbook once a
week for the school year, or more pleasantly your coming of age music, maybe
like me that 1950s classic age of rock and roll when 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 (and got full program play complete with folk DJs and
for a time on television via the Hootenanny show) that is not where I
first heard or learned the song. No for that one song I think the time and
place was in seventh grade in junior high school where Mr. Dasher would each
week in Music Appreciation 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, rock and roll) 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 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, Pete Seeger, and Ramblin’ Jack Elliott) 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. Almost everybody
covered him then, wrote poems and songs about him, sat at his feet in order to learn
the simple way that he took song to entertain the people
with.
It was not until sometime later that I
got the drift of his early life, the life of a nomadic troubadour singing and
writing his way across the land. That is what the serious folk singers were
trying to emulate, that keep on moving 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. 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 true 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 called America and how this land was ours, if we knew how to keep it.
No wonder I remembered that song chapter and
verse.
No comments:
Post a Comment