Barking Dog: November 2, 2023

  • David Rovics - Song for the Mavi Marmara

    • He’s a musician and writer based in Oregon who’s been touring internationally since the 1990s

    • This is from his 2011 album Big Red Sessions, which he recorded at Big Red Studio in Portland, Oregon

    • This song is about the history of refugees in Gaza, and the attempted efforts of international activists to provide humanitarian aid to Gaza in 2010, which ended in a massacre by the Israeli military

  • Bob Dylan - Masters of War

    • Dylan wrote the song in the winter of 1962 and released it on his album The Freewheelin’ Bob Dylan in the spring of 1963

    • This version was recorded live at Town Hall in New York City in April of 1963

  • Jean Ritchie - Nottamun Town

    • Learned traditional folksongs in the oral tradition from friends and family during her youth in Kentucky, and in adulthood moved to New York to work as a social worker, where she met folk musicians like Woody Guthrie, Pete Seeger, and Alan Lomax

    • In 1952, she received a Fulbright scholarship to study the connections between American and British ballads, and travelled to the UK where she recorded many well-known traditional singers

    • She continued to perform for the rest of her life, and passed away at her home in Kentucky in 2015, at the age of 92

    • This is an American folk song, and nearly all modern versions of it come from this recording

    • The melody for “Masters of War,” which we heard before, is based on “Nottamun Town”

    • “Nottamun Town” had been in Ritchie’s family for generations, and she wanted a writing credit on Dylan’s song

    • Dylan’s lawyers paid Ritchie a legal settlement of $5,000, though it appears Dylan mainly got the melody from a version recorded by folksinger Jack Landrón

  • The Weather Station - Came So Easy

  • Phil Ochs - When I’m Gone

    • He was an American protest singer who grew up all over the United States, but moved to New York City in 1962 to establish himself as a folksinger in the Greenwich Village folk scene

    • This is from the 1966 live album Phil Ochs in Concert

  • AA Bondy - Black Rain, Black Rain

    • Musician from Birmingham, Alabama who’s been playing since 1990

    • From his 2007 album American Hearts

  • Alistair Hulett, Dave Swarbrick - The Siege of Union Street

    • Hulett was a folksinger from Glasgow, Scotland, known as a member of the folk punk band Roaring Jack

    • Swarbrick was a folk musician from England who’s known as a member of Fairport Convention, and emerged as an important member of the 1960s British folk revival

    • This is off Hulett and Swarbrick’s 1997 album The Cold Grey Light of Dawn

    • Hulett wrote the song about a battle that took place in Melbourne, Australia between Unemployed Workers Union members and the police during the Great Depression after landlords tried to evict destitute families for not paying their rent

  • Wu Fei, Abigail Washburn - Four Seasons Medley: Four Seasons / Dark Ocean Waltz

    • Washburn a contemporary banjo player from Illinois

    • Wu Fei a composer and musician from Beijing who now lives in the US

    • They met in 2006 and started playing together in the trio The Wu Force in 2011

    • They released their first album together in 2021, which combines American and Chinese folk music

    • The liner notes for the album state that there are a dozen folksongs in China called “Four Seasons,” with each using the four seasons as metaphors for love and friendship

    • This specific version of the song originated in a 1956 stage show called “Hua’er and Youth,” and was adapted from the original folksong

  • Periwinkle - Ode to an Indian Swan

    • This is from a 1981 album called The Promised Land: American Indian Songs of Lament and Protest

    • The song has an alternate title: “The Ballad of Yvonne Swan Wanrow

    • Wanrow is a Sinixt activist who, in 1972, shot and killed a man who had attacked other children and attempted to assault her son

    • She was found guilty by an all-white jury and sentenced to 20 years, though the conviction was later reversed and the charges changed to manslaughter, for which she received five years of probation

    • After these events, she returned to her reservation and began working to improve the community and protect the environment

    • She is still actively supporting land rights for the Sinixt people, especially in Canada, where the government declared the Sinixt legally extinct in 1956 (this declaration was overturned by the Supreme Court in 2021)

  • Blind Joe Taggart - Satan Your Kingdom Must Come Down

    • Taggart was a country blues and gospel musician from South Carolina who recorded between 1926 and 1948

    • Traditional spiritual song

    • This is the first recording of the song, from 1931

  • Spartanburg Famous Four - Satan, Your Kingdom Must Come Down

    • They were a gospel vocal quartet from Spartanburg, South Carolina that recorded for Decca Records in 1938

  • Frank Proffitt - Satan, Your Kingdom Must Come Down

    • Appalachian banjo player from North Carolina, known for preserving the traditional ballad “Tom Dooley

    • Worked in a spark plug factory, as a carpenter, and as a tobacco farmer

    • His carpentry skills extended to making instruments—he was a talented luthier, and the banjos he played were homemade

    • This is off musician, musicologist, photographer, and filmmaker John Cohen’s 1975 compilation album High Atmosphere, which is composed of recordings he made in 1965 of Appalachian folk music in North Carolina and Virginia

    • Proffitt learned the song from an African American man who played blues and spirituals

    • This recording was the last Proffitt ever made, as he died a few days after Cohen’s visit

  • Woody Guthrie - The Ludlow Massacre

    • Guthrie an important figure in folk history who’s known for his songs about the Okie migrants who travelled west during the Great Depression in search of work

    • He wrote this song in 1944

    • It’s about a labour conflict that took place in Ludlow, Colorado, in 1914, resulting in the mass killing of striking coal miners, their wives, and their children by an anti-strike militia at a tent colony

  • Ola Belle Reed - I’ve Always Been a Rambler

    • She was an American musician from Ashe County, North Carolina

    • She was born to a musical family, and her uncle Dockery Campbell taught her to play the banjo as a child, while her mother and grandmother taught her songs and ballads

    • Reed formed the band The New River Boys and Girls with her brother Alex, and they went on to open the New River Ranch music park in Maryland, which hosted a number of well-known artists

    • This is from her 1973 self-titled album

    • The song travelled extensively in the 19th century, and it’s unclear whether it originated in Britain or the United States, as it was popular on both sides of the Atlantic

  • Bruce Cockburn - Soul of a Man

    • Singer-songwriter and guitarist from Ottawa who’s been playing professionally for over 40 years

    • This is a Blind Willie Johnson song, first recorded in 1930

    • This version is from Cockburn’s 2009 live album Slice O’ Life

  • Rory and Alex McEwen - Bonnie George Campbell

    • They were Scottish aristocrats turned folk singers

    • The brothers were some of the first Scottish folk singers to visit the US, and they recorded several albums for Folkways Records there

    • This is from their first album for Folkways, Great Scottish Ballads, from 1956

    • This is a ballad also known as “Bonnie James Campbell,” and it’s likely from the late 16th century, when many Campbells were being killed either in battle or by feud

    • The McEwens learned it from an old Scots Highland aunt

  • Tom Paxton - The Willing Conscript

    • American folksinger and songwriter who first emerged as a member of the Greenwich Village folk scene in the early 1960s

    • He’s now semi-retired, though he occasionally performs with friends in both the US and the UK

    • He wrote this in 1963 after reflecting on his army basic training exercises

  • Robert Dennis - Early One Foggy Morning

    • This is from an album of field recordings made in Florida between 1977 and 1980, called Drop On Down in Florida

    • This one was recorded on March 16, 1980

  • Lonesome Ace Stringband - You’ll Be There

    • From Toronto, ON

    • This is from their new album Try to Make it Fly, which came out on October 13th and is their first album of all-original songs

  • Philippe McKenzie - Mistashipu

    • He’s an Innu musician from the Mani-utenam reserve in Quebec who’s been playing since the 1960s

    • He and musician Florent Volant of the group Kashtin founded the Innu Nikamu festival in 1984, which presents traditional Innu music and art, and is recognized as one of the origins of contemporary Innu music

    • This song was released on the Grammy-nominated 2016 compilation album Native North America (Vol. 1​)​

  • Janis Ian - Shady Acres

    • She’s a musician from New Jersey who first began performing in the mid-1960s during the American folk revival

    • She wrote her first song at the age of 12, which was published in Broadside Magazine, an important publication for the Greenwich Village folk scene

    • The song we just heard was also published in Broadside, and appears on a 1967 album of songs from Broadside

    • Ian wrote and recorded that song when she was 16 years old

  • The Men of No Property - The Multi-Storey

  • Old Man Luedecke - Notes from the Banjo Underground

  • Uncle Sinner - Old Country Stomp

    • From Winnipeg

    • This is an unreleased track recorded between 2007 and 2011

  • Walter Britten - Auctioneer

    • This is a field recording made by Mack McCormick, off a compilation album of McCormick’s recordings called Playing for the Man at the Door, released by Smithsonian Folkways Records in August

    • Britten was a famous Texan auctioneer who began his career in 1935 at the age of 16, performing at the Amarillo Livestock Show

    • He even had an academy named after him, the Britten Auction Academy, which trained some of the finest auctioneers in Texas

    • McCormick made this recording of him in 1966

  • Steve Goodman - The Auctioneer

    • Goodman was a folk musician from Chicago

    • He studied at the Old Town School of Folk Music, where he met his friend John Prine, and they frequently performed together until Goodman’s death in 1984

    • In 2007, the governor of Illinois named October 5 Steve Goodman Day in the state, and a bill was introduced and signed by President Obama in 2010 to rename a post office after him

    • This song was written in 1956 by Leroy Van Dyke and Buddy Black

    • Goodman’s live recording was included on the reissue of his 1972 album Somebody Else’s Troubles

  • Bryan Bowers - Satisfied Mind

    • He’s an American musician often credited with introducing the autoharp to younger generations of musicians

    • The song was written by Jack Rhodes and Red Hayes in 1947

    • From the 1985 live compilation album Tribute to Steve Goodman

  • Cora Fluker - Out in the Woods

    • She was a musician from Alabama who learned to play guitar from her uncle when she was a child

    • From the 9th album in a series called Living Country Blues USA, which comprise field recordings made of American blues artists in 1980 by two German blues enthusiasts named Axel Kustner and Siegfried Christmann

  • Sammy Walker - Funny Farm Blues

    • He’s a musician from Georgia who first began recording in the mid 1970s

    • This is off his first album, Song for Patty, from 1975

    • It’s his own song

  • Eugene Rhodes - See That My Grave Is Kept Clean

    • He was a musician from Kentucky who travelled through the southern states as a one-man-band until he ended up in Indiana State Prison, where he continued to play

    • Folklorist Bruce Jackson went to the prison to record an album of Rhodes’ music in 1963 called Talkin’ About My Time, which is where this song comes from

    • Written by Blind Lemon Jefferson and first recorded in 1927

  • Stan Rogers - The Maid on the Shore

    • Born and raised in Ontario, but known for his maritime-influenced music that was informed by his time spent visiting family in Nova Scotia during summers

    • From his 1977 album Fogarty’s Cove

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Barking Dog: October 26, 2023