Showing posts with label Wenzel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wenzel. Show all posts

Friday, July 12, 2024

Stranger Songs with Mike Regenstreif – CKCU – July 16, 2024: A Salute to Nora Guthrie


Stranger Songs with Mike Regenstreif finds connections and develops themes in various genres. The show is broadcast on CKCU, 93.1 FM, in Ottawa on Tuesdays from 3:30 until 5 pm (Eastern time) and is also available 24/7 for on-demand streaming.

This episode of Stranger Songs was recorded and can be streamed on-demand, now or anytime, by clicking on “Listen Now” at … https://cod.ckcufm.com/programs/595/66023.html

Theme: A Salute to Nora Guthrie.

Nora Guthrie & Mike Regenstreif (2017)

Nora Guthrie
Woody Guthrie’s daughter – recently announced her retirement after 33 years as President of the Woody Guthrie Foundation and Woody Guthrie Publications. Nora was also the founder of the Woody Guthrie Archive and co-founder of the Woody Guthrie Center in Tulsa, Oklahoma. Prior to working with the Woody Guthrie Foundation, Nora had a career as a modern dancer – following in the footsteps of her mother, Marjorie Mazia Guthrie, who had been a member of the famed Martha Graham Dance Company.

Over the past 33 years, Nora was responsible for many Woody Guthrie projects including books, films, concerts, festivals and other events, and the unearthing of thousands of previously unheard Woody Guthrie songs that existed only as lyrics in the Woody Guthrie Archive. One of Nora’s greatest accomplishments was finding the right composers to set those lyrics to music. The songs on this show are just a small sampling of Nora’s work in that regard.

Billy Bragg & Wilco- I Guess I Planted
Mermaid Avenue (Elektra)

Cole Quest & The City Pickers- Way Over Yonder in the Minor Key
Self [En] Titled (Omnivore) 
Folk Uke- California Stars
Starfucker (Folk Uke)
Cathy Fink & Marcy Marxer- Birds and Ships
Postcards (Community Music)

Sarah Lee Guthrie & Johnny Irion- Be No Church Tonight
The Woody Guthrie Tribute Tour: Ribbon of Highway, Endless Skyway (Ribbon of Highway, Endless Skyway)
Lucinda Williams- House of Earth
Ghosts of Highway 20 (Highway 20)

Jackson Browne & Rob Wasserman- You Know the Night
Note of Hope: A Celebration of Woody Guthrie (429)

The Klezmatics- Holy Ground
Wonder Wheel: Lyrics by Woody Guthrie (Jewish Music Group)
Lisa Gutkin- From Here On In
From Here On In (Lisa Gutkin)
The Burns Sisters- God’s Promise
Wild Bouquet (Ithaca)
Wenzel- Ninety Mile Wind 
Ticky Tock: Wenzel Sings Woody Guthrie (Conträr Musik) 

John McCutcheon- Harness Up the Day
This Land: Woody Guthrie’s America (Appalsongs)
Lucy Kaplansky- This Morning I Am Born Again
Reunion (Red House)
Joel Rafael Band- Ramblin’ Reckless Hobo
Woodyboye: Songs of Woody Guthrie (and Tales Worth Telling) Volume II (Appleseed)
The Del McCoury Band- Family Reunion
Del and Woody (McCoury Music)

Mike Regenstreif, Nora Guthrie, Kris Kristofferson & Jimmy LaFave (2007)

Jimmy LaFave- Salvation Train
Peace Town (Music Road)
Dropkick Murphys- Watchin’ the World Go By
Okemah Rising: Lyrics of Woody Guthrie (Dummy Luck Music)

Arlo Guthrie- My Peace
Here Come the Kids (Rising Son)

Next week: When the Saints Go Marching In.

--Mike Regenstreif

Saturday, July 16, 2022

Stranger Songs with Mike Regenstreif – CKCU – Tuesday July 19, 2022: Songs of Woody Guthrie, Part 2 – “New” Songs from the Archives


Stranger Songs with Mike Regenstreif finds connections and develops themes in various genres. The show is broadcast on CKCU in Ottawa on Tuesdays from 3:30 until 5 pm (Eastern time) and is also available 24/7 for on-demand streaming.

CKCU can be heard live at 93.1 FM in Ottawa and https://www.ckcufm.com/ on the web.

This episode of Stranger Songs was prerecorded and can already be streamed on-demand by clicking on “Listen Now” at … https://cod.ckcufm.com/programs/595/56977.html

Theme: Songs of Woody Guthrie, Part 2 – “New” Songs from the Archives.


In the 1990s, Nora Guthrie, Woody Guthrie’s daughter who was then maintaining the Woody Guthrie Archives, discovered the lyrics to literally thousands of songs that Woody Guthrie wrote that he never set to music or whose tunes were never recorded and lost. Nora began to distribute sets of lyrics to contemporary musicians she thought would bring these songs to life. On this show, we’re listening to some of those songs.

Visit https://www.woodyguthrie.org/ for more information on Woody Guthrie.

Sarah Lee Guthrie & Johnny Irion- Folksong
Folksong (RTE 8)

Billy Bragg & Wilco- Walt Whitman’s Niece
Mermaid Avenue (Elektra)
Folk Uke- California Stars
Starfucker (Folk Uke)
Dave Carter & Tracy Grammer- Way Over Yonder in the Minor Key
Little Blue Egg (Red House)
Cathy Fink & Marcy Marxer- Birds and Ships
Postcards (Community Music)

The Del McCoury Band- The New York Trains
Del and Woody (McCoury Music)
Ellis Paul & Vance Gilbert- This Morning I am Born Again
Side of the Road (Philo)

The Klezmatics- Mermaid’s Avenue
Wonder Wheel: Lyrics by Woody Guthrie (Jewish Music Group)
Lisa Gutkin- Gonna Get Through This World
From Here On In (Lisa Gutkin)
Wenzel- I Don’t Feel at Home on the Bowery No More
Ticky Tock: Wenzel Sings Woody Guthrie (Conträr Musik)
Jonatha Brooke- Madonna on the Curb
The Works (Bad Dog)

Mike Regenstreif, Nora Guthrie, Kris Kristofferson & Jimmy LaFave talking about Woody Guthrie at the 2007 Ottawa Folk Festival

Eliza Gilkyson
- Beach Haven
2020 (Red House)
Jimmy LaFave- Peace Town
Peace Town (Music Road)
Janis Ian- I Hear You Sing Again
Best of Janis Ian: The Autobiography Collection (Rude Girl)
Corey Harris- Teabag Blues
Greens from the Garden (Alligator)

John McCutcheon- Old Cap Moore
This Land: Woody Guthrie’s America (Appalsongs)
Madeleine Peyroux & Rob Wasserman- Wild Card in the Hole
Note of Hope: A Celebration of Woody Guthrie (429)
Joel Rafael Band- Dance a Little Longer
Woodeye: Songs of Woody Guthrie (Inside Recordings)
Lucinda Williams- House of Earth
Ghosts of Highway 20 (Highway 20)

Arlo Guthrie- My Peace
Here Come the Kids (Rising Son)

Next week: On the Road Again.

Find me on Facebook. facebook.com/mikeregenstreif

--Mike Regenstreif

Tuesday, May 17, 2016

The Del McCoury Band – Del and Woody



THE DEL McCOURY BAND
Del and Woody
McCoury Music

As I’ve noted before, Woody Guthrie’s astounding writing career – not just songs; also books, poems, letters, newspaper columns and more – was brief, less than 20 years. He began in the mid-1930s and it was over by about 1954 when he was hospitalized with Huntington’s disease, the hereditary neurological disease that eventually robbed him of his life in 1967 at just 55.

“It wasn’t too much time after Woody’s death that I, as a teenager, discovered his songs, books and records. I’ve been listening and reading for [almost 50] years. More recently, I’ve been fascinated with the work that Nora Guthrie has been doing to bring the thousands of her father’s unheard songs back to life.

“When I first began listening to Woody Guthrie records, and to others doing Woody Guthrie songs, back in the 1960s, it was commonly said that Woody was so driven to write that he must have written about a thousand songs. Through Nora’s work at the Woody Guthrie Archives, we now know there were many more songs, about 3,000, and most of them have never been heard. Whatever tunes or melodies Woody wrote or adapted for them are forgotten or were never known.

“Over the past two decades, some of these songs have come to life in new musical settings by a wide variety of artists – some in album-length projects, some in one-off settings. Among my favorite album-length projects have been Wonder Wheel by the Klezmatics, Ticky Tock by the German artist Wenzel, and Note of Hope by various artists in collaboration with Rob Wasserman. What never fails to astound me is how wide-ranging Woody’s writing was – all of these newly come-to-light songs revealing more clues into the Guthrie mystery – and how adaptable his writing was to so many different styles and musical genres and how it continues to speak to very varied artists.”

Bluegrass legend Del McCoury is another of Nora’s great choices for setting Woody’s lyrics to music. Steeped in traditional bluegrass – he played guitar and sang lead vocals with Bill Monroe and the Blue Grass Boys for a time in the early-1960s – and is widely regarded as one of bluegrass music’s greatest standard bearers. He’s been unafraid of looking for material beyond the bluegrass rules and he’s done some great collaborations with artists ranging from Steve Earle to the Preservation Hall Jazz Band.

On Del and Woody, Del adds a dozen “new” songs to the Guthrie canon while creating one of the best bluegrass albums I’ve heard in years. The lyrics are all Woody’s set to melodies by Del.

The album begins in terrific form with “The New York Trains,” a song Woody wrote in 1940 after his first family – wife Mary Guthrie and their three kids – came by train from Texas to join him in New York. Woody humorously describes the family’s first exposure to New York’s expansive subway system.

Woody’s humor can also be seen in such songs as “Wimmen’s Hats,” a bumpkinny – but good-natured – spoof of women’s headwear; “Cheap Mike,” a complaint about a used car dealer who sold him a “‘48 motor on a ’32 frame”; and “Californy Gold,” a tale of a California Gold Rush prospector who loses his fortune to a gold digger.

Among the most poignant songs are “Left in This World All Alone,” sung by a man left without family or friends, and “Family Reunion,” in which Woody encourages families to stick together and support one another.

Other highlights include a love song, “Because You Took Me in Out of the Rain,” and “The Government Road,” sung from the perspective of an ex-con who finds employment building new roads.

Throughout the album Del, who sings lead and plays guitar, is supported by his virtuoso band – sons Ronnie McCoury on mandolin and Rob McCoury on banjo, Jason Carter on fiddle and Alan Bartram on upright bass, all of whom sing harmony vocals – perhaps the greatest traditional bluegrass band currently active.

Find me on Twitter. twitter.com/@mikeregenstreif

And on Facebook. facebook.com/mikeregenstreif

--Mike Regenstreif

Sunday, May 13, 2012

Jay Farrar, Will Johnson, Anders Parker & Yim Yames – New Multitudes


JAY FARRAR, WILL JOHNSON, ANDERS PARKER & YIM YAMES
New Multitudes
Rounder Records

Woody Guthrie’s astounding writing career – not just songs; also books, poems, letters, newspaper columns and more – was brief, less than 20 years. He began in the mid-1930s and it was over by about 1954 when he was hospitalized with Huntington’s disease, the hereditary neurological disease that eventually robbed him of his life in 1967 at just 55.

It wasn’t too much time after Woody’s death that I, as a teenager, discovered his songs, books and records. I’ve been listening and reading for about 45 years. More recently, I’ve been fascinated with the work that Nora Guthrie has been doing to bring the thousands of her father’s unheard songs back to life.

When I first began listening to Woody Guthrie records, and to others doing Woody Guthrie songs, back in the 1960s, it was commonly said that Woody was so driven to write that he must have written about a thousand songs. Through Nora’s work at the Woody Guthrie Archives, we now know there were many more songs, about 3,000, and most of them have never been heard. Whatever tunes or melodies Woody wrote or adapted for them are forgotten or were never known.

Over the past two decades, some of these songs have come to life in new musical settings by a wide variety of artists – some in album-length projects, some in one-off settings. Among my favourite album-length projects have been Wonder Wheel by the Klezmatics, Ticky Tock by the German artist Wenzel, and last fall’s Note of Hope by various artists in collaboration with Rob Wasserman. What never fails to astound me is how wide-ranging Woody’s writing was – all of these newly come-to-light songs revealing more clues into the Guthrie mystery – and how adaptable his writing was to so many different styles and musical genres and how it continues to speak to very varied artists.

The four artists featured on New Multitudes are alt-country and indie rock veterans Jay Farrar, Anders Parker, Will Johnson and Yim Yames (Jim James). Their settings range from folkish to full tilt rock ‘n’ roll and the album is available in two versions: a single CD with 12 songs and a 2-CD deluxe set with an additional 11.

The CD booklet – at least in the deluxe version – has reproductions of Woody’s original lyrics to the 23 songs. And while a few songs are not dated, they date from as early as 1938 to as late as December 1954 when Woody was already hospitalized. It’s fascinating to me, as someone who is familiar with the narrative of Woody’s life, to listen to the songs within the context of when they were written.

Several were written during World War II when Woody served in the merchant marine and army. “Hoping Machine,” written in June 1942, and set to music here by Farrar, are words of advice and inspiration that seem simultaneously universal to everyone and particular to Woody himself. “When I Get Home,” written in 1944 and set to music by Parker, is written from the perspective of a soldier who’s seen too much of war but who also knows there’s much to be done in the fight for social justice at home. And “Atomic Dance,” written about seven weeks after the atomic bombs were dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, and set to music here by Farrar, would seem to be a metaphorical attempt to understand the dawning of the nuclear age.

Several others were written during Woody’s Coney Island period, in the years after the War, when he was married to Marjorie Mazia Guthrie and they were raising their young children (including Arlo and Nora).

Among them is “Fly High,” set to music by Parker, perhaps the sweetest sounding song on the two CDs. It seems to be sung by a man who has walked out on love but is returning again, like he has before, to the love he regrets having messed up. Another is “My Revolutionary Mind,” set to music by Yames, in which Woody iterates his need for a woman who shares his political views.

A bunch of the songs date from the early-1950s, when Woody, already showing signs of Huntington’s disease spent time in California. Earlier songs from this period, like “Old L.A.,” written by Woody in 1950 and set to music by Parker are more lucid than some of the later ones. “Old L.A.,” actually sounds like it could have been an Eagles song from the 1970s.

But, Woody’s own understanding that something is wrong shows through in later songs. In “Talking Empty Bed Blues,” written in 1952 and set to music by Yames, Woody writes, “My neighbors all see me stumblin’ home; They c’n see there’s something pretty bad wrong.”

Another from that period is “San Antone Meat House.” The ‘meat house’ in question here is a brothel and the song is sung from the perspective of a prostitute whose life has pretty much been destroyed by her years in the meat house. It’s a scarier, more graphic step inside the more familiar house of the Rising Sun.

Scarier still is “Dope Fiend Robber,” written by Woody in December 1953 and set to music by Parker. It’s sung from the perspective of a strung out junkie who will stop at literally nothing to feed his jones and is filled with the kind of language and characterizations they now warn us about on cable TV movie channels. I have, of course, heard Woody’s recordings of traditional outlaw ballads like “Bad Lee Brown (Little Sadie)” and his own outlaw ballads like “Pretty Boy Floyd,” but those criminals were almost choir boys in comparison to the dope fiend robber.

A couple of songs written after Woody was hospitalized are particularly fascinating.

In “No Fear,” written December 8, 1954 at Brooklyn State Hospital, and set to music by Johnson, Woody writes like a man at peace with the inevitable given his illness, that he’s ready for death – a death that would actually be 13 years in coming.

And, in “Old Kokaine,” written that same month and set to music by Farrar, he writes like a man close to death, but not at peace thanks to the substances that he thought might have numbed the pain over the years of his deterioration – but didn’t.

The effects of Huntington’s disease can even be seen in the reproductions of Woody’s handwritten lyrics in the CD booklet. Compare his handwriting on those two songs to his handwriting of even a year or two earlier and then to the much earlier work.


There is much more in other songs beyond those I’ve mentioned. The lyrics on most of the songs on the album date from a period in which the United States was in the grip of McCarthyism and striding almost blindly into the age of nuclear proliferation and there are references to such developments in several songs.

As these songs – and others that have surfaced from the Archives over the past 20 years – reveal, Woody Guthrie was a much more complex thinker and writer than we ever could have known. Each of these projects of songs from the Archives fills in just a little bit more of our understanding.

Note: This review is based on the 2-CD deluxe edition of New Multitudes. A single CD version (the first of the two CDs in the deluxe version) is also available. But some of the songs I’ve mentioned are only available in the deluxe version.

Pictured: Mike Regenstreif, Nora Guthrie, Kris Kristofferson and Jimmy LaFave talk about the enduring legacy of Woody Guthrie at the 2007 Ottawa Folk Festival.

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--Mike Regenstreif