Ballads of Sacco & Vanzetti [Original recording remastered]
Ballads of Sacco & Vanzetti [Original recording remastered]
Track Listings
| 1. Flood and the Storm |
| 2. Two Good Men |
| 3. I Just Want to Sing Your Name |
| 4. Red Wine |
| 5. Suassos Lane |
| 6. You Souls of Boston |
| 7. Old Judge Thayer |
| 8. Vanzetti's Rock |
| 9. Vanzetti's Letter |
| 10. Root Hog and Die |
| 11. We Welcome to Heaven |
| 12. Sacco's Letter to His Son |
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com
In 1945, Folkways Records founder Moses Asch commissioned Woody Guthrie to document in song the tale of Sacco and Vanzetti. The United States had wrongly convicted the two Italian immigrants, both anarchist labor organizers, of murder and executed them in Boston in the 1920s. Compare their case to the O.J. Simpson trial with its publicity circus, questionable witnesses, tainted evidence (even a hat that didn't fit), and the deep social divisions it brought to light. Compare the music Guthrie made for the recently released Dead Man Walking soundtrack, with its themes of dignity, justice, and capital punishment. Better yet, compare these songs to The Ghost of Tom Joad, Bruce Springsteen's Guthriesque look at the still-hot issues of immigration and worker exploitation. Whatever you compare it to, the newly reissued Ballads of Sacco & Vanzetti--with its 50-year-old songs and 70-year-old story--is as relevant today as ever.
With only his rambling guitar and raw voice, Guthrie offers eleven takes on what was the first "trial of the century." Using stock folk melodies and techniques, the songwriter first paints a backdrop of postwar prosperity and growing worker unrest, then introduces characters, narrates details of the trial, explains political motivations, reports the city's mood, relays the men's last plea of innocence, then ends by musing on a world full of misunderstanding. Guthrie--a people's poet if ever there were one--never meshed his humanism and his politics better than he did here, and few album reissues have been more worth hearing.
--Roni Sarig
--This text refers to the
Audio CD
edition.
Product Description
Woody Guthrie was one of the twentieth century's greatest poets and songwriters, and his songs about Sacco and Vanzetti include some of his best songs. The murder trial of Sacco and Vanzetti was one of this century's most controversial. Sacco and Vanzetti's story was dramatic; their front-page trial was filled with dubious procedures; and the years of appeals and their eventual execution led to protests around the world. These songs, written and recorded nearly twenty years later, have been carefully remastered from the original acetate discs and are presented with a previously unpublished letter by Guthrie to the judge in the case. Produced by Moses Asch. Reissue compiled by Anthony Seeger and Jeff Place.
--This text refers to the
Audio CD
edition.
Ballads of Sacco & Vanzetti,Woody Guthrie,Smithsonian Folkways,Field Recordings,Folk & Traditional,Political Folk,Pop,Traditional Folk
Average customer rating:
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Ballads of Sacco & Vanzetti
Woody Guthrie Manufacturer: Smithsonian Folkways ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000001DJ0 Release Date: 1996-02-20 |
Tracks:
Amazon.com
In 1945, Folkways Records founder Moses Asch commissioned Woody Guthrie to document in song the tale of Sacco and Vanzetti. The United States had wrongly convicted the two Italian immigrants, both anarchist labor organizers, of murder and executed them in Boston in the 1920s. Compare their case to the O.J. Simpson trial with its publicity circus, questionable witnesses, tainted evidence (even a hat that didn't fit), and the deep social divisions it brought to light. Compare the music Guthrie made for the recently released Dead Man Walking soundtrack, with its themes of dignity, justice, and capital punishment. Better yet, compare these songs to The Ghost of Tom Joad, Bruce Springsteen's Guthriesque look at the still-hot issues of immigration and worker exploitation. Whatever you compare it to, the newly reissued Ballads of Sacco & Vanzetti--with its 50-year-old songs and 70-year-old story--is as relevant today as ever.With only his rambling guitar and raw voice, Guthrie offers eleven takes on what was the first "trial of the century." Using stock folk melodies and techniques, the songwriter first paints a backdrop of postwar prosperity and growing worker unrest, then introduces characters, narrates details of the trial, explains political motivations, reports the city's mood, relays the men's last plea of innocence, then ends by musing on a world full of misunderstanding. Guthrie--a people's poet if ever there were one--never meshed his humanism and his politics better than he did here, and few album reissues have been more worth hearing.
--Roni Sarig
Album Description
Woody Guthrie was one of the twentieth century's greatest poets and songwriters, and his songs about Sacco and Vanzetti include some of his best songs. The murder trial of Sacco and Vanzetti was one of this century's most controversial. Sacco and Vanzetti's story was dramatic; their front-page trial was filled with dubious procedures; and the years of appeals and their eventual execution led to protests around the world. These songs, written and recorded nearly twenty years later, have been carefully remastered from the original acetate discs and are presented with a previously unpublished letter by Guthrie to the judge in the case. Produced by Moses Asch. Reissue compiled by Anthony Seeger and Jeff Place.Customer Reviews:
Woody Guthrie sings his ballads of Sacco & Vanzetti.......2002-02-20
These songs were composed and sung by Guthrie in 1946-47, who had trouble completing the commission. Guthrie was bothered by not only the obligation to do justice to the topic but the limitations of 78 rpm recordings because he felt he had more to say that what could be done in the 4 1/2 minutes. This is why Vanzetti's letter to his son was done in two parts, since it could not fit on one side of a record. The result is a passionate, raw example of the art of folk singing by the nation's greatest balladeer. "Two Good Men," one of the best known compositions in the set, tells of how Sacco & Vanzetti "Left me here to sing this song." Guthrie sings about the details of the crime, the prejudicial behavior of the judge, and the witnesses for and against the pair. This is important because there whatever Guthrie chooses to sing about is always intensely personal, which explains why he has been so inspirational to singers from Bob Dylan to Bruce Springsteen.
The linear notes contain the song texts taken from one of Guthrie's songbooks. These do not always jive with what is on the recordings, but the point is that Guthrie sometimes changed the lyrics as he sang. The last track on this album, "Sacco's Letter to his Son," was set to music and sung by Pete Seeger, who wrote and recorded the song in 1951. As a postscript the booklet includes Guthrie's letter to Judge Thayer (circa 1947?). Thayer did in 1933, seven months after his home was bombed. The letter offers even more evidence of how great was Guthrie's emotional involvement in both this case and this cycle of songs. American History classes studying the Sacco & Vanzetti case would greatly benefit from listening to a couple of these songs. This is an important work of folk music that richly deserved to be preserved in this manner.
ESSENTIAL DOCUMENT OF THE TIMES AND THE MUSICIAN.......2002-01-03
Then go listen to Bragg's "Mermaid Avenue" for some more.
You'll be glad you did.
Wonderful Telling Of A Heartbreaking Story.......2000-09-03
Music Review:
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