Struggle (Woody Guthrie album)

Struggle is an album released by Folkways Records as a vinyl LP (catalogue no. FA 2485) in 1976 and as a CD in 1990.[1] It contains recordings by folk artist Woody Guthrie, accompanied on some of the tracks by Cisco Houston and Sonny Terry. Songs on this album are commonly referred to as protest music, songs that are associated with a movement for social change.[2]

The 1976 LP contains a 12-page booklet containing the complete lyrics of each song and detailed stories about many of them. In the boolklet, Moses Asch, then the director of Folkways Records, wrote the following as a general introduction: "This album came about this way: It was originally called 'STRUGGLE: DOCUMENTARY #1' and I issued it in 1946 on ASCH RECORDS. I had recorded the 6 songs, Pretty Boy Floyd, Buffalo Skinners, Union Burying Ground, Lost John, Ludlow Massacre, and The 1913 Massacre, on Woody's insistence that there should be a series of records depicting the struggle of working people in bringing to light their fight for a place in the America that they envisioned. ... The other songs are from my recordings of Woody during the many years that he was associated with me in ASCH, DISC, and FOLKWAYS RECORDS."[3]

The album is dedicated to Marjorie Guthrie and Pete Seeger.

Track listing

  1. Struggle Blues
  2. A Dollar Down and a Dollar a Week
  3. Get Along Little Doggies
  4. Hang Knot
  5. Waiting at the Gate
  6. The Dying Miner
  7. Union Burying Ground
  8. Lost John
  9. Buffalo Skinners
  10. Pretty Boy Floyd
  11. Ludlow Massacre
  12. 1913 Massacre

References

  1. "Struggle (SWF40025)". Smithsonian Folkways. Archived from the original on 4 July 2007. Retrieved 30 May 2011.
  2. "To protest is to verbalize a dissatisfaction with the status quo," Elizabeth J. Kizer, "Protest Song Lyrics as Rhetoric," Popular Music and Society IX, No. 1 (1983): 3.
  3. Struggle by Woody Guthrie, Folkways Records & Service Corp., New York City, 1976
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 9/14/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.