Although it wasn't until the folk revival and folk-rock movements of the 1960s that the protest song was a widely recognized wing of popular music in the U.S., there had been socially conscious protest songs of sorts since the dawn of the recording age. This compilation assembles 20 of them, and refreshingly, it doesn't emphasize material from the roots of the folk revival (though there's certainly some of that). Instead, this comes from all over the roots music map, from country-blues and old-timey folk/country artists to gospel, hillbilly, and Western swing. There are certainly a number of famous artists and classic songs here, including the Sons of the Pioneers' "Old Man Atom," Bessie Smith's "Nobody Knows You When You're Down and Out," Big Bill Broonzy's "Black, Brown and White," Billie Holiday's "Strange Fruit," and Woody Guthrie's "1913 Massacre." There are, too, sides by Bill Monroe (as part of the Monroe Brothers), Uncle Dave Macon, Memphis Minnie, and even Gene Autry, who shows a surprising and little-known side of his repertoire with "The Death of Mother Jones," inspired by the labor activist Mary Harris Jones.
Many of these tracks are not "protest" songs in the angry and earnest sense that many listeners associate with the style; they often take a more lightly satirical, even a congenial approach. The enjoyable novelty tinged pieces on the then-new threat of atomic energy ("Old Man Atom," the Golden Gate Quartet's alternately somber and swinging gospel number "Atom and Evil," Billy Hughes and His Rhythm Buckeroos' "Atomic Sermon") remind us of how ambivalently the nuclear threat was viewed when it was a new thing, and how songs commenting on it sounded rather like they were whistling in the dark. If you do want songs that were more audible ancestors of the folk revival, however, they're here in cuts like Josh White, Millard Lampbell, and the Almanac Singers' "Billy Boy" and Lee Hayes with the Almanac Singers' "The Dodger Song," the Almanac Singers being a huge influence in getting said folk revival off the ground in the middle of the 20th century. Whatever your sociopolitical perspective, this is impressive on purely musical and lyrical grounds, and can be enjoyed for those qualities alone. This isn't the most extensive anthology constructed along this theme: Bear Family's massive ten-CD box "Songs for Political Action: Folk Music, Topical Songs, and the American Left, 1926-1953" obviously has more. But as a single-disc overview of some notable entries in the genre, this is fine, with informative historical liner notes.
VA - Protest! American Protest Songs 1928 - 1953
(320 kbps, front cover included)
Tracklist:
1.The Sons Of The Pioneers – Old Man Atom
2.Texas Jim Robertson – The Last Page Of Mein Kampf
3.Lee Hayes & the Almanac Singers – The Dodger Song
4.Bessie Smith – Nobody Knows You When You’re Down & Out
5.Dave Macon – We’re Up Against It Now
6.Big Bill Broonzy – Black, Brown & White
7.Slim Smith – Bread Line Blues
8.The Golden Gate Quartet – Atom & Evil
9.The Monroe Brothers – The Forgotten Soldier Boy
10.Memphis Minnie – Hustlin’ Woman Blues
11.Harry McClintock – Fifty Years From Now
12.Mississippi Sheiks – Sales Tax ‘34
13.Josh White, Millard Lampell & the Almanac Singers – Billy Boy
14.Billy Hughes & the Rhythm Buckeroos – Atomic Serman
15.Dave McCarn – Poor Man, Rich Man
16.Gene Autry – The Death Of Mother Jones
17.Billie Holiday – Strange Fruit
18.Furry Lewis – Judge Harsh Blues
19.Ernest V Stoneman & His Dixie Mountaineers -All I’ve Got Is Gone
20. Woody Guthrie – 1913 Massacre
22 Kommentare:
Gruess Gott! This collection looks interesting; however, I cannot get the link to work and note that it is not the same color as the links that work. Regardless, I greatly appreciate your efforts to keep protest and folk music from the U. S. alive. You perform a great service by helping us to not forget our past and those who sacrificed to enrich and improve our lives.
It works. Thanks for the quick response.
All the best to you!
Link is dead, even when cut and pasted
Link is dead, even when cut and pasted
oops! Dead link...
Thank you for sharing so many interesting works! I greatly appreciate your efforts. I too had difficulties getting this download. Bizarrely, that was with Google Chrome. I had to go away and do something. When I returned about an hour later, I used Internet Explorer and it all worked smoothly. Often if I have problems, it works the other way around (Chrome working when IE doesn't).
Hi everyone! Same here, the link doesn't work even when pasted.
Regardless, the collection is very very interesting.
I checked the link with IE and Chrome - it worked in both cases. Please try one more time, hope you get the music. And thanks for your feedback!
No. Unfortunately the links still seems to be dead. Pity cause the songs look great.
sorry but the link has expired,because it is an old link, so it is not possible to download, please give a new link,regards, robyn
I checked the link again - it definitly works. So please try again... Greetings!
Your advice is correct. For whatever reason the link failed to work on Mozilla Firefox but worked fine on Internet Explorer. Thank you for re-posting it.
For me the link doesn't work in Firefox,Chrome,Opera and IE and for several days. If anyone else has this problem, try Soulseek.
Does not work for me either (in ALL browesers I tried).
And the direct link seems to be DEAD.
the pasted link http://www57.zippyshare.com/v/bh7vqDmi/file.html does not work!
Hello Zero, something is strange here. can you please check.
Nope, nothing works.
Still does not work across 4 different browsers. Problem is on your side.
Now there is a fresh link. Best wishes!
Helpful hint: If the page won't relay to a download page, view the opening page in 'elements', which is a feature of a drop down menu on your secondary button. Scan the results for a likely URL. That's your download URL. I can't say why the page won't operate as expected but the process I outlined works.
Dear Sir, restore?
Bless...
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