![]() ![]() Future songwriters can learn from the honesty, the courage, the simplicity, and the frankness of these hard-hitting songs. ![]() “Music is one of the things that will save us. “Now, at the turn of the century, the millennium, what’s the future of these songs?” he asks. But more important, he tells us what’s right and why it still matters, noting songs that have become famous the world over: “Union Maid,” “Which Side Are You On?,” “Worried Man Blues,” “Midnight Special,” and “Tom Joad.” With characteristic modesty, he tells us what’s missing and what’s wrong with the collection. In his afterword, Pete Seeger recounts the long history of collecting and publishing this anthology of Depression-era, union-hopeful, and New Deal melodies. Twenty-seven years in the making (1940-67), this tapestry of nearly two hundred American popular and protest songs was created by three giants of performance and musical research: Alan Lomax, indefatigable collector and preserver Woody Guthrie, performer and prolific balladeer and Pete Seeger, entertainer and educator who has introduced three generations of Americans to their musical heritage. ![]()
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