Subject: RE: Little known '60s Folk Singers From: GUEST,Bruce Yasgur Date: 03 Apr 11 - 07:13 PM Hi, All. I'm still a little-known folksinger, alive and well in the Philly area. Minor correction: Max was my cousin, but was certainly old enough to have been my uncle. |
Subject: RE: Little known '60s Folk Singers From: Art Thieme Date: 20 Mar 11 - 08:28 PM RE: JUDY BRIGHT. She is in and around Evanston, Illinois these days. (I talked to her last week.) For many years she taught school. Sadly, that Dot Records LP was the only one she ever did put out. My copy is long gone. I did manage to put it on a cassette -- along with a few live things by Judy at the No Exit Coffeehouse--circa 1960s-70s. She helps her husband, Mike Stein, put out the magazine called "Film Fax" which is devoted to some of the strangest science fiction films, interviews ephemera, flotsam and jetsam that I've ever seen offered anywhere. Actually a couple hundred thousand DVD reissues of films that only cult devotees could like. Still, I enjoy looking through Film Fax just to see what films I would never ever want to purchase. ---- As you can see, I am at a loss for words to describe the niche this magazine fills. To say it is science fiction is accurate, but also, saying that is a disservice to the really good Sci-Fi films that they feature also (sometimes). Also, Judy Bright (her maiden name) is, and has been, Judy Stein for many years. Back in the 60s I loved her music. BUT Dylan had nothing to do with that record. (He wasn't there then either. ;-) The hamonica was played on the song Tumbalalaika by Judy's then agent Jerry Adler---whose brother, Larry Adler, was a solo harmonica player of much repute a decade or two earlier.. Hope this helps you folks looking for her. Art Thieme |
Subject: RE: Little known '60s Folk Singers From: GUEST,Frank White Date: 20 Mar 11 - 12:49 AM Hello out there! I moved from Brisbane, Australia to Montreal in 1965 which spelled break-up for a young Brisbane group called Babayaga Trio (predates other groups of this name). Also in the trio were Murray Uhlmann (deceased) and Ray Gurney (very active in the Aussie folk music scene, in Sydney). The Montreal Folk Workshop became my favourite haunt from 65-69, and I launched a one man band act there (more energy than finesse, but it was fun): guitar, maraca (in running shoe), harmonica, kazoo and whistle. ... Flamenco jazz these days. Let's hear it for the lesser known from Moose Hall, 1960s! |
Subject: RE: Little known '60s Folk Singers From: NY Pinewoods Date: 02 Mar 11 - 09:35 AM Save this date! New York Pinewoods Folk Music Club (Folk Music Society of New York, Inc.) presents North American Urban Folk Music of the 1960s A Celebration and Tribute Saturday • October 22, 2011 1:00-10:00 PM Doors open 12:30 PM Confirmed participants: Alix Dobkin Jerry Epstein Luke Faust Bev Grant and the Dissident Daughters Charlie Ipcar Lisa Null Anne Price Jerry Rasmussen Peter Stampfel Heather Wood Other performers to be announced once confirmed. Schedule: 1:00-2:30 PM: The Great Folk Scare, an Overview of the 1960s 2:45-4:15 PM: Hoot in the Afternoon Round Robin – Part 1 4:30-6:00 PM: Hoot in the Afternoon Round Robin – Part 2 7:30-10:00 PM: Evening Concert Hosted by: Elisabeth Irwin High School – LREI 40 Charlton Street New York, NY 10014 Between Varick Street and Sixth Avenue www.folkmusicny.org |
Subject: RE: Little known '60s Folk Singers From: GUEST,magnettejake Date: 30 Jan 11 - 11:27 PM Haven't seen too much about SoCal in he 60s--lots of us tried to be folksingers. Here are some really little knowns: Melinda Rinker (now a prof at stanford), George Ball (who wrote Baxter's Flatpicking Manual), Steve Stapenhorst (AKA S. Stapen, S. Horst and S. Forest); Owens, Bob and Carol (from Texas--Owens Castleman had some success); Tim Morgon; Tom Carvey; Al Ellington; the Green Valley Clodsfrom Pasadena. |
Subject: RE: Little known '60s Folk Singers From: Thomas Stern Date: 12 Jan 11 - 09:45 PM looking for Judy Bright, or any other out of print LP - look on eBay, GEMM, musicstack, or google for other record dealers. Best wishes, Thomas. |
Subject: RE: Little known '60s Folk Singers From: GUEST Date: 12 Jan 11 - 08:45 PM Looking, looking....... what happened to 60's folk singer Judy Bright ????? Seems that at her Music on DOT, she was in good company with Bob Dylan, etc. Any music available anywhere?? Sherry |
Subject: RE: Little known '60s Folk Singers From: GUEST,Jon Marchett Date: 01 Jan 11 - 02:42 AM The Queen City Balladeers sang backup for the Mitchell Trio in their 1960's concerts in OH. |
Subject: RE: Little known '60s Folk Singers From: GUEST,Judy Hensdke (is still around) Date: 26 Dec 10 - 02:05 PM I don't know if she counts as little known but Judy Henske (High Flying Bird- pre Richie Havens) Wade in the Water, Salvation Army Band) Hooka Tooka (see my link about a new interpretation) is still around. She is still touring (a little( and he is a racious and seductive as ever.Not bad for somebody in her 70's. |
Subject: RE: Little known '60s Folk Singers From: sheila Date: 26 Dec 10 - 01:48 PM Guest Morgana (23 Jul 10)- Matt McGinn died in 1977, due to a fire. |
Subject: RE: Little known '60s Folk Singers From: Suffet Date: 25 Dec 10 - 10:03 PM A quick update: I went to visit Matt Jones at Mount Sinai Hospital in New York Cty earlier this week, but he was in a deep sleep. He has been hospitalized for several months already, and he looks like a shell of his former self. --- Steve |
Subject: RE: Little known '60s Folk Singers From: GUEST,Iberus Hacker Date: 25 Dec 10 - 02:49 PM As I remember, he introduced himself to me as Iberus J. Hacker. I met him in the late 60s / early 70's in Chattanooga. He was quite a character, but very talented and cared for humanity. |
Subject: RE: Little known '60s Folk Singers From: GUEST,guest Date: 24 Nov 10 - 12:26 AM Any info on Dorothy Callison of W. Va? I heard her on an Oscar Brand SSA program. |
Subject: RE: Little known '60s Folk Singers From: GUEST,Gandalf Date: 19 Nov 10 - 07:34 AM Know Don Crawford well...we had a common friend and in the early 70s he appeared on a PBS special called 'The Session" in addition to releasing several great albums. In fact, WoundedBird records has re-release three of them on CD and they sound as fresh as they did when they were released in the early 70s. Wish I knew where he was now...last time I heard anything about him was years ago when he was in Denver. |
Subject: RE: Little known '60s Folk Singers From: Don Firth Date: 11 Oct 10 - 02:28 PM I met Pat Foster on one occasion, back in the very late Fifties or very early Sixties. He came to Seattle looking for work singing. We made a few suggestions of places he could try, then one fellow I knew offered to put him up at his apartment. He didn't seem to care to mingle with any of the local singers at all. Kind of aloof. The friend later said that Foster never left the apartment, apparently expecting local impresarios to come looking for him. Never did check out the places we suggested. Then, my friend said that Foster rolled up his sleeping back, stuffed it into his back pack, picked up his guitar case, declared Seattle the nether orifice of the world, and left for other parts. A "difficult" and fairly unpleasant person indeed. A few weeks later, the fellow who ran the Folklore Center in Seattle's University district discovered that he had a record of Pat Foster in stock (Riverside, I think, but I'm not sure). He played it for me. Pat Foster was a darn good singer, and the record had some good stuff on it. I kind of got the impression that, in a way, he was his own worst enemy. Too bad. Sorry to hear about your loss, Kurt. Don Firth |
Subject: RE: Little known '60s Folk Singers From: Art Thieme Date: 10 Oct 10 - 11:01 PM to Kurt Foster, Thanks for telling us all that about Pat. I never met him but his music really did hit me where I've lived; the graphic songs from history---his renderings of California gold rush ballads--those brought him alive for me. In that sense, I'm glad I got to know him. The tune he had for "The California Boy" is the one I used for the Wisconsin lumber camp ballad called "The Pinery Boy." That good tune made the song quite popular there in Wisconsin and in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan. Those two songs along with "The Sailor Boy" --- from Britain---all had the same tale to tell; but the manner in which the "boy" made his living changed with the geography and culture involved. Again, thanks for taking the time to set us straight. Art Thieme |
Subject: RE: Little known '60s Folk Singers From: GUEST,Kurt Foster Date: 10 Oct 10 - 06:41 PM I've seen several references to my Father Pat Foster. It's nice to know he is remembered. I thought I would provide the details of what happened to him Pat passed away at age 61 in 1990 in Seaside CA at his Mother's home of a sudden heart attack after years of alcohol and tobacco abuse. As those who knew Pat, he could be a very "difficult" person. When drinking he was downright unpleasant and when sober he was at best miserable. Pat and my Mother divorced when I was a baby due to their being arrested in LA in regards to child neglect and abuse. I looked him up and finally met him when I was 14 years old. He was living with his then Wife Harriet in Sausilito CA and by that time he had pretty much stopped gigging. When I turned 18 we took a road trip in a VW bus to Yellowstone and we played some impromptu sets in a few small bars and bistros along the way. Pat was drinking quite heavily and trip ended when he wound up in the hospital in Yellowstone from a pancreatic attack. He went on to live many more years that he was supposed to spending his last years in the persona of a Catholic Priest of the American Catholic Church in the Salinas and Monterey area. His ashes are buried next to his Mother Hazel and his Uncle Robert Greene in the cemetery overlooking the lighthouse at Pacific Grove CA. I had the opportunity to produce and record Brownie McGhees final record just before Brownie passed away and in passing I ask him if he had know Pat. He said nothing but he gave me such a dirty look, I decided to drop it. Those who knew Pat probably understand. He was a great talent but he wasted it. He led a tortured existence due to some very bad experiences in the service of the OSA as a teen and I am comforted that in his passing he is finally at peace. Kurt Foster |
Subject: RE: Little known '60s Folk Singers From: Suffet Date: 24 Jul 10 - 07:09 AM Morgana, Lots of people you mention are still alive and actively performing, and there are several that I am in contact with. For example, I regularly see and speak with Paul Kaplan, since both he and I currently serve on the People's Music Network steering committee. Paul currently lives in Amherst, MA, where is teaches music and runs a concert series. The last I heard of Julius Lester he was also living in Amherst, but that was several years ago. He is a Professor Emeritus of African-American Studies and Judaic Studies at the University of Massachusetts Amherst, as well a the author of many books. Carolyn Hester tours with her two daughters, and they peform at the Peoples' Voice Cafe in New York City about once a year. Matt Jones lives in New York City and has been part of the local folk scene for many years. He has been seriously ill lately, and I visited him in Saint Luke's Hospital earlier this month. I believe Eric Andersen lives in Norway. He is still touring, and I've seen him here in New York three times in the past five years. Several people on your list have, of course, passed away. --- Steve |
Subject: RE: Little known '60s Folk Singers From: GUEST,Morgana Date: 23 Jul 10 - 07:41 PM Abby, could your San Fransisco folk singer Tom be Tom Parrott? He wrote "The Freedoms We've Been Fighting For," which is in Broadside Magazine, and I think he's still alive. I'm pretty sure I looked him up on wikipedia once. Many of the people whose names I've seen here appeared in Broadside Magazine. I'm too young to have been around in the '60's, and I always thought that anybody I knew the name of had to be well-known, otherwise I wouldn't know about them. But, there are several names in a Broadside songbook which my mother gave me that I've tried to look up online, and had no results. Of course, just because somebody isn't online now doesn't mean they weren't famous then, but I feel as if there would be some mention of their name somewhere if they were. I've noticed that several people have posted about David Cohen (I guess there are three David Cohens). In my Broadside songbook, there is a David Cohen mentioned who wrote "The Cruel Years," and "More Good Men Goin' Down," both anti-Vietnam songs. I wonder if he is one of the same ones you all have talked about? Also in the songbook are Alex Cohen and Bob Cohen. Probably unrelated, since Cohen is a common name. I'm going to list here some of the "little-known" song-writers who appear in my book, along with others whom I consider to be well-known: Eric Anderson - He wrote "My Land is a Good Land," and had a record (1965ish) called "'Bout Changes and Things." I own this, and it's the only record of his I've ever heard of. Rich Astle - He wrote "The Autumn Wind," which I love. I don't know what became of him, but I would like to know. Ed Carl Jimmy Collier - I think he was active in the poor people's movement with Fredrick Douglas Kirkpatrick "Everybody's Got a Right to Live." Joan Cosman Gail Dorsey and Emilie Gould Richard Farina - played the mountain dulcimer. Mimi Farina's husband. He wrote "Children of Darkness," and died tragically in a motorcycle accident. Bill Frederick Ricardo Gautreau Chris Gaylord Guillevic Carolyn Hester Matt Jones and Elain Laron Paul Kaplan Mike Kellin Peter Krug Peter La Farge - I think this is who wrote "As Long as the Grass Will Grow," and worked for Native American causes. He died young, but I'm not sure why. Julius Lester Walter Lowenfels Ernie Marrs Ric Masten Matt McGinn - He may be more well-known than I think. I've seen his name in other places besides Broadside. Will McLean - He wrote several songs about the history of his home state, Florida. He was also a WWII vet, and older than many of the younger folk-singers of the time. Jerry Moore Ronnie Peterson Vanessa Redgrave - A little-known singer, but a well-known actress and activist, I would guess. Malvina Reynolds - I don't consider her little-known, but nobody else seems to know who she is. She's one of my favorites. Norman A. Ross Teddi Schwartz Patrick Sky Mark Spoelstra Luis Valdez Carl Watanabee Billy Edd Wheeler Elain White Martin Wood Woody Wright If anybody has information about the people mentioned in this post, I'd like to know more about them. Feel free to correct me if I've listed someone who is actually quite famous as "little known." |
Subject: RE: Little known '60s Folk Singers From: Genie Date: 23 Jul 10 - 05:31 PM Among the good folksingers I heard when I lived in Greenwich Village in the early '60s but who are not well-known except maybe to real folkie "insiders" are Josh White's daughter Beverly, Peter & Isobel Gardner (very eclectic and both with classical musical training), and Bonnie Dobson. The latter two, as well as Carolyn Hester, Guy Carawan, and Judy Henske, were folksingers I discovered early on, by way of live performances or workshops and/or records, but who never really became big names. Then there are people like Andy Cohen who were hardly known in the '60s and even now are not as well known as their talent deserves. Andy spent a short time in Champaign-Urbana, IL, where I met him and he would entertain me and others, playing my old Martin guitar. I don't think he had done much songwriting at the time, but his guitar work and blues singing were very impressive even back then. Another excellent guitarist/singer/performer whom I knew in Philadelphia about 1970 was Max Yasgur's nephew Bruce Yasgur. DK if he ever did any recording but he was excellent. Someone's already mentioned the Seattle area folks like Don Firth, Nancy Quense, Stewart Hendrickson, Reggie Miles, Mike Nelson, Bob Nelson, Stan James, and Bruce Baker. And in the Portland, OR, area we had some excellent folkies such as Jinx Davis, Steve Culver (the same one mentioned before as a Seattle area musician?), Bo and Paul Parker, Bob Cotta, Mary Benson (both of the group "Howling Gael"), Kate Power & Steve Einhorn, Bill Murlin. I might add Baby Gramps and Jim Page, as well as Linda Allen and Linda Waterfall. And back about 1959, when I first "got into" folk music, I got a record by a folk trio called "The Coachmen." They were a lot like the Kingston Trio or The Limeliters, for what it's worth, but whatever you think of that type of "folk" music, they were excellent musicians. Then there are people like our own Mary Garvey, who have been writing and singing beautiful folk songs for decades - not sure if they all were doing that in the '60s though. |
Subject: RE: Little known '60s Folk Singers From: GUEST,Tim Shoben Date: 23 Jul 10 - 04:45 PM Hi Burl, Martin's my dad, so let me know what you want to know!! He'd be very happy someone remembers him & Harry. All the best, Tim |
Subject: RE: Little known '60s Folk Singers From: Larry The Radio Guy Date: 24 Jun 10 - 11:41 PM Good point! Sorry about that. But consider them now to have been mentioned. |
Subject: RE: Little known '60s Folk Singers From: BK Lick Date: 24 Jun 10 - 11:27 PM Saidman said: Re. the list compiled by BKLick. Where are Mickey Newbury and Tom Rapp? Two of the greatest.Well, if you will notice, the list purports only to be a compilation of names mentioned in this thread. The two you inquired about had not yet been mentioned, whereas the ones you instructed us to take out have been mentioned. —BK |
Subject: RE: Little known '60s Folk Singers From: Don Firth Date: 24 Jun 10 - 01:23 PM Don Crawford. Yes, I heard him once at The Ark in Vancouver, B.C. This would have been sometime in the late 1960s. Excellent! Don Firth |
Subject: RE: Little known '60s Folk Singers From: RoyH (Burl) Date: 24 Jun 10 - 06:03 AM Whatever happened to the two London boys Martin Shoben and Harry Vallins, known as 'The Haverim'? They were well known on the UK folk scene in the 1960's, singing Yiddish songs like 'Yoshke Fort Avec', and others like '9 Inch Nails'. |
Subject: RE: Little known '60s Folk Singers From: Larry The Radio Guy Date: 24 Jun 10 - 03:26 AM Re. the list compiled by BKLick. Where are Mickey Newbury and Tom Rapp? Two of the greatest. (and take out Eartha Kitt, Toots Thielman, and others who have nothing to do with folk, singer-songwriter, or roots music). |
Subject: RE: Little known '60s Folk Singers From: GUEST,Marvin Dockery Date: 29 May 10 - 10:13 AM I went often to the Hunt Club in Newport to listen to Jim, and drink an ale or two. He was buddies with several of my friends, and twice came to our house, at 82 mill street, for dinners prepared by our land lady, Berniece Woods. Jim has a new cd, to be released any day now, that features two of my 1962 images of him, and the destroyers at Newport. If you want to see the old 1962 photos of Jim check out his gallery at www.pbase.com/modelsmodels |
Subject: RE: Little known '60s Folk Singers From: GUEST Date: 22 May 10 - 05:50 PM Anyone know where Don Crawford is? I remember him from Vancouver between 1962-1968. Sounded like Richie Havens. Played 12-string. Great voice. Worked for Vancouver Life magazine 1962. Anyone know what happened to him? |
Subject: RE: Little known '60s Folk Singers From: GUEST,moonrider Date: 22 May 10 - 05:06 PM Anyone remember Don Crawford - great folk singer, played in Canada and the US, worked in Vancouver at Vancouver LIfe magazine. Played 12-sring and sounded like Richie Havens.I heard him in Vancouver 1962 nd again 1968 - played Hootenannies. Where is he now? |
Subject: RE: Little known '60s Folk Singers From: Larry The Radio Guy Date: 14 May 10 - 06:39 PM Alright, here's a couple who none of you are probably familiar with: (Maybe they qualify more as 70's rather than 60's). RICHARD WHITE: Played a lot in Edmonton (at The Hovel and The Edmonton Folk Club) as well as in Calgary and Winnipeg--plus the very first Frostbite Music Festival in Whitehorse. A great songwriter, the theme of many of his songs being the loss of traditional ways of life---with a Western Canadian focus. He put out 3 lp's on Tonic Records, the last one being adaptations of poetry by Icelandic/Canadian poet, Stephane Stephanson (sp?). Currently he's a history professor in Toronto. DALEN AND STOJAN: (Gary Dalen and Mike Stojan). From Grande Prairie, Alberta where the performed during the late 60's, early 70's--then disappeared. Great complex harmonies during a period of time when this wasn't "in". They played at the first Dawson City Music Festival in 1978 and nothing more has been heard of them. |
Subject: RE: Little known '60s Folk Singers From: GUEST,Gene Jaleski Date: 02 May 10 - 03:01 PM I am alive and well on a little island in the Gulf of Mexico. I loved being a part of the folk/hippie scene in the early sixties. Moved to Duvall in 1967 followed by Lahaina, Holly Weird, Lake Tahoe and here and now. I played six and twelve string and mostly rural blues. Seattle was a beautiful experience with beautiful characters and a story almost too special to tell. Link to me and friends in Duvall and Seattle in the sixties: http://picasaweb.google.com/geneonlbk/DuvallWashington19681975# |
Subject: RE: Little known '60s Folk Singers From: Suffet Date: 12 Apr 10 - 01:27 PM Frank, Thanks for those tidbits. --- Steve |
Subject: RE: Little known '60s Folk Singers From: Mark Ross Date: 11 Apr 10 - 11:24 AM Eugene, Oregon these days. Left The Big Core(the apple has long since been eaten) 34 years ago, Montana far 23 years, and then here. MarK Ross |
Subject: RE: Little known '60s Folk Singers From: GUEST,susan ruskin Date: 11 Apr 10 - 02:05 AM and aloha to you.....still in the city? |
Subject: RE: Little known '60s Folk Singers From: Stringsinger Date: 10 Apr 10 - 07:59 PM Steve, Pete Seeger told me that he cut his teeth as a performer on the Wallace campaign trail with Robeson. Learned to sing for large audiences. Tony was responsible for the arrangement used on "Micheal Row The Boat Ashore". Frank |
Subject: RE: Little known '60s Folk Singers From: Mark Ross Date: 09 Apr 10 - 10:09 PM Hello Susan, good to see you here. Mark Ross |
Subject: RE: Little known '60s Folk Singers From: GUEST Date: 09 Apr 10 - 08:50 PM aloha marco - i just found your postings on mudcat. i only check in every couple of years but i'm glad to have the opportunity to let you know i knew your dad briefly in 1966. we hitched together from greece to rome where we stayed a week or so with gordon mcintyre and his wife. had my first espresso. i liked your dad.....was sorry to hear he is no longer on the planet. i hope he had a good life. we were not in touch much after that summer. i went on to open a guitar store with my then significant other - store still there in nyc......umanov guitars. your dad would have loved all the old martins that passed through. i live in hawaii now.....have a bamboo nursery on the big island and a bunch of old guitars up in the loft. hope you have good memories of paul. though i only knew him briefly, i think he was a pretty good guy. and he sure made getting to rome easier and safer and more fun for me. aloha, and peace without bombs......susan ruskin (ex umanov). |
Subject: RE: Little known '60s Folk Singers From: Bettynh Date: 28 Mar 10 - 05:02 PM I remember seeing Tony Salatan on public television when it was on maybe 3 hours a day in the early 60s. Saturday afternoons had Julia Child, Pete Seeger's "Rainbow Quest" and sometimes Tony, but I don't remember the name of his program. |
Subject: RE: Little known '60s Folk Singers From: Suffet Date: 28 Mar 10 - 04:48 PM Frank, Tony Salretan did a program for the New York Pinewoods Folk Music Club just one year ago. The program featured songs from the 1948 Progressive Party campaign of Hentry Wallace. Carolyn Hester will be performing with her two daughters at the Peoples' Voice Cafe in New York City this coming May 15. --- Steve |
Subject: RE: Little known '60s Folk Singers From: iancarterb Date: 28 Mar 10 - 10:58 AM I love that list, Frank. Heard most on recordings, a few in the same room. One I knew of from an in-law was Tony Saletan, whom I missed at Pinewoods because I moved west, but finally met last year when he sang with Joe Hickerson in Seattle. He lives in Tacoma, and forever in 15 minute segemnts of in service-television for schools from the late fifties and early sixties. Carter Bannerman |
Subject: RE: Little known '60s Folk Singers From: Stringsinger Date: 27 Mar 10 - 06:44 PM The "lads" or the "boys" The Clancy Brothers and Tommy Makem brought Irish music to America through the folk revival. I worked with them and a wonderful guitarist who did great work with Odetta on Tradition Records (owned by Pat Clancy)................... Bruce Langhorne. Paul Clayton opened the Gate of Horn folk nightclub in Chicago. John Braheny mentioned the Fickle Pickle in Chicago. I played there with a trio on the off night and a new comedian used to come in and do impromptu sets ....Dick Gregory. Bob Gibson came in too. Does anyone remember Pat Foster or Woody Wachtel? Or Rolf Cahn? (I know Jo Mapes does because she posts here.) John Braheny, "Baby Let Me Follow You Down" by Eric Von Schmidt, Jim Rooney does a good job of chronicles from that time and preceding times. Lots of Club 47 folks there. Taj Majal and Ry Cooder were in a group called "The Rising Suns" The late Erik Darling influenced the pop folk scene with "The Banana Boat Song" running concurrently with Belafonte's and "Walk Right In", his rewrite of Gus Cannon's song with the Rooftop Singers. Broadside Magazine run by Cis Cunningham and Gordon Freisen featured some songwriters who weren't quite as famous as Paxton and Dylan (who they featured) such as Gil Turner. Len Chandler was part of that also. He later wrote songs for a weekly news show in Los Angeles on current events called "The Credibility Gap". Bernie Krause replaced me in the Weavers. He has an interesting autobio: In 1998, Heyday Books ," Into a Wild Sanctuary: A Life in Music and Natural Sound." Does anyone remember Jessie Benton (Tom Benton's daughter?) Some might remember Billy Faier, the banjo player. He innovated some interesting banjo styles as did Sandy Bull. Jim Rooney and Eric Von Schmidt. Joe Val and the New England bluegrass band, The Charles River Valley Boys. Around that time Geoff Muldaur, Maria and the influential Bill Keith (the father of melodic conjunct style banjo playing) were in Jim Kweskin's band at the Club 47 on Bow St. Cambridge. Ray Boguslav from New York. Children's songwriter Peter Alsop. Did anyone know that Jac Holzman of Elektra Records played flamenco guitar? Tony Saletan? Brookline MA. Molly Scott? Caroline Hester Anita Shearer? They were known by a small audience in the 60's. One of my fave folkies that I worked with at the Gate of Horn was Alan Mills (nee Alan Miller) who brought with him the greatest fiddler I've ever heard name Jeanny Carignan (Ti Jean) from Montreal.. I also worked with Brother John Sellers, a great fellow and fine gospel singer. Of course, if you remember the 60's, you weren't there. F. |
Subject: RE: Little known '60s Folk Singers From: GUEST,Bill French, Epsom, NH Date: 26 Mar 10 - 07:02 PM I hope this connects to the thread about Leonda and her ocelot. I worked in the same USAF shop at Otis AFB as Billy and used to hang out at their house in Sandwich, Ma. in 1964 - 1966 We used to go up to the Boston coffeehouses after we got off work at the base to listen to Leonda and other folk singers. I had a photo darkroom in their basement. When I got out the USAF from Goose Bay, Labrador, I stopped by their place in Cambridge and they had the ocelot then. I also remember then having a "Honey bear" (kinkajou?) at one point. Bill French Epsom, NH |
Subject: RE: Little known '60s Folk Singers From: GUEST,Marco Paolo McNeill Date: 23 Mar 10 - 10:46 AM "Children of the storm", the last album from Paul McNeill, my father is on www.paulmcneill.ch marco@paulmcneill.ch |
Subject: RE: Little known '60s Folk Singers From: Suffet Date: 21 Mar 10 - 08:12 AM Here's a double blast from the past! I heard both Matt Jones (ex-SNCC Freedom Singer) and Donal Leace perform at the Peoples' Voice Cafe in New York City last night (March 20, 2010). --- Steve |
Subject: RE: Little known '60s Folk Singers From: CC Ryder Date: 06 Mar 10 - 07:48 PM I sent a reply to this post but I am not sure if I did it right... I am Sam Cancilla's sisier. I live in Canada. Sam passed away on Sept 1st 2007 of heart failure in Ocala Florida. I am glad to see he is remembered. He was an extremely talented man with a velvet voice. I miss him very much. Thank you |
Subject: RE:Little known '60s Folk Singers From: CC Ryder Date: 06 Mar 10 - 07:40 PM To the person who sent the post regarding Sam Cancilla/CC Ryder I am his sister, I live in Canada. Sam died on September 1st 2007 in Ocala Florida of heart failure. He was an amazing man and a wonerful singer, excepionally talented with a velvet voice. I am glad someone remembers him. Thank you. |
Subject: RE: Little known '60s Folk Singers From: Suffet Date: 06 Mar 10 - 10:39 AM Some sad news! I just learned that after nearly half a century in business under one name or another, the Bliss Gourmet Cafe in Kew Gardens, Queens, New York, finally closed its doors last week. All that is left is an empty corner storefront and FOR RENT signs. Under previous owners, the cafe had once been called the Interlude, and during the first half of the 1960s it was one of the important centers of the folk scene in New York City. At one time Michael Cooney lived in one of the apartments on the second floor of the building which housed the Interlude, and he often served as the MC for the Thursday open mic nights, then called hootenanny nights. Michael was also among the many who appeared as featured performers on Friday and Saturday nights. Others included Pat Sky, Dave Van Ronk, Eric Andersen, and Phil Ochs. In its most recent incarnation as the Bliss Gourmet Cafe, the venue continued to present live music, mostly local singer-songwriters. A year ago it hosted he Kew Gardens Music Festival, and I was invited to be the first performer in recognition of my connection to ithe past. Let's hope a new tenant comes along to reopen the cafe and continue its long tradition. --- Steve |
Subject: RE: Little known '60s Folk Singers From: GUEST,jan jarvis Date: 03 Mar 10 - 10:55 PM hi I am seeking anyone who has memories or recordings of Michael Atwood who used to play at the Pamir house in seattle-please respond to jbjmog////2gmail.com |
Subject: RE: Little known '60s Folk Singers From: GUEST,Eric Marchbein Date: 02 Mar 10 - 08:37 AM I stumbled upon this thread and really enjoyed reliving the 4 Winds scene. My brother, Ted, invited me to join the Hunker Hill String Band in 1965, so that makes me a little-known folksinger! The band was named for our childhood home in Hunker, PA. Ted died in '02. I saw Charlie Chin at the National Storytelling Festival in Jonesborough, TN about 5 years ago. He was a featured performer telling stories of the Chinese immigrant days in San Francisco. He was great! Jay Unger is no little-known folksinger. He is, of course, the composer of Ashokan Farewell, the theme song of Ken Burn's Civil War film. He still tours and performs. |
Subject: RE: Little known '60s Folk Singers From: GUEST,Jef Jaisun Date: 21 Feb 10 - 08:52 PM John -- Walt Barbee is still living in NE Seattle, or at least he's listed on the tax rolls, at 5751 29th Avenue NE. I know this 'cause in 1987 I wired his house! And that happened because Bryan Bowers talked me into re-wiring the massive, 100-year-old Bowers Towers a few years earlier. Then all my musician pals started passing me around like a joint with skills. :) The good news is I used the money to buy more guitars and tour Europe, and so far the houses haven't burned down. Alex Campbell told me he married Peggy Seeger because her visa had expired and she was facing deportation. After the marriage, he effectively "handed her off" to Ewan McColl. Peggy corroborated this when I talked to her circa 1990. Jef www.jaisunphoto.com |
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