The Mudcat Café TM
Thread #174287   Message #4227840
Posted By: GUEST,Wally Macnow
30-Aug-25 - 03:15 PM
Thread Name: Obit: Tony Saletan (1931-2025)
Subject: RE: Obit: Tony Saletan (1931-2025)
This from Molly Lynn Watt's public posting on Facebook. I think it's important to know Tony's contributions to the world of folk music.

"For almost 70 years now, Tony Saletan has been a close and important friend of mine. I was deeply saddened when I picked up the phone two days ago to hear Jill Rosenthal, speaking through tears, say, Tony died this morning. She had just lost her husband and was already doing the sad task of sharing the news.

So much of what is right in my life has been contributed to by Tony. In 1957 he and I joined forces with Manny Greenhill, Marcel Kisten, and Bob Gustafson to form what became the folk song society of greater Boston, FSSGB, still in existence, still making ways for people to share singing the old traditional songs and singing for the old causes. Tony was an excellent performer. Tony was the host of the first series of programs on public television for children, where they learned traditional songs from many cultures throughout the world. (Just intuitive DEI song lists, because that was Tony.) His program was broadcast in classrooms all over the country. Because of Tony, my donkey laughs, my donkey sings my donkey does most anything, Tingalay-o, come little donkey come, delighted thousands of children as they sang with him!

Tony was chosen by the US state department to represent the United States as a cultural ambassador, taking 16 months to travel around the world, teaching songs and learning songs from the people he met.
Tony often gave concerts and during his marriage with Irene Kossoy, they performed together, weaving, beautiful, harmonies to traditional tunes. Always learning, he decided at some point to take up the art of calling contra and Square dances. Most who knew him have danced to his calling, especially at the Annual NEFFA folk festival. He was a master leading dancers through complicated formations, and sometimes he did it through singing his calls, an art not many have mastered.Tony alone and with Irene released several records.

More recently Tony alongside his friend Joe Hickerson and his wife, Jill Rosenthal, researched and selected the the songs included in the play George and Ruth: songs and letters of the Spanish Civil War released as a CD on which he performed the songs with myself and my husband, Dan Lynn Watt taking the roles of George and Ruth. Later the play was released as a hardcopy book imprint on Amazon. And as a free download to educators and community groups through ALBA, the archive of the Abraham Lincoln Brigade. It will be performed next fall in Barcelona, Spain in the Catalon language. The Spanish Civil War cause was important to Tony as his father, a booster of the cause of the Spanish Republic, gave free dental care to US volunteers who fought on the side of the Republic.

Not so long ago Tony told me he was learning Yiddish. Why? I asked. Because that’s what old people speak and now I am an old person.

Tony and I have shared so many good and difficult times over the years that it’s hard to choose what to share. His contributions to Folkway Records, Fok Legacy Records, Pinewoods Camp, World Fellowship Center, the Revels, Camp Interlocken to name a few more worlds we shared. Suffice it to say, traditional music and traditional dance and the cause of justice have lost a true culture carrier and scholar. And his many networks have lost a dear friend."