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Obit: Scott Alarik (1951-2021)

GUEST 25 Dec 21 - 05:13 AM
Joe Offer 10 Dec 21 - 02:49 PM
GUEST,David vonFischer 10 Dec 21 - 12:29 PM
GUEST,Roni DiSanzo 08 Dec 21 - 11:08 PM
GUEST,maeve 05 Dec 21 - 01:57 PM
Elmore 05 Dec 21 - 11:51 AM
GUEST,Charlie Ipcar 05 Dec 21 - 11:44 AM
GUEST,Frank Hamilton 04 Dec 21 - 05:35 PM
GUEST,maeve 04 Dec 21 - 05:27 PM
Joe Offer 04 Dec 21 - 04:51 PM
Stilly River Sage 04 Dec 21 - 04:10 PM
Joe Offer 04 Dec 21 - 02:47 PM
GUEST 04 Dec 21 - 01:26 PM
GUEST 04 Dec 21 - 01:25 PM
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Subject: RE: Obit: Scott Alarik (1951-2021)
From: GUEST
Date: 25 Dec 21 - 05:13 AM

Seems like he just went away. I hope it was peaceful for him.


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Subject: RE: Obit: Scott Alarik (1951-2021)
From: Joe Offer
Date: 10 Dec 21 - 02:49 PM

This is the first obituary I've seen, posted 10 Dec 2021, a week after Scott Alarik's death.
By Sean Corcoran, WGBH, Boston.

We learned of the loss this week of two prominent figures in the local folk scene: Scott Alarik, a journalist, musicologist and songwriter; and Bill Staines, a folk singer who wrote many songs about the natural world. Brian O'Donovan, host of GBH's A Celtic Sojourn every Saturday afternoon, joined host Sean Corcoran on Morning Edition to discuss the mens' work and their legacies.

Sean Corcoran: Scott Alarik managed to do something that not a lot of artists can do. He not only covered music for publications like The Boston Globe, the folk publication Sing Out and Billboard magazine, but he also performed — he was a folk singer himself. And I know he was your friend. Tell us about him.

Brian O'Donovan: He was an amazing character. I first met Scott probably back in 1982 or '83. Around a concert at The Idler, which was a famous folk club right in Harvard Square, sadly, not there anymore. And Scott had just arrived here from Minnesota. I remember my conversation with him was just intriguing. And I was fairly new here. And Scott intrigued me through his writing, his performances and his's advocacy. He was a community activist, really around folk music around the benefits of folk music. And he loved to write about that in the Globe and became well known for that advocacy over his whole life. But he was a triple threat, as you said: he was a performer, he was an activist, and he was just a really gifted writer. He had a wonderful compendium called "Deep Community," a book that he published. And, of course, he wrote a novel about the folk scene in Cambridge around the same time I just referenced, the '80s, called "Revival."

Corcoran: Did he have songs that stand out to you?

O'Donovan: Yes, I you know, I think Scott was a kind of a comforting force for me generally, and I love the song "Carolina Moon" that he wrote himself. It's just a classic kind of '80s folk style. And as I said, it kind of comes at you almost like a cup of hot cocoa.

Corcoran: He was a familiar voice on the radio. Not only did he host his own show on WUMB, he was also a guest on your show quite often. He also appeared on A Prairie Home Companion. And as a journalist, one of the people Scott would certainly have written about would have been Bill Staines, one of the greatest folk singers to ever come out of Massachusetts, born in Lexington. He also came up in that Cambridge folk scene, which was so huge during the '60s and '70s.

O'Donovan: He did and we lost battle stains again this week as well. It was tough to contemplate the loss of both of those giants of the folk world. But Bill also was that great force or kind of just so American to me, he just captured it and he is very popular in Europe, as well, for that reason. So he kind of captured that folksy, kind of traveling-style, easy. He had a great rapport with audiences and got them very much into the songs and his performances. And he really did a lot for bringing people into folk music and continuing what had happened in the '60s, morphed into something quite different: more acoustic, more earthy, perhaps, in line with what was happening in the '80s.

Corcoran: And Bill Staines seemed he had really strong melodies, of course, the backbone of folk music, but he paints a picture with his music. He was a very descriptive writer in his lyrics. He's a naturalist in verse, it seems to me. The song "River" is another one of his most-requested songs.

O'Donovan: He was a naturalist. He talked about the seasons and New Hampshire, and he could just paint a picture of the changing seasons here in New England. He was very New England to me, even though he wrote about other parts of the U.S. There was a New England flavor to them, and he adored how rivers would would look different at different times of the year and capture that perfectly in verse.

Corcoran: And he would connect that natural world to something larger. I expect many of his songs might end up in churches. I'm thinking of songs like "All Things Bright and Beautiful."

O'Donovan: Which is a church song itself. You know, "all creatures great and small" comes from, you know, good old Protestant hymnal, but he was kind of like a revival. as well and I think he kind of brought that almost like a traveling preacher. Not in an evangelical way, strictly speaking, but just got people into the idea that that there maybe was a larger force — it could be nature — and he was going to sing about it unabashedly and get the audience to participate, like his congregation.

Corcoran: I come from a folk family, and I remember my father teaching us All God's Critters, we called it, but I guess it's really called "A Place in the Quiet."

O'Donovan: It just has such a great sentiment: all God's creatures have a place. There's room for diversity in there, and he goes in and names all of the creatures.

Corcoran: One of his most popular songs is "My Sweet Wyoming Home." I expect that maybe music teachers use that to teach the alternating finger style on guitar.

O'Donovan: Well that was a another stock and trade, was his ability to have the finger style guitar. I sent it to somebody yesterday — somebody way younger than me who had recently moved to Wyoming — and I said, "You got to listen to the song." They said, "Listen to this song? That's already the state national anthem."

Scott Alarik and Bill Staines have left behind a legacy of a gentle approach to music.

    Sean Corcoran is GBH’s Senior Managing Editor for News. He grew up north of Boston, and he is a graduate of The George Washington University and the Columbia University School of Journalism. For the first nine years of his career, he worked at various New England newspapers, doing some of the earliest reporting into what is now known as the “opioid crisis.” Sean joined WCAI-FM in 2005 as a senior reporter and later news director. He moved to GBH News in 2017. Sean has been recognized with a DuPont-Columbia Award, two Gabriel Awards and a national Edward R. Murrow Award. He can be reached at sean_corcoran@wgbh.org


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Subject: RE: 2021 Obit: Scott Alarik
From: GUEST,David vonFischer
Date: 10 Dec 21 - 12:29 PM

I am Scott's Cousin and regret to confirm his death. Scott and I spent summers in northern Minnesota as kids. He lived in Minneapolis and I in Cleveland, Ohio. There are many fond memories of us swimming, fishing, and just generally raising hell. One of my fondest memories what when Scott came to Cleveland for a visit. We were in our teens and I took him to a great club (Le Cave) that featured fold musicians. We went to a Tom Paxton concert and felt very cool that they served us beer as minors. Around mid-show Tom Paxton stopped his music and told us "I don't want to come on strong but if you came to talk you came to the wrong place." I remember the scolding like it was yesterday. Anyway, that evening gave Scott the folk music bug and the rest is history.
Here is to you Cuz. May the trail rise up to meet you.
DVF


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Subject: RE: 2021 Obit: Scott Alarik
From: GUEST,Roni DiSanzo
Date: 08 Dec 21 - 11:08 PM

Scott's music made Saturdays so entertaining. I would listen to Scott and garden or do other chores. Bye Scott, rest in peace.


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Subject: RE: 2021 Obit: Scott Alarik
From: GUEST,maeve
Date: 05 Dec 21 - 01:57 PM

WUMB Saddened by the loss of Scott Alarik
    Folks we’ve just found out that Folk Tales Host Scott Alarik passed away earlier this week unexpectedly. We’re as shocked and saddened by this news as you are. Scott had many passions in life and Folk Music was one of them. We know that Scott would want you to think of a time when he played a song or an artist or told a story that made you think differently about the world. Our thoughts are with Scott’s family and loved ones. WUMB will find a way to pay tribute to Scott and in the immediate will continue to air Folk Tales as a tribute to him.


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Subject: RE: 2021 Obit: Scott Alarik
From: Elmore
Date: 05 Dec 21 - 11:51 AM

Sorry to hear this. When Scott wrote for the Globe he was a big help to those of us who booked performers in both large and small venues. It was always a pleasure to have a conversation with him. RIP Scott.


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Subject: RE: 2021 Obit: Scott Alarik
From: GUEST,Charlie Ipcar
Date: 05 Dec 21 - 11:44 AM

Scott will be missed in this community. :-(


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Subject: RE: 2021 Obit: Scott Alarik
From: GUEST,Frank Hamilton
Date: 04 Dec 21 - 05:35 PM

Wow! I'm sorry I missed tuning in to this guy. A great story teller and the Pete Seeger
in Barcelona on You Tube is a classic. Yes indeed. Pete reached the pinnacle of what I'd call fame.

https://youtu.be/N4rwN3PgF1c

I feel this way about certain jazz musicians I know such as guitarist Pat Martino who also
recently died. And folk performers Paul Clayton and Art Thieme and Emmett Miller and Bruce Langhorne...and....and....and..............

I missed Scott and regret that.

Then there's the Beatles. My view is so nu?


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Subject: RE: 2021 Obit: Scott Alarik
From: GUEST,maeve
Date: 04 Dec 21 - 05:27 PM

US Day News: Folksinger Scott Alarik’s Cause of Death is Behind Shadows


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Subject: RE: OBIT: Scott Alarik
From: Joe Offer
Date: 04 Dec 21 - 04:51 PM

Yes, Scott is/was probably the most distinguished folk music journalist in the United States. I still have not been able to find confirmation of his death from official sources, though informal sources are becoming more and more credible. I thought the Boston Globe would have something about it by now. I'm still not ready to give it total credence, because Scott was so active so recently. I've been at Mudcat 26 years now, and I've seen a few early obituaries that turned out not to be true.
-Joe-


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Subject: RE: OBIT: Scott Alarik
From: Stilly River Sage
Date: 04 Dec 21 - 04:10 PM

Is this your friend who posts on the FB page with the Folkways stuff?


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Subject: RE: OBIT: Scott Alarik
From: Joe Offer
Date: 04 Dec 21 - 02:47 PM

Sad news indeed. No news about it yet on Google or at the Boston Globe, where Scott was a music writer for many years.

His Website is http://scottalarik.com/

You'll find a lot of Scott Alarik videos at https://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=%22scott+alarik%22


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Subject: RE: OBIT: Scott Alarik
From: GUEST
Date: 04 Dec 21 - 01:26 PM

Oh forgot to add my name. Greg Doucette, Jr.


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Subject: OBIT: Scott Alarik
From: GUEST
Date: 04 Dec 21 - 01:25 PM

Sadly I just saw Garnet Rogers post on Facebook. I was lucky enough to see Scott perform a number of times at coffeehouses and festivals in New England growing up. I also followed him on Facebook and enjoyed his perspective on politics.

From Garnet:

Just received crushing news that one of my oldest and most treasured friends, Scott Alarik has died.

We met back in the mid 70's and fell in with each other, having a similar taste in humour , whisky and music. He was one of the funniest, kindest, and gentlest men I have ever known, with an unwavering moral compass. He almost never talked about it, but he spent time in a federal pen during the Vietnam war, as a conscientious objector.
He wrote for the Boston Globe for many years, mostly as a music critic, which took an incredible amount of bravery in that he was himself a singer and writer.
His songs were great, his singing, inspired, and no one could touch him as a performer.
In later years he has been one of the sharpest, most incisive thinkers and commentators on American politics, whose posts here on Facebook have been a kind of pole star for me. Whenever I needed an issue explained and unravelled, Scott was the guy I turned to to make sense of it all, and find the right words when I couldn't.
He was funny and wise, and a bottomless well of human kindness.
I can't believe he's gone. What a damned hard day.


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