BBC Folk America - Music Documentary Series 2009-01-30
Part 2 - This Land Is Your Land, various, various
Set 1
Chapter List:
Woody Guthrie...and Friends
Leadbelly And John Lomax
Woody Guthrie
Josh White
Alan Lomax, Pete Seeger And Leadbelly
Josh White And Leadbelly In Washington
Woody Guthrie, New York 1940
The Almanac Singers
Dave "honeyboy" Edwards
Josh White
Pete Seeger And Jean Ritchie
Pete Seeger And Woody Guthrie
Woody Guthrie And Leadbelly
The Weavers
The Committee
Harry Smith To Bob Dylan
Woody Guthrie...and Friends
Leadbelly And John Lomax
Woody Guthrie
Josh White
Alan Lomax, Pete Seeger And Leadbelly
Josh White And Leadbelly In Washington
Woody Guthrie, New York 1940
The Almanac Singers
Dave "honeyboy" Edwards
Josh White
Pete Seeger And Jean Ritchie
Pete Seeger And Woody Guthrie
Woody Guthrie And Leadbelly
The Weavers
The Committee
Harry Smith To Bob Dylan
Set 2
Set 3
Comment
Three-part documentary series on American folk music, tracing its history from the recording boom of the 1920s to the folk revival of the 1960s.
Official blurb: In the depression of the 1930s, John Lomax found convicted murderer Leadbelly in a southern jail. Leadbelly's music was never quite as pure and untouched by pop as Lomax believed, but it set a new agenda for folk music, redefining it as the voice of protest, the voice of the outsider and the oppressed.
Dustbowl drifter Woody Guthrie fitted the mould perfectly and the two of them teamed up with Lomax's son Alan, Pete Seeger and Josh White - a group of friends who believed 'they could make a better world if they all got together and just sang about it'. Their songs and their radical politics took them to high places of influence, but brought about their downfall in the blacklisting 1950s.
Contributors include Pete Seeger, Rambling Jack Elliot, Anna Lomax, Tom Paxton, Roger McGuinn, Woody Guthrie's sister and daughter and Josh White's son.
Official blurb: In the depression of the 1930s, John Lomax found convicted murderer Leadbelly in a southern jail. Leadbelly's music was never quite as pure and untouched by pop as Lomax believed, but it set a new agenda for folk music, redefining it as the voice of protest, the voice of the outsider and the oppressed.
Dustbowl drifter Woody Guthrie fitted the mould perfectly and the two of them teamed up with Lomax's son Alan, Pete Seeger and Josh White - a group of friends who believed 'they could make a better world if they all got together and just sang about it'. Their songs and their radical politics took them to high places of influence, but brought about their downfall in the blacklisting 1950s.
Contributors include Pete Seeger, Rambling Jack Elliot, Anna Lomax, Tom Paxton, Roger McGuinn, Woody Guthrie's sister and daughter and Josh White's son.
Sources
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Created At
Mon Feb 23 2009 12:06:09 GMT+0000 (Coordinated Universal Time)
Updated At
Mon Feb 23 2009 12:06:09 GMT+0000 (Coordinated Universal Time)
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