Arlo Davy Guthrie
(born July 10, 1947) is an American folk singer. Like his father, Woody Guthrie, Arlo often sings songs of protest against social injustice. One of Guthrie's works is "Alice's Restaurant Massacree", a talking blues song that lasts for 18 minutes.
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ARLO GUTHRIE TICKETS
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Early life
Guthrie was born in
Brooklyn,
New York, the son of folk singer and composer
Woody Guthrie and his wife
Marjorie Mazia Guthrie, who was a one-time professional dancer with the
Martha Graham Company and founder of the Committee to Combat
Huntington's Disease, the disease that took Woody's life in 1967. He received religious training for his bar mitzvah from Rabbi
Meir Kahane, who would go on to form the
Jewish Defense League. "Rabbi Kahane was a really nice, patient teacher," Arlo later recalled, "but shortly after he started giving me my lessons, he started going haywire. Maybe I was responsible."
[1] Arlo graduated from the
Stockbridge School in
Stockbridge, Massachusetts in 1965, and briefly attended
Rocky Mountain College. He received an Honorary Doctoral degree from Westfield State College in 2008.
As a singer, songwriter and lifelong political activist, Arlo carries on the legacy of his legendary father. He was awarded the Peace Abbey Courage of Conscience award on September 26, 1992.
[2]
"Alice's Restaurant"
His most famous work is "
Alice's Restaurant Massacree", a
talking blues song that lasts 18 minutes and 34 seconds in its original recorded version (Guthrie has been known to spin the story out to forty-five minutes in concert). Guthrie has pointed out that this was also the exact length of one of the famous gaps in
Richard Nixon's
Watergate tapes. The Alice in the song is
Alice Brock, who now runs an art gallery
[3] in
Provincetown, Massachusetts.
The song, a bitingly
satirical protest against the
Vietnam War draft, is based on a true incident. In the song, Guthrie is called up for a draft examination, and rejected as unfit for
military service as a result of a criminal record — consisting in its entirety of a single arrest, court appearance, fine and clean-up order for
littering and creating a
public nuisance on Thanksgiving Day in 1965, when Arlo was eighteen years old. On the DVD commentary for the film, Guthrie states that the events as presented in the song are true to real-life occurrences.
For a short period of time after its release in 1967, "Alice's Restaurant" was in frequent rotation on nearly every college and counter-culture radio station in the country. Indeed, it became a symbol of the late '60s and for many it defined an attitude and lifestyle that were lived out across the country in the ensuing years. Many stations across the States have made playing "Alice's Restaurant" a Thanksgiving Day tradition.
A 1969
film, directed and co-written by
Arthur Penn, was based on the story. In addition to acting in this film, also called
Alice's Restaurant
, Guthrie has had minor roles in several movies and
television series. Guthrie's memorable appearance at the 1969
Woodstock Festival was documented in the
Michael Wadleigh film
Woodstock
.
Popular and critical reception
In 1972 Guthrie made famous
Steve Goodman's song "
City of New Orleans," a
paean to long-distance
rail travel. Guthrie's first trip on that train was in December 2005 (when his family joined other musicians on a train trip across the country to raise money for musicians financially devastated by
Hurricane Katrina and
Hurricane Rita, in the South of the United States). He also had a minor hit with his song "Coming into Los Angeles," which was played at the 1969
Woodstock Festival, and success with "The Motorcycle Song." Guthrie's 1976 album
Amigo
received a 5-star (highest rating) from
Rolling Stone,
and may be his best-received work; unfortunately that milestone album is rarely heard today as are Guthrie's earlier
Warner Brothers albums — although each boasts compelling folk music accompanied by top-notch musicians including
Ry Cooder.
Shenandoah
In the fall of 1975 during a benefit concert in Massachusetts, Arlo Guthrie performed with his band
Shenandoah
in public for the first time. They continued to tour and record throughout the 1970s until the early 1990s. Although the band received good reviews, it never gained the popularity that Guthrie did while playing solo. They did play many of Guthrie's most famous songs, which were most requested. By this time, Guthrie had developed his own sound in versions of "
talking blues" songs. A number of musicians from a variety of genres have joined Guthrie on stage, including
Pete Seeger,
David Bromberg,
Cyril Neville,
Emmylou Harris,
Willie Nelson,
Judy Collins,
Wesley Gray,
Josh Ritter, and others.
Acting
Though Arlo Guthrie is best known for being a musician, singer, and composer, throughout the years he has also appeared as an actor in films and on television. The film
Alice's Restaurant
(1969) is his best known role, but he has had small parts in several films and even co-starred in a television drama,
Byrds of Paradise
.
Politics
Guthrie endorsed Texas Congressman
Ron Paul for the
2008 Republican Party nomination. He said, "I love this guy. Dr. Paul is the only candidate I know of who would have signed the
Constitution of the United States had he been there. I'm with him, because he seems to be the only candidate who actually believes it has as much relevance today as it did a couple of hundred years ago. I look forward to the day when we can work out the differences we have with the same revolutionary vision and enthusiasm that is our American legacy."
[4] He told the New York Times Magazine that he is a Republican because, "We had enough good Democrats. We needed a few more good Republicans. We needed a loyal opposition."
[5]
Legacy
Like his father,
Woody Guthrie, Guthrie often sings
songs of protest against social injustice. He collaborated with poet
Adrian Mitchell to tell the story of
Chilean folk singer and activist
Víctor Jara in song. He regularly performed with folk legend
Pete Seeger, one of his father's longtime partners.
In 1991, Guthrie bought the church that had served as Alice and Ray Brock's former home in
Great Barrington, Massachusetts, and converted it to the , an interfaith meeting place that serves people of all religions.
Family
Guthrie and his wife Jackie reside in the Town of
Washington, Massachusetts. Guthrie's son
Abe Guthrie and his daughters
Sarah Lee Guthrie and
Cathy Guthrie have also become musicians.
Annie Guthrie writes songs and performs, and also takes care of family touring details. Sarah Lee performs and records with her husband
Johnny Irion. Cathy plays
ukulele in , a group she formed with
Amy Nelson, the daughter of
Willie Nelson. Abe Guthrie was formerly in a folk-rock band called Xavier, and now tours with his father. Abe Guthrie's son, Krishna, is a drummer and toured with Arlo Guthrie on his European tour in 2006
[6]. Arlo Guthrie is a grandfather of Abe's son Krishna and daughter Serena, Annie's son Shiva Das (Mo) and daughter Jacklyn, Sarah Lee's daughters Olivia Nora and Sophia Irion and Cathy's daughter Marjorie Maybelle Midwood.
He is third cousin to Canadian composer and musician
Jan Randall.
Discography
- Alice's Restaurant
(1967)
- Arlo
(1968)
- Running Down the Road
(1969)
- Alice's Restaurant Soundtrack
(1969)
- Washington County
(1970)
- Hobo's Lullaby
(1972)
- Last of the Brooklyn Cowboys
(1973)
- Arlo Guthrie
(1974)
- Together In Concert
(1975)
- Amigo
(1976)
- The Best of Arlo Guthrie
(1977)
- One Night
(1978)
- Outlasting the Blues
(1979)
- Power Of Love
(1981)
- Precious Friend
(1982)
- Someday
(1986)
- All Over the World
(1991)
- Son of the Wind
(1992)
- 2 Songs
(1992)
- More Together Again
(1994)
- Alice's Restaurant - The Massacree Revisited
(1996)
- Mystic Journey
(1996)
- This Land Is Your Land: An All American Children's Folk Classic
(1997)
- "BanjoMan - a tribute to Derroll Adams" (2002)
- Live In Sydney
(2005)
- In Times Like These
(2007)
- 32¢ Postage Due
(2008)
- ''Tales Of '69 (2009)
Select filmography
- Alice's Restaurant
(1969)
- Renaldo and Clara
(1978)
- Baby's Storytime
(1989)
- Roadside Prophets
(1992)
Notable television guest appearances
- Beat-Club
(episode # 1.52) February 28, 1970
- Byrds of Paradise
(1994)
- Relativity
December 29, 1996
- Renegade
in episode: "Top Ten with a Bullet" (episode # 5.14) January 24, 1997
- The fourth season of "The Muppet Show".
Film and television composer
- Alice's Restaurant
(1969) (song "The Alice's Restaurant Massacree")
- Woodstock
(1970) (song "Coming Into Los Angeles")
- Clay Pigeon
(1971) also known as Trip to Kill
(UK)
- Baby's Storytime
(1989)
Producer
- Isn't This a Time! A Tribute Concert for Harold Leventhal
(2004)
Writer
- Mooses Come Walking
(2004) (Children's Book) [7]
Appearances as himself
- Hylands hörna
(episode # 4.4) January 31, 1970
- Woodstock
(1969) (also known as Woodstock 25th Anniversary Edition
and as Woodstock, 3 Days of Peace & Music
)
- The Dick Cavett Show
September 8, 1970
- Arthur Penn 1922-: Themes and Variants
(1970) (TV)
- The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson
playing "Himself" August 17, 1972
- The Muppet Show
(episode # 4.8) June 19, 1979
- The Weavers: Wasn't That a Time
(1982)
- Woody Guthrie: Hard Travelin
(1984)
- Farm Aid '87
(1987) (TV)
- A Vision Shared: A Tribute to Woody Guthrie and Leadbelly
(1988)
- Woodstock: The Lost Performances
(1990)
- Woodstock Diary
(1994) (TV)
- The Kennedy Center Honors: A Celebration of the Performing Arts
(1994) (TV)
- The History of Rock 'N' Roll, Vol. 6
(1995) (TV) (also known as My Generation
)
- This Land Is Your Land: The Animated Kids' Songs of Woody Guthrie
(1997)
- Healthy Kids
(1998) (TV series)
- The Ballad of Ramblin' Jack
(2000)
- Hollywood Rocks the Movies: The Early Years
(1955-1970) (2000) (TV)
- Last Party 2000
(2001) (also known as The Party's Over
)
- Pops Goes the Fourth!
(July 4, 2001)
- NPR's Talk of the Nation
radio broadcast (Nov. 14, 2001)
- *St. James Infirmary
and The City Of New Orleans
- Singing in the Shadow: The Children of Rock Royalty
(2003)
- Get Up, Stand Up
(2003) (TV series)
- From Wharf Rats to the Lords of the Docks
(2004)
- Isn't This a Time! A Tribute Concert for Harold Leventhal
(2004)
- 1968 with Tom Brokaw
(2007)
- Pete Seeger: The Power of Song
(2008) (American Masters
PBS TV special)
References
- A Jewish Visit to Guthrie's Land, Jewish Journal, Dec. 4, 2004
- The Peace Abbey Courage of Conscience Recipients List
- Alice Brock
- http://blogs.wsj.com/washwire/2008/01/29/group-w-grad-endorses-ron-paul/
- http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/26/magazine/26fob-q4-t.html
- http://visions-of-dylan.blogspot.com/2006/08/arlo-at-vicar-st.html
- Chronicle Books Link