Redwood Moose greetings
Freeman Article
Pardon if you don't know me - I'm sending this to my entire e-mail list.
Most important -Please come to the Hootenanny/Auction on Sunday from
And - There was an article about me in The Kingston Freeman today. It was a wonderful article and the reporter, Rochelle Riservato did a wonderful job but a few mistakes of fact crept in not her fault. The article is at http://www.dailyfreeman.com/site/news.cfm?newsid=19011252&BRD=1769&PAG=461&dept_id=81974&rfi=6 (And yes, I know that these things won't really matter to anyone but me.)
1. I have never taught a class in Gaelic. I also have never taught at Winterbear, The D&H Canal Society or Shelbark Farm, although I have performed at these places.
2. The point I was making about "city music" was that in spite of radio, recordings and TV, our area has kept alive our own indigenous folk music.
3. The event on the Kingston Art bus and the Phil Och's nite are not related to the Heritage Folk Music organization. All of the HFM events can be found at http://heritageconcerts.blogspot.com/
Yours in folk music,
Bob Lusk
Hootenanny Auction
Fw: Eisteddfod-NY A festival of traditional music 11/16-18, Jackson Heights, NY
Norris Bennett ~ Colleen Cleveland ~ Jeff Davis ~ Jerry Epstein ~ Margaret Farrell ~ Alan Friend ~ Julia Friend ~ Martin Grosswendt ~ Jodee James ~ Johnson Girls ~ David Jones ~ Karelian Ensemble ~ Keith Kendrick ~ Evy Mayer ~ Dan Milner ~ Anne Price ~ Jean Ritchie ~ Ricki Schneyer ~ Steve Suffet ~ Ken Sweeney and Craig Edwards ~ Triboro ~ Bill and Livia Vanaver ~ Jeff Warner ~ Tzvety Weiner ~ Heather Wood ~ Director Emeritus – Howard Glasser; MC's: Ron Olesko ~ Mary Cliff ~ Oscar Brand
For tickets:
FMSNY non-members: http://eisteddfod-ny.eventbrite.com/
For more information, go to the Eisteddfod-NY web page:
http://www.eisteddfod-ny.org
--
Joy Bennett
President, Folk Music Society of NY, Inc
aka NY Pinewoods
Hootenanny Auction on 11/18
There are a lot of wonderful donations of Folk Music memorabilia coming in for Heritage Folk Music's Hootenanny Auction on 11/18. An updated list can be found at http://heritagemusicauction.blogspot.com/
To Stop the War -
War," by Paul Kaplan and Friends. The link is
http://www.youtube.
The song consists of new words I have written to the tune of "To Stop the Train." It is performed as a 3-part, 6-part and 12-part round. We taped it at the CMN gathering in Albany, and Lee Larcheveque of WMUA here in Amherst did the editing.
I would like to publicly thank the singers: Ruth Pelham, Barbara
Wright, Cathy Winter, Sally Rogers, Martha Leader, Linda Hutchings, Tom Neilson, Verne McArthur, Tom Seiling, Jackson Gillman, David Heitler-Klevans and Sandy Pliskin.
Let's hope the right people get the message!
Paul Kaplan
'Pete Seeger: The Power of Song' opens Saturday
Subject: 'Pete Seeger: The Power of Song' opens Saturday
Friends,
Jim Brown Productions has asked me to help spread the word on the new film called PETE SEEGER: THE POWER OF SONG. It opens this weekend at the IFC Center in Greenwich Village.
Most socially conscious people will recall the brilliant documentary by Jim Brown, 'The Weavers: Wasn't That a Time'; the director has called this one 'a sequel of sorts'. It is notable that the copy on the poster (attached)
reads: 'Musician. Patriot. Activist. Environmentalist. Blacklisted.--Legend', and that it offers a real biography of Pete, including the pains brought on HUAC, with an accent on his music of social change. Was it by chance that a film about a figure like Pete Seeger or his old group The Weavers would be released in a decade of struggle against the right-wing, a period which finds us cringing under the full corporate weight of a George W Bush or a Ronald Reagan? When capitalism pulls apart its reigns and tramples rights, as we have lived with during any imperial presidency, we need a Jim Brown to remind us all of why we fight. And why we must continue to do so. This is a movie to attend as we plan on the next demo, peace vigil, radical political meeting or...presidential election. But its also one to take our kids to. It will inspire and incite---the way it
should.
'Pete Seeger: The Power of Song' will premier in Manhattan this weekend but will also be selectively shown in various cities (including Pleasantville NY on 11/3) before coming to the small screen via PBS in February. Please go to www.PowerofSong.net for more info on this brilliant film about one of our greatest Cultural Workers and national treasures.
Below is some info from the press release.
In Solidarity,
John Pietaro- www.flamesofdiscontent.org
Jim Brown Productions
T: 212.505.0138
F: 212.505.5594
www.JimBrownFilms.com
Roger Ebert's review:
Pete Seeger: The Power of Song
**** Stars
September 13, 2007
Cast & Credits
Featuring Pete Seeger, Toshi Seeger, Bob Dylan, Bruce Springsteen, Natalie Maines, Tom Paxton, David Dunaway, Bess Lomax Hawes, Joan Baez, Ronnie Gilbert, Jerry Silverman, Henry Foner, Eric Weissberg, Arlo Guthrie, Peter Yarrow, Mary Travers, Julian Bond, Tommy Smothers and Bonnie Raitt.
The Weinstein Company presents a documentary directed by Jim Brown.
Running time: 93 minutes. No MPAA rating (suitable for all ages).
Opening today at Landmark Renaissance.
BY ROGER EBERT
I don't know if Pete Seeger believes in saints, but I believe he is one. He's the one in the front as they go marching in. "Pete Seeger: The Power of Song" is a tribute to the legendary singer and composer who thought
music could be a force for good, and proved it by writing songs that have actually helped shape our times ("If I Had a Hammer" and "Turn, Turn, Turn") and popularizing "We Shall Overcome" and Woody Guthrie's unofficial national anthem, "This Land Is Your Land." Over his long career (he is 88), he has toured tirelessly with song and stories, never happier than when he gets everyone in the audience to sing along.
This documentary, directed by Jim Brown, is a sequel of sorts to Brown's wonderful "The Weavers: Wasn't That a Time" (1982), which centered on the farewell Carnegie Hall concert of the singing group Seeger was long
associated with. The Weavers had many big hits circa 1950 ("Goodnight Irene," "Kisses Sweeter Than Wine") before being blacklisted during the McCarthy years; called before the House Un-American Activities Committee and asked to name members of the Communist Party, Seeger evoked, not the fifth, but the First
Amendment. The Weavers immediately disappeared from the playlists of most radio stations, and Seeger did not appear on television for 17 years, until the Smothers Brothers broke the boycott.
But he kept singing, invented a new kind of banjo, did more for the rebirth of that instrument than anyone else, co-founded two folk-song magazines, and with Toshi, his wife of 62 years, did more and sooner than most to live a "green" lifestyle, just because it was his nature. On rural land in upstate New York, they lived for years in a log cabin he built himself, and we see him still chopping firewood and working on the land. "I like to say I'm more conservative than Goldwater," Wikipedia quotes him. "He just wanted to turn the clock back to when there was no income tax. I want to turn the clock back to when people lived in small villages and took care of each other."
With access to remarkable archival footage, old TV shows, home movies and the family photo album, Brown weaves together the story of the Seegers with testimony by admirers who represent his influence and legacy: Bruce Springsteen, Bob Dylan, Natalie Maines of the Dixie Chicks, Tom Paxton, Joan Baez, Arlo Guthrie, Peter Yarrow, Mary Travers, Julian Bond and Bonnie Raitt. There is also coverage of the whole Seeger family musical tradition, including brother Mike and sister Peggy.
This isn't simply an assembly of historical materials and talking heads (however eloquent), but a vibrant musical film as well, and Brown has remastered the music so that we feel the real excitement of Seeger
walking into a room and starting a sing-along. Unique among musicians, he doesn't covet the spotlight but actually insists on the audience joining in; he seems more choir director than soloist.
You could see that in 2004 at the Toronto Film Festival, in the "final" farewell performance of the Weavers, as he was joined onstage by original group members Ronnie Gilbert and Fred Hellerman, who go back 57
years together, and more recent members Erik Darling and Eric Weissberg. Missing from the original group was the late Lee Hays, who co-wrote "If I Had a Hammer."
The occasion was the showing of an interim Brown doc, "Isn't This a Time," a documentary about a Carnegie Hall "farewell concert" concert in honor of Harold Leventhal's 50th anniversary as an impresario. It was Leventhal who booked the Weavers into Carnegie Hall for the first time in the late 1940s, and Leventhal who brought them back to the hall when the group's left-wing politics had made them victims of the show-business blacklist. Although Seeger has sung infrequently in recent years, claiming his voice is "gone," he was in fine form that night in Toronto, his head as always held high and thrown back, as if focused in the future.
Sadly, for many people, Seeger is still associated in memory with the Communist Party USA. Although never a "card-carrying member," he was and is adamantly left-wing; he broke with the party in 1950, disillusioned with Stalinism, and as recently as this year, according to Wikipedia, apologized to a historian: "I think you're right. I should have asked to see the gulags when I was in the USSR."
What I feel from Seeger and his music is a deep-seated, instinctive decency, a sense of fair play, a democratic impulse reflected by singing along as a metaphor. I get the same feeling from Toshi, who co-produced this film and has co-produced her husband's life. How many women would sign on with a folk singer who planned to build them a cabin to live in? The portrait of their long marriage, their children and grandchildren, is one of the most inspiring elements in the film. They actually live as if this land was made for you and me.
Auction-Hootenanny
We are having a great response to out Auction/Hootenanny, scheduled for 11/18
Peggy Atwood Bruce Blair - Bob Burroughs - Cavanaugh & Kavanaugh - Jim Donnelly - Lee Eaton - Drew Ferraro - Bob Horan - David Howells - Denise Jordan Finley and Daniel Pagdon - Pat Keating - Pat LaManna - Bob Lusk - Kelleigh McKenzie - Ernie Mortuzans and Jean Weiss - Rick Nestler - Melissa Ortquist Constance Rudd - Cecilia St. King - Norm Wennet - Elly Wininger. I imagine there will be some surprise guests.
The auction items are coming in. So far people have donated:
Bruce Ackerman
Autographed poster (used)
Rich Bala
Large bass Kalimba (thumb piano) (used)
American Favorite Ballads by Pete Seeger book (used)
Bawdy Songs and Back Room Ballads by Oscar Brand LP (used)
Kevin and Carol Becker
Reach Out and Catch the Wind - Cassette Tape (new)
Pass it On - Cassette Tape (new)
Reach Out and Catch the Wind and Lots of Love - Deluxe CD (new)
The
Stephen Bergstein
Yamaha Classical Guitar (used)
Andrea Epstein
Framed folk drawing by Aina Stenberg (used)
Denise Jordan Finley
HAUNTRESS - CD (new)
Sing Out! - magazines circa 1985-1989 (used)
Raggedy Crew
I Don't Mind Failin' CD (new)
Anonymous
The Peggy Seeger Songbook - book (used)
Jack Elliot Guitar Style Video VHS (new)
Sing Out! magazines (used)
with more to come.......................
If you have something to add, send me an e-mail- boblusk@hvc.rr.com or call 845-338-8587
From Priscilla Herdman
From Priscilla Herdman
Dear Bob,
I'm sending an update to my previous newsletter since I have recently added a show which is coming up fast. I was asked to fill in for a performer who is unable to do the October concert for the Friends of Fiddler's Green Chapter of the Hudson Valley Folk Guild. Because the date is so close, we are trying to get the word out quickly and I'm hoping that those of you in the Hudson Valley region will be able to spread the word to anyone you think might be interested. Maybe you could even bring some friends along to the show too! For concert information please call: (845)483-0650. (The web site is not updated.) Venue: Hyde Park United Methodist Church on Rte. 9 and
Priscilla Herdman
Sacred Geometry
I'm inviting to you come to hear a new cycle of piano and keyboard compositions based on sacred geometry. This weekend will be my first appearance as a composer in the Woodstock Cycle, an annual musical event supporting new works from regional composers.
Water Not Weapons
I generally don't put up postings with so many internet links, but think it justified in this case. Cecilia is a tireless worker for peace and justice and the Water not Weapons project is really worthwhile. (self interest disclosure - she is the June Carter in my Johnny Cash tribute concert)
This was sent out by my new friend, Phil Sauers. : )
ALOHA.. On Saturday, water's new theme song, "Water Not Weapons" with music & lyrics by Cecilia St. King was debuted by CECILIA @ the 6th Annual "Peace Vigil" @ the Bandshell in Central Park -> http://www.vigil4internationalpeace.org <http://www.vigil4internationalpeace.org/>
On Sunday, CECILIA performed "Water Not Weapons" for Pete Seeger.
Pete has given his warm blessings -> & -> the go-ahead to CECILIA & WWRF to immediately, if not sooner, produce a music video, ala Quincy Jones -> "We Are The World"... wow !!
CECILIA'S debut on Sunday for Pete was professionally filmed by Pamela Timmins @ the Alternative Energy Festival -> http://www.beaconsloopclub.org/alt_energy_fest_color.pdf
Film of Pete performing with CECILIA will be installed on -> http://wwwwaternotweapons.org <http://www.waternotweapons.org/>
CECILIA'S Website -> http://www.sonicbids.com/CeciliaStKing
PHIL -> http://www.wwrf.org <http://www.wwrf.org/>
Yodeling has never been my strong suite. It's kind of like stepping off a cliff - it's one of these things that you just have to take a deep breath, close your eyes and do it.
And I Wonder if You’re Watching the Moon Too
Each night I hope and pray your love won’t go away
I’m waiting out here for you dear
Out in the open sky, don’t cha hear the coyotes cry
And I wonder if you’re watching the moon too
Yodel----------------------------------
The stars dance around, we’re stuck here on the ground
It’s lonesome here beneath the prairie moon
To even feel your touch, would warm me, oh so much
And I wonder if you’re watching the moon too
Yodel----------------------------------
The moon is riding high, up in the sky
And I don’t believe we’ll get to sleep tonight
Let the moonlight shine, on your home and mine,
And I wonder if you’re watching the moon too
Yodel----------------------------------
And I wonder if you’re watching the moon too
And I love you and I love you and I love you
Veteran's for Peace
Read at a poetry reading last night for the first time in 30 years. I did one poem and one song. Of course being me, even the poem had some "OMing" in it. I sang a new song for the first time there.
White Crosses on the Hillside
Words:Bob Lusk tune "Little Boxes" Malvina Reynolds
Inspired by an article in the NY Times that spoke about the new opening of lot 60 for the returning personel killed in Iraq. I sang this for the first time at a Veteran's for Peace Poetry reading in Woodstock 9-17-07. Jay Wenk, WWII vet told me afterwards that he had know Malvina and that "She would be proud".
Chorus
White crosses on the hillside
White crosses in the cemetery
White crosses, white crosses
White crosses all the same
And there's soldiers, and there's sailors
Marines and Air corpsman
And they all have white crosses
White crosses all the same
1
And each one had a body bag
It was draped with an American flag
And we didn't get to see it
They snuck them in the back door
And they're all buried in the graveyard
At Arlington National Cemetery
in lot Six-ty
They make their final rest
Chorus
2
Each one was an individual
Who had their own personality
They lived and loved and laughed
And each one had a name
And most of them had families
And people who loved them
People who voted to
Send them to war
Chorus
Some of my poetry is included in the book
POST TRAUMATIC PRESS 2007
poems by veterans, Dayl Wise, Editor
All proceeds go to Veterans for Peace…and its tax deductible. To order your copy, send $12 plus $3 shipping to:
Post Traumatic Press
Dayl Wise, Editor
104 Orchard Lane North, Woodstock, NY 12498
dswbike@aol.com
Make checks payable to:
VFP Catskill Mountain Chapter 058
Write "PTP 2007" in memo line
My Instruments
Weekend Report
Sunday Jim Donnelly and I played as part of the Heritage Music Foundation Concert Series at Alternative Books in Kingston. A great time doing historic Irish music of the area in a living room atmosphere.
Tonight it's off to Kirtan at Namaste yoga in Woodstock, where I will probably accompany whoever is leading with my violin. After that (8:00) I'll be singing some anitwar songs and reading poetry with Veteran's for Peace at the Colony Cafe in Woodstock.
Phew!
Schedule
So many things going on! Check my schedule anytime at http://blschedule.blogspot.com/
Upcoming, tomorrow is protest at Kings Mall at noon, then Academy Green Rally at 1:00; Hindu music concert at 4:00 in Poughkeepsie, Sunday Irish concert at Alternative Books in Kingston, Monday night reading anti war poetry with Veteran's for Peace at colony Cafe in Woodstock, 9/22 is Lindenwald Harvest Festival in Kinderhook. Phew!
I'm also making plans to start teaching some music classes in my house.
Global Mala Project
In cooperation with the United Nations International Day of Peace and the Global Mala Project, Namaste will host an evening of 108 minutes of chanting the Sanskrit names of the divine on September 22. Invocation will begin at 5:30 followed by chanting. With this project we join our energies with yoga practitioners and studios all over the world in an effort to expand peace worldwide. Visit www.globalmala.org or see the Global Mala attachment. You will need to open this attachment with a Word Works Word Processor program.
Namaste Yoga Center
Gretchen Hein
2568 Route 212, Woodstock, NY
845-679-7532
Jackie Alper passes
From the Sing Out list-
Jackie Alper, 86, social activist and long running host of Mostly Folk on
WRPI 91.1, Troy, NY died last Thursday, September 6, 2007.
She will be missed.
http://timesunion.com/AspStories/storyprint.asp?StoryID=620972
Good Times
I think any musician, performer, actor, poet realizes that the best music, performances, theater or poetry doesn't happen in formal settings but in impromtu affairs when the juice just cooks, everthing is magical and alive and what you are doing feels in total harmony with the universe.
Well that happened last night at good friend Jim Donnelly's. A serious rehearsal turned into a music party when his friend Marshall dropped by. We all had a wonderful time. Jim's place is a civil war era house in the wilds of Stanfordville. We were doing historic catskill music mixed in with rock n roll. My hands were sore this morning from playing so much. I wound up sleeping there and getting home at 8 this morning just in time to go to work. Driving home I just kept thinking - "I can't do this too often, I con't do this too often - but boy was it fun!"
Broadside Magazine
Broadside Magazine is being revived online. I was on their board briefly in the 80's.
Check out: http://www.broadsidemagazine.com This is a great song resource.