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<text id=93HT0359>
<title>
1960s: Folk Singing: Sibyl with Guitar:Joan Baez
</title>
<history>Time-The Weekly Magazine-1960s Highlights</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
TIME Magazine
November 23, 1962
Folk Singing: Sibyl with Guitar
</hdr>
<body>
<p> Anything called a hootenanny ought to be shot on sight, but
the whole country is having one. A hootenanny is to folk
singing what a jam session is to jazz, and all over the U.S.
there is a great reverberate twang. Guitars and banjos akimbo,
folk singers inhabit smoky metropolitan crawl space; they sprawl
on the floors of college rooms; near the foot of ski trails,
they keep time to the wheeze and sputter of burning logs; they
sing homely lyrics to the combers of the Pacific.
</p>
<p> They are everybody and anybody. A civil engineer performs
in his off-hours in the folk bins of the Midwest. So do
debutantes, university students, even a refugee from an Eastern
girl's-school choir. Everywhere, there are bearded fop singers
and clean-cut dilettantes. There are gifted amateurs and serious
musicians. New York, Boston, Chicago, Minneapolis, Denver and
San Francisco all have shoals of tiny coffee shops, all loud
with basic folk sound--a pinched and studied wail that is
intended to suggest flinty hills or clumpy prairies.
</p>
<p> Not even the smaller cities are immune; Joliet, Ill.,
for example, has a folk cave appropriately called The Know
Where, Fort Wayne, Ind., has a place called The Fourth Shadow
where people squat on the floor and sip espresso by candlelight
over doors that have been made into tables. Strings are jumping
at The Jolly Coachman in Council Bluffs, Iowa. Incredibly,
Omaha, just across the river from Council Bluffs, has two
places, The Third Man and The Crooked Ear where queues sometimes
run to a hundred head, and the varied clientele--as in all
cities--not only have beards, berets, and half-acre sweaters
with turtle necks, but also the striped ties and no-extra-margin
lapels. When something is that big in Omaha, Daddy, it can be
said to have arrived.
</p>
<p> Cult & Industry. Removed from its natural backgrounds, folk
singing has become both an esoteric cult and a light industry.
Folk-song albums are all over the best-seller charts, and folk
singing groups command as much as $10,000 a night in the big
niteries. As a cultural fad, folk singing appeals to genuine
intellectuals, fake intellectuals, sing-it-yourself types, and
rootless root seekers who discern in folk songs the fine basic
values of American life. As a pastime, it has staggeringly
multiplied sales of banjos and guitars; more than 400,000
guitars were sold in the U.S. last year.
</p>
<p> The focus of interest is among the young. On campuses where
guitars and banjos were once symptoms of hopeless maladjustment,
country twanging has acquired new status. A guitar stringer
shows up once a week at the Princeton University Store.
</p>
<p> The people who sit in the urban coffee-houses sipping mocha
java at 60 cents a cup are mainly of college age. They take folk
singing very seriously. No matter how bad a performing singer
may be, the least amount of cross talk will provoke an angry
shhh.
</p>
<p> These cultists often display unconcealed and somewhat
exaggerated contempt for entertaining groups like the Kingston
Trio and the Limeliters. Folk singing is a religion, in the
purists' lexicon, and the big corporate trios are its money-
changing De Milles. The high pantheon is made up of all the
shiftless geniuses who have shouted the songs of their forbears
into tape recorders provided by the Library of Congress. These
country "authentics" are the all but unapproachable gods. The
tangible sibyl, closer to hand, is Joan Baez.
</p>
<p> Her voice is as clear as air in the autumn, a vibrant,
strong, untrained and thrilling soprano. She wears no makeup,
and her long black hair hangs like a drapery, parted around her
long almond face. In performance she comes on, walks straight
to the microphone and beings to sing. No patter. No show
business. She usually wears a sweater and skirt or a simple
dress. Occasionally she affects something semi-Oriental that
seems to have been hand-sewn out of burlap. The purity of her
voice suggests purity of approach. She is only 21 and palpably
nubile. But there is little sex in that clear flow of sound.
It is haunted and plaintive. A mother's voice, and it has in it
distant reminders of black women wailing in the night, of
detached madrigal singers performing calmly at court, and of
saddened gypsies trying to charm death into leaving their
Spanish caves.
</p>
<p> Impresarios everywhere are trying to book her. She has
rarely appeared in nightclubs and says she doubts that she will
ever sing in one again; she wants to be something more than
background noise. Her LP albums sell so well that she could
hugely enrich herself by recording many more, but she has set
a limit of one a year. Most of her concerts are given on college
campuses.
</p>
<p> She sings Child ballads (Harvard Professor Francis J.
Child's five-volume The English and Scottish Popular Ballads,
published between 1882 and 1897 is still the definitive
anthology in its field. Folkupmanship absolutely requires that
a ballad be referred to as Child 12, Child 200, or Child 209
rather than Lord Randall, Gypsy Laddie, or Geordie.) with an
ethereal grace that seems to have been caught and stopped in
passage in the air over the 18th century Atlantic. Barbara Allen
(Child 84) is one of the set pieces of folk singing, and no one
sings it as achingly as she does. From Lonesome Road to All My
Trials, her most typical selections are so mournful and quietly
desperate that her early records would not be out of place at
a funeral. More recently she has added some lighter material
to create a semblance of variety, but the force of sadness in
her personality is so compelling that even the wonderful and
instructive lyrics of Copper Kettle somehow manage to portend
a doom deeper than a jail sentence:
</p>
<qt>
<l>Build your fire with hickory--</l>
<l>Hickory and ash and oak.</l>
<l>Don't use no green or rotten wood,</l>
<l>They'll get you by the smoke.</l>
<l>While you lay there by the juniper,</l>
<l>While the moon is bright,</l>
<l>Watch them jugs a-filling</l>
<l>In the pale moonlight.</l>
</qt>
<p> That song is a fine hymn to the contemplative life of the
moonshiner, but Joan Baez delivers it in a manner that suggests
that all good lives, respectable or not, are soon to end.
</p>
<p> The people who promote her records and concerts are forever
saying that "she speaks to her generation." They may be right
since her generation seems to prefer her to all others. If the
subtle and emotional content of her attitude is getting through
to her contemporaries, she at least has an idea of what she is
trying to say to them and why they want to hear it. "When I
started singing, I felt as though we had just so long to live,
and I still feel that way," she says. "It's looming over your
head. The kids who sing feel they really don't have a future--so they pick up a guitar and play. It's a desperate sort of
thing, and there's a whole lost bunch of them."
</p>
<p> Mobile Start. Joan Baez (she pronounces it By-ess) was
born on Staten Island, Jan. 9, 1941. But both her parents were
foreign-born. Her mother was English-Scottish, the daughter
of an Episcopal minister and professor of dramatic art who
migrated to the U.S. Her father was born in Mexico and was also
a minister's son. He arrived in the U.S. at the age of seven
when his father was sent to work with the Spanish-speaking
community in New York City. The two met at Drew University in
Madison, N.J., where he discovered an interest in physics and
made it his life's work. His academic career has been highly
mobile, taking him to various universities and cities ranging
from Los Angeles to Buffalo to Baghdad to Boston and, most
recently, Paris, where he is now a consultant for UNESCO.
</p>
<p> Along the way, young Joan and her two sisters learned some
memorable lessons in bigotry. When Dr. Baez was doing military
research in Buffalo, for example, he thought it would be a
pleasant experience to settle in a small and typical American
town. He chose Clarence Center, N.Y., (pop. 900) where the
senile old man who was their next-door neighbor scowled at
Joan's dark Mexican skin and said, "Niggers." The Baezes in turn
called the neighbor "Old Bogey." To keep Old Bogey confused,
they sank a plug spout into a telephone pole outside his house
and hung a maple-syrup bucket on it. "We knew that he would be
full of contempt for our supposed ignorance of maple tapping,"
says Dr. Baez, "but we knew that he could not resist peeking
into the bucket. We were in stitches of laughter, peeking from
our window when he would come by, look around furtively, and
peek into the bucket. Then we began to put things in the bucket,
water and so on. He was astonished. Poor Old Bogey."
</p>
<p> In Redlands, Calif., Joan found a situation that cut deeper
than one old crank. The Mexican schoolchildren there play in
separate groups from the "whites." Observably, the dominant tone
of Joan's personality changed from ebullience to melancholy. Her
13th birthday came, and she said something she would repeat
often: "Mummy, I don't want to grow up."
</p>
<p> She went to high school in Palo Alto, walked barefoot on
the campus, got A's in music and F's in biology, studying only
what appealed to her. She bought a Sears Roebuck guitar and
also sang in the school choir, but there were no particular
stirrings of a future career, least of all in folk singing. The
music on the phonograph at home was Bach, Mozart, Vivaldi. Her
voice at the time was, by her description, "straight as a pin."
She would stand before her bathroom mirror, jiggling her Adam's
apple with her forefinger in an effort to induce a vibrato--with no idea how stunning it would be when it eventually came
to her.
</p>
<p> Resentful Stones. After she had finished high school, the
family moved to Boston, where her father had picked up a mosaic
of jobs with Harvard, M.I.T., Encyclopedia Britannica Films, and
the Smithsonian Institution. They had scarcely settled when Dr.
Baez came home one night and said, "Come girls, I have something
to show you." He took them to Tulla's Coffee Grinder, where
amateur folk singers could bring their guitars and sing.
</p>
<p> Joan was soon singing there and in similar places around
Boston. She spent a month or so at Boston University studying
theater--the beginning and end of college for her--and she
met several semi-pro folk singers who taught her songs and
guitar techniques. She never studied voice or music, or even
took the trouble to study folklore and pick up songs by herself.
Instead, she just soaked them up from those around her. She
could outsing anybody, and she left a trail of resentful
steppingstones behind her.
</p>
<p> She sang in coffeehouses in and around Harvard Square that
were populated by what might be called the Harvard underworld--drifters, somewhat beat, with Penguin classics protruding from
their blue jeans and no official standing at Harvard or anywhere
else. They pretended they were Harvard students, ate in the
university dining halls and sat in on some classes. Joan Baez,
who has long been thought of as a sort of otherworldly beatnik
because of her remote manner, long hair, bare feet and burlap
wardrobe, actually felt distaste for these academic bums from
the start. "They just lie in their pads, smoke pot, and do
stupid things like that," she says.
</p>
<p> They were her first audiences, plus Harvard boys and
general citizens who grew in number until the bums were choked
out. She was often rough on them all. She ignored their requests
if she chose to. When one patron lisped a request to her, she
cruelly lisped in reply. When another singer turned sour in
performance, Joan suddenly stood up in the back of the room and
began to sing, vocally stabbing the hapless girl on the stage
into silence.
</p>
<p> Sometime Thing. She made one friend. His name is Michael
New. He is Trinidad English, 23 years old, and apparently
aimless--a sulky, moody, pouting fellow whose hair hangs down
in golden ringlets. He may go down in history as the scholar who
spent three years at Harvard as a freshman. "I was sure it would
only last two weeks as usual," says Joan. "But then after three
weeks there we were, still together. We were passionately,
insanely, irrationally in love for the first few months. Then
we started bickering and quarreling violently." Michael now
disappears, for months at a time. But he always comes back to
her, and she sometimes introduces him as her husband.
</p>
<p> In the summer of 1959, another folk singer invited her to
the first Folk Festival at Newport, R.I. Her clear-lighted voice
poured over the 13,000 people collected there and chilled them
with surprise. The record company leg-and-fang men closed in.
"Would you like to meet Mitch, Baby?" said a representative of
Columbia Records, dropping the magic name of Mitch Miller, who
is Columbia's top pop artists-and-repertory man when he isn't
waving to his mother on TV.
</p>
<p> "Who's Mitch?" said Joan.
</p>
<p> The record companies were getting a rude surprise. Through
bunk and ballyhoo, they had for decades been turning sow's ears
into silk purses. Now they had found a silk purse that had no
desire to become a sow's ear. The girl did not want to be
exploited, squeezed and stuffed with cash. Joan eventually signed
with a little outfit called Vanguard, which is now a considerably
bigger outfit called Vanguard.
</p>
<p> Cats & Doctors. Somewhere along the line, Joan Baez' family
became Quakers, but Joan herself is not a Friend. "Living is my
religion," she says. She practices it currently on California's
rugged coast. She has lived there for more than a year,
including eight months in the Big Sur region in a squalid cabin
with five cats and five dogs. The cabin was a frail barque
adrift on a sea of mud, and sometimes when Joan opened the
front door, a comber of fresh mud would break over the threshold
and flow into the living room. When she couldn't stand it any
more, she moved to cleaner quarters in nearby Carmel.
</p>
<p> She does not like to leave the area for much more than
a short concert tour, for her psychiatrist is there and she
feels that she must stay near him. He is her fourth "shrink,"
as she calls analysts, and the best ever. Mercurial, subject to
quickly shifting moods, gentle, suspicious, wild and frightened
as a deer, worried about the bugs she kills, Joan is anything
but the harsh witch that her behavior in the Cambridge
coffeehouses would suggest. Sympathetic friends point out that
her wicked manner in those days was in large part a coverup for
her small repertory. She could not have honored most requests
if she wanted to. Actually, friends insist, she is honest and
sincere to a fault, sensitive, kind and confused. She once
worked to near exhaustion at the Perkins School for the Blind
near Boston.
</p>
<p> Segregation & Sentiment. Like many folk singers, she is
earnestly political. She has taken part in peace marches and
ban-the-bomb campaigns. Once in Texas she broke off singing in
the middle of a concert to tell the audience that even at the
risk of embarrassing a few of them, she wanted to say that it
made her feel good to see some colored people in the room. "They
all clapped and cheered," she says, "I was so surprised and
happy."
</p>
<p> She is a lovely girl who has always attracted numerous
boys, but her wardrobe would not fill a hatbox. She wears almost
no jewelry, but she has one material bauble. When a Jaguar auto
salesman looked down his nose at the scruffily dressed
customer as she peered at a bucket-seat XK-E sports model, she
sat down, wrote a giant check, and bought it on the spot.
Wildly, she dashes across the desert in her Jaguar, as unsecured
as a grain of flying sand. "I have no real roots." she says.
"Sometimes, when I walk through a suburb with all its tidy
houses and lawns, I get a real feeling of nostalgia. I want to
live there and hear the screen door slam. And when I'm in New
York, it sometimes smells like when I was nine, and I love it.
I look back with great nostalgia on every place I've ever lived.
I'm a sentimental kind of goof."
</p>
<p> A Singing Map. With that much capacity for nostalgia, it
is a paradoxical wonder that she is not more interested in folk
history. "I don't care very much about where a song came from
or why--or even what it says. All I care about is how it
sounds and the feeling in it." True, it is of only academic
interest that a song called In the Bright Mohawk Valley migrated
west from stream to stream, new title to new title, until it
settled down in the Red River Valley as a Western woman's torch
song for her cowboy-errant. Similarly, a British ballad called
The Unfortunate Rake, about a soldier dying of syphilis, went
through several mutations before it traveled to Texas and became
the national anthem of the trackless range, The Streets of
Laredo.
</p>
<p> But more significantly, as Anthologist Alan Lomax says in
the opening line of his Folk Songs of North America, "the map
sings." Anyone who takes the time to seek out the anthologies
or listen to some of the field-taped recordings sold by the
Library of Congress' Archive of American Folk Song will get an
unmatchable focus on the fine detail of American history. What
is more, the folk songs bring it back alive. The West, for
example:
</p>
<qt>
<l>Oh, don't you remember sweet Betsy from Pike,</l>
<l>Who crossed the big mountains with her lover Ike,</l>
<l>With two yoke of cattle, a large yellow dog,</l>
<l>A tall Shanghai rooster and one spotted hog.</l>
</qt>
<qt>
<l>Something called Kansas Boys offers the discouraging word</l>
<l>about prairie architecture that Home on the Range left out:</l>
<l>Come all you girls, pay attention to my noise,</l>
<l>Don't fall in love with the Kansas boys...</l>
<l>Some live in cabins with a huge log wall,</l>
<l>Nary a window in it at all,</l>
<l>Sandstone chimney and a puncheon floor,</l>
<l>Clapboard roof and a button door...</l>
</qt>
<qt>
<l>People who squatted on Government land were engaged in a</l>
<l>clumsy bet against bureaucracy, but they sang:</l>
<l>Hurrah for Lane County, the land of the free,</l>
<l>The home of the grasshopper, bedbug, and flea.</l>
<l>I'll sing her praises and boast of her fame,</l>
<l>While starving to death on my government claim.</l>
<l>If they did not happen to be in Lane County, they were usually</l>
<l>bright enough to substitute their own whereabouts.</l>
</qt>
<qt>
<l>Cowboys liked to think they were beholden to no one.</l>
<l>The Lone Star Trail is fill of defiance in the saddle:</l>
<l>I'll sell my outfit just as soon as I can:</l>
<l>I won't punch cattle for no damn man.</l>
</qt>
<p> But they frequently ran out of guts when the sun went down and,
according to Poet-Anthologist Carl Sandburg, stood around in
circles with their arms draped around one another's shoulders,
moaning:
</p>
<qt>
<l>Oh, bury me not on the lone prairie,</l>
<l>Where the wild coyotes will howl o'er me,</l>
<l>Where the rattlesnakes hiss and the wind blows free.</l>
<l>Oh, bury me not on the lone prairie.</l>
</qt>
<p> So it went for every other part of the country as well.
Anyone within earshot was invited to:
</p>
<qt>
<l>Drop a tear for Big Foot Sal,</l>
<l>The best damn cook on the Erie Canal,</l>
</qt>
<p>
and the timber drover Bigerlow was lofted into song as the Old
Ironsides of all Great Lakes barges. Labor songs, in fact, not
only chronicled the building of the nation but also played a
part in the actual work, from the winch-hauling shanties of New
England sailors to the rhythmic songs of the free-swinging
lumberjacks of the great Pacific Northwest. There was even a
song that helped people put up rail-and-post fences. And in the
most often repeated labor song of all--wherein John Henry, the
Negro Paul Bunyan, works himself to death trying to compete
with a steam hammer--the onslaught of the machine makes itself
felt as it never could in a thousand pages of conventional
history.
</p>
<p> Battles & Skirmishes. Folk singing today is a multilateral
practice. It is on one hand art, on another entertainment--terms which are not mutually exclusive, except to the purists.
In the purists' severe canon, which holds that it is not art
unless it is faintly boring, there are three categories.
</p>
<p> The Commercial category--also labeled the Impures or the
Popularizers--is led by The Kingston Trio, which is probably
the most scorched threesome since Shadrach, Meshach and
Abednego. Humbly describing themselves only as "folk-oriented"
singers, they crack jokes and sing songs that only vaguely
resemble the old straight sour mash. When purist critics seek
an example of everything that is corrupt about folk singing,
they always pick on the hapless Kingstons. First off, the trio
has made as much as $30,000 a week, and this is unforgivably
crude. Next, they smooth down, harmonize, and slicken the
lyrics, embellishing the whole with gimcrack corn. But, carping
aside, the Kingstons are accomplished entertainers, and many of
their critics, Johnny-come-latelies to purity, forget that they
probably would never have heard of folk music if they had not
been at first attracted by a heel-stomping ditty rendered by the
Kingston Trio.
</p>
<p> Competing with the Kingstons for all those filthy gate
receipts are other groups like the Limeliters, Peter-Paul-and-
Mary, and the Chad Mitchell Trio, whose most celebrated number
is an imitation folk song called The John Birch Society:
</p>
<qt>
<l>Join the John Birch Society, there is so much to do,</l>
<l>Have you heard they're serving vodka at the W.C.T.U.?</l>
<l>And the Brothers Four:</l>
<l>Frogg went a-courtin' and he did go,</l>
<l>To the Coconut Grove for the midnight show...</l>
</qt>
<p> Burl Ives, who also did much to engender the present
interest in folk singing, has long since been dipped in taint,
chiefly because of his popularity. Harry Belafonte, embalmed in
his riches, goes right on even though he has long been called
Harry Belaphony by folkier-than-thou types. Harry has committed
several crimes. Mainly, he has made plenty money, Also, he is
backed by an orchestra large enough to support Der Ring des
Nibelungen.
</p>
<p> Hard Times. At the other extreme are the Pures, the
Authentics, the Real Articles--singers who are above criticism
because they are living source material. Most are nameless, or
at least obscure, an important characteristic for true greatness
in the field. Kentucky's Jean Ritchie, 39, is perhaps the best-
known authentic. She comes from a town called Viper, in Perry
County, and she sings without accompaniment in a pancake-flat
voice the songs her mother taught her while she wiped the dinner
dishes.
</p>
<p> Frank Proffitt, 49, is the most interesting contemporary
authentic. His first LP album was made via tape recorder in his
cabin in the Blue Ridge Mountains. It includes straightforward
lyrics like these:
</p>
<qt>
<l>I didn't have no hog to kill,</l>
<l>I went and set me up a little bitty still.</l>
<l>It's hard times on the Beaver Dam Road,</l>
<l>Hard times, poor boy.</l>
</qt>
<p> Proffitt lives near Beaver Dam Road in Watauga County, North
Carolina. His voice is flat, course, aloof and unsentimental.
Close your eyes and you can smell the corn mash in the still and
see the heat waves over the road. Proffitt makes his own fretless
banjos, cutting down hardwoods and killing groundhogs to get his
materials. Years ago, he sang a song called Tom Dula for a
visiting folk scholar. It was later recorded by the Kingston
Trio as Tom Dooley. If any one event touched off the present
folk boom in popular music, that was it. The Kingstons have sold
more than 2.6 million copies of the song and many other singers
have recorded it, too. Proffitt's reward has been approximately
zero dollars, zero cents. Hard times on the Beaver Dam Road.
</p>
<p> Great Names. Much backbiting, infighting, frontal assault
and crossfire occur in the vast middle ground occupied by the
Semipures, the Adapters, the Interpreters. Joan Baez being the
most celebrated of them just now, is the one most under attack.
By other singers, disorganized coffeehouse groups, and organized
critics like the editor of the Little Sandy Review (folk
singing's self-appointed "conscience") she is sniped at for her
failure to study, for not training her voice, for using folk
material to express her own feelings, for singing nearly
everything sadly. If she were to study zealously, take voice
lessons, disguise her emotions, and sing like a revivalist, she
would be blasted for tampering with nature.
</p>
<p> Like Joan Baez, the big names in folk singing belong to
this middle group. Many of them have been songsmiths in their
own right, and all have been devoted to creating and
recreating folk music with feeling rather than negotiable
embellishment. Chief among them was the late Huddie Ledbetter,
a felonious Negro known as Leadbelly, who is folk singing's one
immortal. He was so great that he was almost authentic. He spent
much of his career behind bars for murder and other pastimes,
but on both sides of the walls he was a natural, whooping,
primitive, shouting in primary rhythms with a voice as clear and
incomprehensible as an echo.
</p>
<p> After Leadbelly, names like Woodrow Wilson ("Woody")
Guthrie and William L.C. ("Big Bill") Broonzy are the ones to
drop in folksville. Both were drifters who wrote songs, sang
them, made no money, and tended the flame. Guthrie, 50, who has
been terribly ill with a nervous disease for the past eight
years and is now at Kings County Hospital in Brooklyn, is an
Oklahoman who never held a job more than a week or so, always
needed a shave, and sang for anybody who cared to listen--timber workers on the edge of the Great Lakes, sharecroppers in
the South. Today's young folk singers show a widespread
predilection for Woody Guthrie songs, especially Hard Travelin'
and This Land is Your Land.
</p>
<p> Darlings and Buddhas. Big Bill Broonzy died in 1938. Mainly
a blues singer, he was the unwashed darling of purist fans, but
he had short patience with all the folk curators who insist that
a true folk song has to be of unknown authorship and come down
through the oral tradition. "I guess all songs is folk songs,"
he said. "I never heard no horse sing 'em."
</p>
<p> The tradition of Broonzy and Guthrie is being carried on
by a large number of disciples, most notably a promising young
hobo named Bob Dylan. He is 21 and comes from Duluth. He dresses
in sheepskin and a black corduroy Huck Finn cap, which covers
only a small part of his long, tumbling hair. He makes visits
to Woody Guthrie's hospital bed, and he delivers his songs in
a studied nasal that has just the right clothespin-on-the-nose
honesty to appeal to those who most deeply care. His most
celebrated song is Talkin' New York, about his first visit to
the city, during the cold winter of 1961, when he discovered
"Green Witch Village."
</p>
<p> But the current patriarch of folk singing is Pete Seeger.
A Harvardman who quit college to wander through the country
collecting songs. Seeger has sung at least 50 LP albums. In 1949
he organized a group called the Weavers that won a tall
reputation for quadripartite purity. Seeger commends so much
respect among folk singers that the only criticism ever leveled
against him (Except by the House Un-American Activities
Committee, which cited him for contempt of Congress some years
ago when he refused to answer their questions about his
performances before Communist-line groups. He was finally
convicted in 1961, but last May the U.S. Court of Appeals
reversed the decision. While the case was under review, Joan
Baez dedicated a song to Seeger in every concert she gave. Folk
singing has always been closely allied with social protest and
liberal politics. "There's never been a good Republican folk
singer," says Joan.) is that he can't carry a tune. But that
gives him the seal of authenticity. His voice sounds as if a
cornhusk were stuck in this throat.
</p>
<p> Eclectics & Elegants. In the great miscellany of
contemporary folk singers, there is something for everybody.
Arty eclectics such as Theodore Bikel and Richard Dyer-Bennett
sing anything from anywhere with a lofty and cosmopolitan
distinction. Jean Redpath sings the songs of her own Scotland
with plaintive elegance; Miriam Makeba, an extraordinarily
popular nightclub performer in this country, conveys the passion
of the African chants she learned as a girl in South Africa.
</p>
<p> The great Odetta, born Odetta Felious in Birmingham, is
currently under fire for doing a blues album that is closer to
jazz than folk. But she remains one of the best folk singers
going; her brawny female baritone can run through a wider
variety of mood and matter than most singers would dare attempt.
The best bluegrass (a polite synonym for hillbilly) is being
done by Nashville's Lester Flatt, Earl Scruggs and the Foggy
Mountain Boys, cultural descendants of Tennessee's Carter Family
whose records--made in the '30's--are still the standard
canon of bluegrass. Scruggs is the world's most famous banjo
picker, and his swift style is often imitated. "I'd like to be
able to do it." admits North Carolina's Frank Proffitt in a
reserved drawl, "and then not do it."
</p>
<p> Parody & Power. There are, in fact, so many active
professional folk singers that hootenannies often turn into
games of king-of-the-mountain, as eager youth, male and female
storms the stage. In Greenwich Village's Folk City, dozens of
album jackets hung from the ceiling like Christmas cards, and
nearly all the names and faces they display are triumphantly
obscure. Every other crow alive is a folk singer who has made
at least one album. In response to that sort of popularity, a
parody was inevitable.
</p>
<p> High on Variety's bestseller chart this week was something
called My Son the Folk Singer by Allan Sherman. The melodies are
truish, and the words are Jewish. Greensleeves becomes
Greenbaum, Matilda becomes My Zelda, who "took the money and ran
with the tailor." Another fellow has lost his best salesman and
his business is failing. It could be that there are other
factors involved, but "Gimmie Jack Cohn and I don't care, gimmie
Jack Cohn and I don't care..."
</p>
<p> Folk singing may be a fad just now, but it will never roll
off like the Hula Hoop. As its long history demonstrates, it has
staying power. It is something that people who are constantly
bathed in canned entertainment can do for themselves. At its
best it unpretentiously calls up a sense of history. It shines
with language in which short words and images go long distances
upstream all the way against the main currents of polished
grammar. And, unpontifically, it dusts off the sturdier and
simpler values of American life--some of which are against the
law:
</p>
<qt>
<l>You just lay there by the juniper,</l>
<l>While the moon is bright,</l>
<l>Watch them jugs a-filling,</l>
<l>In the pale moonlight.</l>
</qt>
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