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Pete Seeger Reader.

Perhaps the most widely recognized figure in folk music and one of the most well-known figures in American political activism, Pete Seeger now belongs among the icons of 20th-century American culture. The road to his current status as activist and respected voice of folk music was long and often rou...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Clasificación:Libro Electrónico
Autor principal: Cohen, Ronald D.
Formato: Electrónico eBook
Idioma:Inglés
Publicado: Oxford University Press, USA, 2013.
Temas:
Acceso en línea:Texto completo
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • Cover; Contents; Introduction; PART I: Background; 1 Gene Marine: Guerrilla Minstrel (1972); 2 Studs Terkel: Pete Seeger: 2002 (2005); PART II: The Early Years; 3 Lawrence Emery: Interesting Summer: Young Puppeteers in Unique Tour of Rural Areas (1939); 4 Pete and His Banjo Meet Some Fine Mountain Folks (1940); 5 Pete Seeger: Banjo Picker in Kentucky; 6 Pete Seeger: Back Where I Come From (1941); 7 George Lewis: America Is in Their Songs: Pete Bowers and Al [sic] Hays Collect U.S. Folk Ballads (1941); 8 The Almanac Singers [Pete Seeger] to Son House (1942).
  • 9 E.A.: The "Almanacs" Part, But Keep on Singing (1943)10 Pete Seeger: Notes of an Innocent Bystander (1945); 11 Woody Guthrie: People's Songs and Its People (1990); 12 Pete Seeger: People's Songs Workshop, The Jefferson School of Social Science Newsletter (1946); 13 Pete Seeger: People's Songs and Singers (1946); 14 Pete Seeger: Report to Members (1946); 15 Pete Seeger: Two Letters to People's Songs Supporters (1948); 16 Pete Seeger: Minutes of the Meeting of the National Board of Directors of People's Songs (1948); PART III: The 1950s.
  • 17 Robert W. Dana: Village Vanguard Has Real Hoe-Down (1950)18 Jay Russell: How the Weavers Break Night Club Ice (1950); 19 Frederick Woltman: Melody Weaves On, Along Party Lines (1951); 20 Alan Lomax: Liner Notes to Darling Corey (1950); 21 Letter to Ray M. Lawless (1953); 22 Irwin Silber: Pete Seeger-Voice of Our Domestic Heritage (1954); 23 Monty Muns: Pete Seeger: An Appreciation (1955); 24 Pete Seeger: Summary of Government Charges, 1955-1957 (1957); 25 Pete Seeger: A Letter of Greetings to the Editors and Readers of Sing Along (1957).
  • 26 "Blind Rafferty" (aka Dave Van Ronk): Untitled Article (1957)27 Emerson L. Batdorff: It's Not Nose in Folk Song, Artist Proves (1958); 28 Ronald Radosh: Excerpt from Commies (2001); PART IV: The 1960s; 29 Moses Asch: Foreword to Pete Seeger, American Favorite Ballads (1961); 30 Pete Seeger: Statement to the Court Before Judge Thomas F. Murphy, Federal Court, New York (1961); 31 David Marcus: Seeger Cites Battle of Politics, Arts (1961); 32 Eric Winter: Pete Seeger Sails In to a Hero's Welcome (1961); 33 Pete Seeger: When You're Singing Just Be Yourself (1961).
  • 34 Allan Hjerpe: Pete Seeger in L.A. Concert (1962)35 Pete Seeger: The Country Washboard Band (1963); 36 Pete Seeger: Introduction to The Bells of Rhymney (1964); 37 Pete Seeger: Letter to Sis Cunningham and Gordon Friesen (1963); 38 Pete Seeger: What's in a Word? (1964); 39 Harold Leventhal: Newsletter about Seeger Concert Tour (1964); 40 Ruth Daniloff: Pete Seeger in Moscow (1964); 41 Jon Pankake: Pete's Children: The American Folksong Revival, Pro and Con (1964); 42 [Pete Seeger]: Pete Seeger (1965); 43 Ralph J. Gleason: A Singer Who Meets You Half Way (1965).