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Song of the Month


When Rats Dream


Pat Wynne
When Rats Dream
by Pat Wynne, Bernard Gilbert

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Liner Notes

The Planter And The Sharecropper

— John Handcox


John Handcox and Joe Glazer
John Handcox and Joe Glazer at the 48th anniversary of the founding of the Southern Tenant Farmers Union, Memphis, April, 1982. Photo: Evelyn Munro Smith, held by Joe Glazer. Click to enlarge.

According to the legendary folksinger Woody Guthrie, John L. Handcox (1904-1992) was the "main light, organizer, and songwriter for the Southern Tenant Farmer's Union during its early days." Since then, Handcox's songs have established him as the voice of poor cotton farmers during the great Depression and, according to Pete Seeger, as "one of the most important songwriters of the early 20th Century." In Handcox's songs and poems, we find both the timeless artistic expression of one man and a documentary history of the major issues that drove the unionization of tenant farmers in the South and Southwest during the 1930s. Due to the power of his words and their rhythmic vitality, his writing continues to touch Americans concerned with worker justice.

In these recordings of Handcox's songs, poems, and stories, you will not find a honey-smooth voice. John Handcox's vocals have a bite to them -- just as his lyrics have a bite, a roughness about them. The reality that he speaks of is harsh and hard -- a rough truth that Handcox knew first-hand. His is a pure voice, that of a man who needed to record and comment on the injustice he saw around him in Depression-era rural Arkansas.

Born in Brinkley, Arkansas on February 5, 1904, to a large African-American family, Handcox knew the hard life of a poor cotton farmer early on. His father, the son of slaves, owned animals, tools, and even some land in eastern Arkansas, near -- but not in -- the fertile Delta of the Mississippi River. Handcox joked, "You couldn't even raise a fuss on that land." Even though the earth was poor and they had to raise cotton on other people's property for money, their land ownership gave the family a measure of security that many other farmers of the era did not enjoy. Young John even attended school up to the ninth grade, much longer than many of his peers, and idolized the poetry of Paul Lawrence Dunbar. With Dunbar's work in mind, Handcox first began writing his own poetry and songs.

Poem recorded March 9, 1937, for the Library of Congress's Archive of Folksong by Charles Seeger and Sidney Robertson.

Taken from the CD John L. Handcox, Songs Poems, and Stories of the Southern Tenant Farmers Union, available from West Virginia University Press.

Liner notes on the CD by Mark Allan Jackson (footnotes and bibliography omitted).

Engineer: Mark Poole, Zone 8 Recording.

When his father was accidentally crushed to death by a wagon in 1921, Handcox and the rest of his expanding family entered some particularly hard times. They lost their homestead, leaving them no choice but to live and work others' land as tenant farmers. During this time, many people -- both black and white -- made a precarious living as tenant farmers raising cotton in the rich lands of the Arkansas Delta region and throughout the South and Southwest.

Instead of money, these farmers paid a percentage of their harvest as rent, usually a third or a fourth but sometimes as much as half. With cotton prices plummeting to five cents a pound by the early 1930s -- coupled with the perfidy of some landowners' bookkeeping -- many of these farmers ended each year further in debt, including Handcox's own family. Recognizing the injustice of tenant farming, Handcox quit farming and sought out others who shared his disdain for this repressive and debilitating system, people who were working to make a difference.

In 1934, two members of the local Socialist Party, H.L. Mitchell and Clay East, joined 18 tenant farmers -- both black and white -- at a school house in Tyronza, Arkansas, to form the Southern Tenant Farmers Union (STFU). The newly formed union protested evictions of tenant farmers, lobbied both state and federal officials for labor protection and civil rights, and organized strikes to gain better working conditions and increased pay. Due to the STFU's labor agitation and racially-integrated membership, many local individuals and groups violently opposed the union's efforts. Meetings were attacked, members were beaten and jailed, and a few were even killed. Ultimately, the union was forced to move its headquarters to Memphis, Tennessee, as a safety measure. But word began to spread, and tenant farmers took the union's goal of economic justice to new chapters in surrounding states.

Dribble Plantation
Sharecroppers evicted from the Dribble Plantation for union activity congregate by the roadside near Parkin, Arkansas, in the winter of 1936. Photo: John Vachon, held by Prints and Photographs Division, Library of Congress. Click to enlarge.

After first learning about the union in 1935, John Handcox said, "Man, that's the thing we needs," and immediately joined. Soon, he became an active organizer and began writing numerous songs and poems about his and other farmers' experiences, many of which appeared in the STFU's newspaper The Sharecropper's Voice. Of this work, he said, "I tried to write something interesting about the conditions that people were living under and what was happening. I wanted to point out when people were working hard and not getting anything out of it."

Within a year, his union activities in support of poor black and white sharecroppers in Arkansas had brought on the very real threat of lynching. Handcox himself reports that a friend came to his house and told him that a group of men were bragging, "That nigger John Handcox, we gonna hang him. We got the rope and we got the limb, all we want is him." Although he wanted to stay and defend his family, his mother and wife convinced him to leave for awhile. first, he went to the STFU headquarters in Memphis, Tennessee. At the request of union leaders, Handcox traveled down to Hillhouse, Mississippi, where the STFU had set up a collaborative farming community for evicted tenant farmers called the Delta Cooperative Farm. After a few weeks there, he traveled up to the boot-heel country of Missouri to organize locals for the union. Although he left the area after a few months to help promote and raise money for the STFU elsewhere, his songs remained behind. In fact, protesters involved in the famed Missouri Bootheel Roadside Demonstration in 1939 sang his song "Raggedy, Raggedy," emphasizing the "homeless, homeless are we, just as homeless as we can be" verse.

The Planter And The Sharecropper

Often in his work, Handcox directly pointed his finger at the planters and the landowners who treated both their black and white tenants as if slavery still existed. In his poem The Planter And The Sharecropper, he lays out the gulf between the two groups. The planter, his wife, and his children eat well, ride in automobiles, and live in "a house as fine as the best," while the sharecropper and his family work the fields and "have to go bare." Even in death there is no equality: "When the sharecropper dies he has to be buried in a box,/Without any necktie or any socks."

Handcox traveled far form the cotton fields of the South in an effort to gain support and money for the STFU, visiting Chicago, Detroit, New York City, and Washington, DC. While in the capital in March 1937, at the urging of STFU secretary H. L. Mitchell, he dropped by the Library of Congress, where Charles Seeger and his assistant Sidney Robertson recorded six of his songs and two of his poems for the Archive of Folksong.

Due to reasons both economic and personal, Handcox left the STFU and the South at the end of the Depression. During World War II, he joined other members of his extended family in San Diego, where he lived quietly for nearly forty years. But in the 1980s, Handcox again felt called upon to comment on America's political realities, especially after his participation in the 50th Anniversary celebration of the STFU in Memphis, Tennessee. In 1984, he wrote the pointedly political, "Oh No, We Don't Want Reagan anymore" and "Let's Get Reagan Out." Although Handcox had been inactive for several decades, the union community began rediscovering him during this time and invited him to several labor gatherings throughout America.

With his death from cancer on September 18, 1992, John Handcox's voice was finally stilled -- but not his memory or his influence. His work has been revered by the likes of such labor songwriters and performers as Pete Seeger, Woody Guthrie, and Joe Glazer. But how did these labor minstrels hear of Handcox and his songs or poems? Labor folklorist Archie Green asks, "What would have been Handcox's role had he not recorded any songs in Washington, DC? How could we have come to an appreciation of his contributions?" Yes, these recordings did catch the interest of a young Pete Seeger, whose father Charles had captured them for the Library of Congress. In turn, Seeger sang them for Guthrie -- and the two of them then sang them for thousands of union organizations around the nation in the 1940s. The two then put some of Handcox's work in the radical songbook Hard Hitting Songs for Hard Hit People. Through these efforts and others, Handcox's songs have been passed on and we are still sung on picket lines. In fact, his granddaughter Camellia Cook encountered his song Roll The Union On when she saw television coverage of the 2003 Kroger workers' strike and heard union members singing it. However, few have actually heard Handcox singing his own songs, reciting his own poems, or telling of his life or work with the STFU.

Muskogee Oklahoma
Black and white members of the STFU meet in a school house in Muskogee, Oklahoma, July, 1939. Photo: Russell Lee, held by Prints and Photographs Division, Library of Congress. Click to enlarge.

Through the release of these recordings from the Library of Congress and the Smithsonian, this important labor figure's efforts are now accessible to new generations. His words -- in his songs, poems, and stories -- provide a historical record of the struggles of the STFU and the plight of tenant farmers in the 1930s. At great personal risk, he worked to bring poor cotton farmers together -- both black and white -- so they could find strength in unity to fight for fair wages for their labor and for fair prices of what they raised. He stood up for justice in a time and place where little opportunity existed for the poor. For this effort, and for his songs and poems of truth, John Handcox should be remembered as a labor hero to us all; and he is now able to sing out his rough truth for eternity -- in his own voice.



Music Archives

May 2008
Pat Wynne
When Rats Dream
Pat Wynne, Bernard Gilbert
Personnel: Pat Wynne: vocals
and piano; Carole Steele
(Queen of Groove), percussion;
Ayla Davila, bass: Greg
Landau, producer; John
Greenham, mastermix. May 2008
Pat Wynne
When Rats Dream
Pat Wynne, Bernard Gilbert
Photo: NHGRI
April 2008
George Mann
Rest, Papa Rest
George Mann
Personnel: Marty Confurius, double
bass, cellos, string arrangements;
George Mann, acoustic guitars,
e-bows, lead vocals, sound; Annie
O'Shea, lead and harmony vocals;
Joe Jencks, harmony vocals; Alan
Podber, harmonica; Mark Urselli,
sound. April 2008
George Mann
Rest, Papa Rest
George Mann
Photo: Howard Goldbaum
March 2008
Lynn Marie Smith
Rebuilding The Union Movement
Lynn Marie Smith, A Taste Of Honey
Personnel: Lynn Marie Smith, lead,
background vocals; Denise Dotson,
background Vocals; Jon Pettiford,
musician; Bruce Wimbley, engineer. March 2008
Lynn Marie Smith
Rebuilding The Union Movement
Lynn Marie Smith, A Taste Of Honey
Photo: Jim West
February 2008
Dropkick Murphys
Worker's Song (Handful of Earth)
Ed Pickford
Personnel: Al Barr, vocals; Ken Casey, vocals,
bass, producer; Joe Delaney, bagpipes; Matt
Kelly, vocals, drums; James Lynch, vocals,
guitar; Marc Orell, vocals, guitar; Jim Siegel,
Howie Weinberg, Fredrik Sarhagen, sound. February 2008
Dropkick Murphys
Worker's Song (Handful of Earth)
Ed Pickford
Photos: Jim West, Fred Askew
January 2008
Joe Uehlein
Artists See The World In A Different Light
Joe Uehlein, Dave Alvin
Personnel: Joe Uehlein, vocals, guitar;
Ellis Boal, sound. January 2008
Joe Uehlein
Artists See The World In A Different Light
Joe Uehlein, Dave Alvin
Photo: FBI
December 2007
Finest Kind
Homeless Wassail
Ian Robb
Personnel: Ian Robb, lead vocals, concertina;
Ann Downey, Shelley Posen, harmony vocals;
James Stephens, David Bignell, David Cain,
sound. December 2007
Finest Kind
Homeless Wassail
Ian Robb
Photo: Unknown
November 2007
Guy Carawan
Which Side Are You On?
Florence Reece
Personnel: Guy Carawan, vocals, banjo; Doug
Dorschug, recording; Doug Dorschug, Sonny
Houston, Lynn Brown, mixing. November 2007
Guy Carawan
Which Side Are You On?
Florence Reece
Photo: Harlan County Library
October 2007
Paul Robeson
Water Boy
Avery Robinson
Personnel: Paul Robeson, solo; Milt Okum
choral conductor; Robert DeCormier,
arranger; James Frey, disk compiler; Jeff
Zaraya, engineer. October 2007
Paul Robeson
Water Boy
Avery Robinson
Photos: Alan Lomax, Joseph John
September 2007
Billy Bragg
The Internationale
Eugène Pottier, Pierre Degeyter, Billy Bragg
Personnel: Billy Bragg, vocals; Grant Showbiz,
Wiggy, producers; Derek Bolland, Peter Haigh,
Charlie Llewellin, Step Parikian, engineers. September 2007
Billy Bragg
The Internationale
Eugène Pottier, Pierre Degeyter, Billy Bragg
Lithograph: Unknown
August 2007
Si Kahn
Go To Work On Monday
Si Kahn
Personnel: Si Kahn, guitar, lead vocals;
Annemarieke Coenders, harmony vocals; Linde
Nijland, harmony vocals; Jesse Kahn,
producer; Pieter Groenveld, engineer,
producer; Jelke Haisma, mastering. August 2007
Si Kahn
Go To Work On Monday
Si Kahn
Photo: Earl Dotter
July 2007
The NewLanders
The Altoona Freight Wreck
Fred Tait-Douglas, Carson Robison
NewLanders personnel: Art Gazdik, violin
and mandolin; Gerard Rohlf, acoustic
guitar, backing vocal; Paula Purnell,
acoustic guitar, backing vocal; Doug
Wilkin, electric guitar, lead vocal;
Dave Yates, bass; Dan Kaplan, harmonica;
RJ Heid, drums. July 2007
The NewLanders
The Altoona Freight Wreck
Fred Tait-Douglas, Carson Robison
Photo: Unknown
June 2007
Zack de la Rocha, Tom Morello
And Now What?
Zack de la Rocha
Personnel: Zack de la Rocha,
vocals; Tom Morello, guitar. June 2007
Zack de la Rocha, Tom Morello
And Now What?
Zack de la Rocha
Poster: Ahmed Resistol
May 2007
Coco Brown
I Dreamed I Saw Joe Hill Last Night
Alfred Hayes, Earl Robinson
Personnel: Coco Brown, lead vocals; Gail
Berry, Michael Dunston, Lorraine Scott,
Bryant Didier, Coco Brown, backing vocals;
Denis Keldie, piano, accordion, mandolin;
Paul Antonio, drums; Russ Williams,
guitars; Bryant Didier, strings, acoustic
bass; Bryant Didier, mixing and mastering;
Toney Leah, liner notes. May 2007
Coco Brown
I Dreamed I Saw Joe Hill Last Night
Alfred Hayes, Earl Robinson
Oil: M. Baer
April 2007
Ry Cooder
Strike!
Traditional, new verses by Ry Cooder
Personnel: Ry Cooder, vocals, guitar,
producer; Mike Seeger, fiddle, harmonica,
jaw harp; Joachim Cooder, drums; Don
Smith, recording, mixdown; Sunny Levine,
recording; Martin Pradler, recording,
mixdown, mastering; Aisha Ayers,
assistant; Vincent Valdez, illustrator April 2007
Ry Cooder
Strike!
Traditional, new verses by Ry Cooder
Drawing: Vincent Valdez
March 2007
Teresa Healy, Tom Juravich
Bread and Roses
by James Oppenheim, Tom Juravich
Personnel: Teresa Healy, vocals; Tom
Juravich, vocals, acoustic guitar,
producer; James Stephens, fiddle,
electric guitar, producer, recording,
mixing; David Cain, mastering;
Dave Bignell, mixing. March 2007
Teresa Healy, Tom Juravich
Bread and Roses
by James Oppenheim, Tom Juravich
Painting: Ralph Fasanella
February 2007
Detroit Cultural Workers and Artists Caucus
Walking 500 Days
by Bob Vasseur
Personnel:  Bob Vasseur, keyboard;
Lee Tilson, guitar; Gordy Mills, bass;
Barry Bogin, drums; Kris Peterson,
vocals; Marty Krist, sound; Bob Vasseur
and Ellis Boal, producers; Pat Beck,
Daymon Hartley, photographers February 2007
Detroit Cultural Workers and Artists Caucus
Walking 500 Days
by Bob Vasseur
Photos: Pat Beck, Daymon Hartley
January 2007
New York City Labor Chorus
Ode To Workers
by Friedrich Schiller, Ludwig Van
Beethoven, Jeff Vogel
Personnel:  New York Labor Chorus,
Peter Schlosser director. January 2007
New York City Labor Chorus
Ode To Workers
by Friedrich Schiller, L. V. Beethoven, Jeff Vogel
Photo: Unknown
December 2006
Charlie Bernhardt
Children Of Abraham
by John McCutcheon
Personnel:  Charlie Bernhardt, vocals,
acoustic guitar; Ari Fink, electric bass. December 2006
Charlie Bernhardt
Children Of Abraham
by John McCutcheon
Photo: Jerry Anderson
November 2006
Ted Warmbrand
Who's The Criminal
by Ted Warmbrand
Personnel:  Ted Warmbrand, vocals, guitar;
Frank Hernandez, keyboard, accordian,
vocals; Megan Jackson, vocals; engineer,
Lance Saxerud. November 2006
Ted Warmbrand
Who's The Criminal
by Ted Warmbrand
Photo: Mizue Aiseki
October 2006
Woody Guthrie
Buffalo Skinners
by Woody Guthrie
Personnel:  Woody Guthrie, guitar and vocals;
Moses Asch, sound; Neil Waldman, art. October 2006
Woody Guthrie
Buffalo Skinners
by Woody Guthrie
Painting: Neil Waldman.
September 2006
Freedom Song Network
Rockin' Solidarity
by Ralph Chaplin, David Welsh.
Personnel: Vocals, Alex Bagwell, Harriet
Bagwell, George Fouke, Jon Fromer, Reed
Fromer, Christine Haupert-Wemmer, Mary
Idosidis, Shelley Kessler, Dave Welsh,
Pat Wynne, Ed Wyre; guitar, Jon Fromer;
keyboard, Reed Fromer; sound, Tony Sanchez;
painting, Irving Fromer. September 2006
Freedom Song Network
Rockin' Solidarity
by Ralph Chaplin, David Welsh
Painting: Irving Fromer.
August 2006
Seattle Labor Chorus
Torn Screen Door
by David Francey
Personnel:  Anita Austin, Beth Brunton, Nancy
Eichner, Alison Eisinger, Alice Friedman, Kelly
Garland, Sue Gibbs, JoAnn Keenan, Jean Lepley,
Sue Moser, Linda Novenski, Vrlina Nozlic, Hannah
Ruggiero, Kate Speltz, sopranos; Johanna
Berking, Zoë Bermat, Sandra Coffman, Laura Elia,
Susan Gordon, Sheri Hinshaw, Patty Lyman, Celia
Matson, Zoë Myers, Danushka Northcross, Edna
Oberman, Karen Stuhldreher, altos; Martha
Cohen, Jim Douglas, Jackie Dupras, Sasha
Harmon, Judy Moise, Brooke Richardson, Aspen
Swartz, Lauren Tozzi, Karen Weisser, tenors; 
Bob Barnes, John Hushagen, Charles Imhoff,
David Moise, Eric Nelson, Dan Roberts, Jim
Roe, Bill Rose, Gary Smith, Andy Thomas, Jim
True, Lou Truskoff, David Westphal, basses;
Eric Nelson, barn photo; Terry Gray, engineer;
additional sound, Robbie Cribbs; Janet
Stecher, director, producer August 2006
Seattle Labor Chorus
Torn Screen Door
by David Francey
Photo: Eric Nelson
July 2006
Emma's Revolution
Bound For Freedom
by Pat Humphries, Sandy O
Personnel:  Pat Humphries, lead vocal, guitar;
Sandy O, vocal, guitar; Ben Odom, background
vocals, arr.; Rose Odom, background vocals;
Candace Elliott, background vocals; John
Platania, electric guitar; Robin Burdulis,
tambourine; Clifford Carter, piano, b3; WhyNot
Jansveld, bass; Ethan Eubanks, drums; Paul
Antonell, producer; Sean Price, engineer;
Chris Powers, assistant engineer; David Seitz,
basic tracks; rally photo, Linda Panetta. July 2006
Emma's Revolution
Bound For Freedom
by Pat Humphries, Sandy O
Puppet: SOAW Puppetistas
June 2006
David Rovics
Used To Be A City
by David Rovics
Personnel:  David Rovics, everything except
mastering; Essential Sound, mastering. June 2006
David Rovics
Used To Be A City
by David Rovics
Photo: George Waldman
May 2006
Leaving The Fishing Behind
by Len Wallace
Personnel: Len Wallace, vocals, accordian; Martin
Smit, acoustic guitar; Eric Rosenbaum, producer;
Chuck Reynolds, recording engineer; John Robinson,
Tracy Holmes, recording assistant; R & R
Productions, studio May 2006
Len Wallace
Leaving The Fishing Behind
by Len Wallace
Drawing: H. W. Elliott, J. W. Collins
April 2006
The Nickel Under The Foot
by Marc Blitzstein
Personnel:  Marc Blitztein, vocals, piano;
Leonard Lehrman, liner notes, co-producer; Bruce
Yeko, co-producer; Da-Hong Seetoo, remastering;
Blitzstein Archives of the State Historical
Society in Madison Wisconsin, owner of original
acetate April 2006
Marc Blitzstein
The Nickel Under The Foot
by Marc Blitzstein
Photo: Unknown
March 2006
Judy Gorman
Step By Step
by American Miners Association,
Waldeman Hille,  Pete Seeger
Personnel:  Judy Gorman, vocals, guitar,
arrangements, producer; Bob Furgo, violin;
Dave Kilner, bass; Mark Hurwitt, cartoon,
photo, producer; Stanley John Mitchell,
background instrumentation, arrangements,
mixing, producer; Sylvia Arana, Spanish
translation. March 2006
Judy Gorman
Step By Step
by American Miners Association, Waldeman Hille,
Pete Seeger
Cartoon: Mark Hurwitt
February 2006
John Handcox
The Planter And The Sharecropper
by John Handcox
Other personnel: Recording, Charles Seeger,
Sidney Robertson; engineer, Mark Poole,
Zone 8 Recording. February 2006
John Handcox
The Planter And The Sharecropper
by John Handcox
Photo: Evelyn Munro Smith
January 2006
Lynn Marie Smith
U.N.I.O.N.
by Henri Belolo, Jacques Morali, Lynn Marie Smith 
Other personnel: Terry Miles, music;
Raymond Wimbley, engineering and mixing January 2006
Lynn Marie Smith
U.N.I.O.N.
by Henri Belolo, Jacques Morali, Lynn Marie Smith
Photo: Rebecca Cook
December 2005
John McCutcheon
Christmas In The Trenches
by John McCutcheon
Other personnel:  Freyda Epstein, violin;
Howard Levy, harmonica;
Lorraine Duisit, mandolin;
Ralph Gordon, cello, bass;
Bill McElroy, engineer;
John McCutcheon, Paul Reisler, producers. December 2005
John McCutcheon
Christmas In The Trenches
by John McCutcheon
Drawing: Frederice Villiers
November 2005
Davis Gloff, Michael Carluccio, Larry Schrock
Radio, Guns, and Money
by Steve Jones
Other personnel:  Bill Meyer, piano;
Hubie Crawford, bass; Charles Stuart,
drums; Elise Bryant, director; Dave
Elsila, Lisa Canada, producers; Rayse
Biggs, Jazz Miller, sound; W. DeLappe,
Holly Syrrakos, art. November 2005
Davis Gloff, Michael Carluccio, Larry Schrock
Radio, Guns, and Money
by Steve Jones
Poster: W. DeLappe, Holly Syrrakos
October 2005
Chris Chandler, David Roe
The Pageant of the Paterson Silk Strike
by Chris Chandler, Lisa Stolarski
John Henry's Slow Rag
by David Roe
Other personnel:  David Roe, piano,
snare, vocal; Thomas Nuendel, violin;
Thomas Falcone, clarinet; Justin Nurin,
cornet; Henry Cross, bass October 2005
Chris Chandler, David Roe
The Pageant of the Paterson Silk Strike
by Chris Chandler, Lisa Stolarski
John Henry's Slow Rag
by David Roe
Poster: Robert Edmund Jones
September 2005
Brooklyn Women's Chorus
We Were There
by Bev Grant
Other personnel:  Bev Grant, lead vocal,
guitar; Barry Kornhauser, electric bass;
Bruce Markow, electric guitar; Robin
Burdulis, percussion; Jeff Van Nostrand,
keyboards; Jeff Van Nostrand, Don Jacobs,
Peter Karl, sound. September 2005
Brooklyn Women's Chorus
We Were There
by Bev Grant
Ceramic mask: Geri Gventer
August 2005
Anne Feeney
Shut 'Cha Down
by Anne Feeney
Other personnel: Steve Jones, piano; Rafael
Herrera, Pam Parker, Janet Stecher, harmony
vocals. August 2005
Anne Feeney
Shut 'Cha Down
by Anne Feeney
Photo: United Airlines
July 2005
Francisco Javier Herrera
La Tierra
by Eduardo Robledo
Other personnel: Glen White, sound. July 2005
Francisco Javier Herrera
La Tierra
by Eduardo Robledo
Photo: Ellis Boal
June 2005
Si Kahn
He Lies In The American Land
by Andrew Kovaly / Pete Seeger
Other personnel: Joost van Es, fiddle;
Pieter Groenveld, Jesse Kahn, sound. June 2005
Si Kahn
He Lies In The American Land
by Andrew Kovaly / Pete Seeger
Photo courtesy of It's All Relative
May 2005
Luci Murphy, Pam Parker
Mother's Day
by Peter Jones
Other personnel: Scott Giambusso, bass;
Richard Miller, guitar; Steve Jones, piano;
Francis Thompson, drums; Ken Giles,
five-string viola; Gantt Kushner, Bill Wolf,
sound. May 2005
Luci Murphy, Pam Parker
Mother's Day
by Peter Jones
Publicity photos
April 2005
Angel Martinez
Memoirs of Bernardo Vega
Other personnel: Juan Flores, translator;
César Andreu Iglesias, editor. April 2005
Angel Martinez
Memoirs of Bernardo Vega
by Bernardo Vega, Juan Flores, César Andreu Iglesias
Photo: Unknown
March 2005
Pam Parker
We Speak Louder Than Machines
by Steve Jones
Other personnel: Steve Jones, piano, harmony
vocals; Francis Thompson, drums; Scott
Giambusso, bass. March 2005
Pam Parker
We Speak Louder Than Machines
by Steve Jones
Photo: Jim West
February 2005
Maria Dunn,
Troublemaker
by Maria Dunn
Other personnel:  Shannon Johnson, David
Ward, Dawn Anderson, harmony vocals. February 2005
Maria Dunn
Troublemaker
by Maria Dunn
Photo: Glenbow Archives
January 2005
The Troublemakers
Troublemakers Theme
by Pauly Gailiunas
Personnel: Wendy Treat, keyboards; Chris
Repaal, bass; Paul Gailiunas, guitar; Keith
Rogers, drums; Yoni Mazuz, saxaphone;
Patrick Farrell, trumpet; John Buxbaum,
bass; Cassandra Burrows, saxaphone. January 2005
The Troublemakers
Troublemakers Theme
by Pauly Gailiunas
Graphic: Ricardo Levins Morales
December 2004
Joe Jencks
Christmas In Mansfield
by Joe Jencks
Other personnel: Cary Black, upright bass;
Will Dowd, drums; David Lange, accordian. December 2004
Joe Jencks
Christmas In Mansfield
by Joe Jencks
Painting: Ray Tapajna
November 2004
Kelly Wideman
A Capella Banjo
by Samuel Augustus Ward, Katherine Lee
Bates, Earl Scruggs November 2004
Kelly Wideman
A Capella Banjo
by Samuel Augustus Ward, Katherine Lee Bates, Earl Scruggs
Photo: Jim West
October 2004
Chris Bricker, George B, Utah Phillips,
Marty Confurius, George Mann, Julius
Margolin, Alan Podber, Scott Supeck
Hail To The Thief / Stupid's Pledge / I'm
George W by George Mann, James Sanderson,
Utah Phillips, Stephen Foster October 2004
Chris Bricker, George B, Utah Phillips, George Mann
Hail To The Thief / Stupid's Pledge / I'm George W
by George Mann, James Sanderson, Utah Phillips, Stephen Foster
Cover art: Quenton of rushlimbaughonline.com
September 2004
Laurel Blaydes, Joe Jencks, Chapman
Zon What Will I Leave Behind /If I
Had A Golden Thread by Si Kahn, Pete
Seeger September 2004
Laurel Blaydes, Joe Jencks, Chapman Zon
What Will I Leave Behind / If I Had A Golden Thread
by Si Kahn, Pete Seeger
Photo: Jim West
August 2004
Utah Phillips
1910 Spokane Free Speech Fight
by Utah Phillips August 2004
Utah Phillips
1910 Spokane Free Speech Fight
by Utah Phillips
Photo: Roger Leisner
July 2004
Dave Lippman
I Hate Wal-Mart
by Dave Lippman
Sister Swing (Valerie Marston, Leigh
Hannah, Paula Chafey), backup vocals;
Bob Pearce, mandolin; Pat Balcom, drums;
Joe Lev, bass; Bruce Bolin, sound. July 2004
Dave Lippman
I Hate Wal-Mart
by Dave Lippman
Photo: Jim West
June 2004
Finland Station
Unemployment Compensation Blues
by Les Pine, Jerry Silverman
Personnel: Janet Goldwasser, guitar; Jean
Rooney, trombone; Ellis Boal, bass; Gary
Benjamin, Susan Newell, duet; Carl Robinson,
drums; Elise Bryant, director; Mike
Iacapelli, sound. June 2004
Finland Station
Unemployment Compensation Blues
by Les Pine, Jerry Silverman
Photo: Dorothea Lange, Farm Security Administration
May 2004
John McCutcheon
What It's Like
Other personnel: Bobby Read, synthesizers,
Tom Jones, percussion. May 2004
John McCutcheon
What It's Like
by John McCutcheon
Photo: Hormel Foods
April 2004
Pete Seeger & Tao Rodriguez-Seeger
A Little A' This 'N' That
by Pete Seeger
Jim Musselman, Peter Lewis, Jim Lovell,
sound. April 2004
Pete Seeger & Tao Rodriguez-Seeger
A Little A' This 'N' That
by Pete Seeger
March 2004
Charlie King & Karen Brandow
Moving Day / We Shall Not Be Moved
by Fred Stanton / Traditional
Jonathan Lufersweiler, Justin Metz, sound. March 2004
Charlie King & Karen Brandow
Moving Day / We Shall Not Be Moved
by Fred Stanton / Traditional
Photo: Unknown
February 2004
Fruit Of Labor
Solidarity
by Fruit Of Labor
Personnel: Rick Scott, Angaza Sababu
Laughinghouse, Nathanette Mayo, Yara
Hakeem, Sauuda Eshe, Kathy Blount;
Babyjack Records, sound. February 2004
Fruit Of Labor
Solidarity
by Fruit Of Labor
January 2004
Tom Juravich
Ring Some Changes
by Tom Juravich
Other personnel: Duke Levine, guitar;
Richard Gates, bass; Lorne Entress,
drums; Rani Arbo, vocal harmony. January 2004
Tom Juravich
Ring Some Changes
by Tom Juravich
Photo: Ellis Boal
December 2003
Anne Feeney
War On The Workers
by Anne Feeney
Other personnel: Jon Fromer, Janet
Stecher, Susan Lewis, vocals; Sam
Bacco, drums; Charlie Chadwick, bass. December 2003
Anne Feeney
War On The Workers
by Anne Feeney
Photo: Jim West
November 2003
Rebel Voices
Hospital Workers
by Paul McKenna
Personnel: Janet Stecher, Susan Lewis, vocals. November 2003
Rebel Voices
Hospital Workers
by Paul McKenna
Photo: Ellis Boal
October 2003
Águila Negra
El Mojado
by Flaco Jimenez
Personnel: Baldemar Velasquez, vocals,
guitar; Jesse Ponce, accordian; Jacob
Estrada, bass, harmony vocals. October 2003
Águila Negra
El Mojado
by Flaco Jimenez
Photo: Jim West
September 2003
Joe Uehlein
Jerusalem
by Steve Earle
Other personnel: Bev Grant, Pam Parker,
Anne Feeney, harmony vocals. September 2003
Joe Uehlein
Jerusalem
by Steve Earle
Photo: Ellis Boal
August 2003
AFT Singers
We're An On-Time Union
by Dottie Peoples, Gloria Britton-Ellis
Personnel: Renette Brown, Sharon Chambers,
Gloria Britton-Ellis, Sharon Wilson,
Linda Baldwin. August 2003
AFT Singers
We're An On-Time Union
by Dottie Peoples, Gloria Britton-Ellis
Photo: Michael Campbell
July 2003
Jon Fromer, Francisco Herrera
I Cannot Sleep
by Malvina Reynolds July 2003
Jon Fromer, Francisco Herrera
I Cannot Sleep
by Malvina Reynolds
Photo: Ellis Boal
June 2003
Pat Wynne
Toxic Dreams
by Pat Wynne June 2003
Pat Wynne
Toxic Dreams
by Pat Wynne
Photo: Pat Wynne
May 2003
Susan Lewis, Janet Stecher, Luci Murphy
Mean Things Happening / Roll The Union On
by John Handcox
Ain't You Got A Right
by Guy Carawan May 2003
Susan Lewis, Janet Stecher, Luci Murphy
Mean Things Happening / Roll The Union On
Ain't You Got A Right

by John Handcox, Guy Carawan
Photos: Labor Heritage Foundation, Highlander Center
April 2003
George Mann & Julius Margolin
If I Only Had A Brain
by Harold Arlen, Yip Harburg, George Mann
Other personnel: Alan Podber, resonator
slide guitar; Lou Holtzman, sound. April 2003
George Mann & Julius Margolin
If I Only Had A Brain
by Harold Arlen, Yip Harburg, George Mann
Photo: White House
March 2003
Ray Korona
The People Are In Charge
by Ray Korona March 2003
Ray Korona
The People Are In Charge
by Ray Korona
Album cover: David Beyda
February 2003
Charlie King
One Puppet Town
by Charlie King February 2003
Charlie King
One Puppet Town
by Charlie King
Album cover: Mark Hurwitt
January 2003
Pat Humphries
No Sweat
by Bev Grant January 2003
Pat Humphries
No Sweat
by Bev Grant
Graphics: Margaret Randall, Pat Humphries
December 2002
David King
Reindeer Games
by David King December 2002
David King
Reindeer Games
by David King
Doll: Linda Anderson
November 2002
Bev Grant
Labor Of Love
by Bev Grant November 2002
Bev Grant
Labor Of Love
by Bev Grant
October 2002
Charlie Ray Fetty III
The Mobile Inspirational
by Charlie Ray Fetty III October 2002
Charlie Ray Fetty III
The Mobile Inspirational
by Charlie Ray Fetty III
Colorado state fair parade float: USWA Local 2102
September 2002
Joe Glazer
The Mill Was Made Of Marble / I
Ain't No Stranger Now
by Joe Glazer September 2002
Joe Glazer
The Mill Was Made Of Marble / I Ain't No Stranger Now
by Joe Glazer


Songs not otherwise attributed were recorded at the annual Great Labor Arts Exchange in 2001, 2003, 2004, or 2005 at the National Labor College/George Meany Center, Silver Spring, Maryland. Engineers: Bob Barnes, Ellis Boal, Charlie Ray Fetty III, Joe Jencks, Ray Korona, George Mann, Dave Sless, Isaac Wilson.

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