Posted on 12/31/2013 12:52:56 PM PST by Mrs. Don-o
If you're having trouble nailing down your New Year's resolutions, here's a good place to start.
Seventy years ago, American folk legend Woody Guthrie scribbled in his journal a list of 33 tasks he would dedicate himself to in the coming year. According to WoodyGuthrie.org, he called them "Rulin's."
At age 31, he was in the prime of his life, with a wife and three kids, as well as a good deal of life experience, having survived the Dust Bowl to make it out to California.
As a result, it's a pretty unbeatable list. Check it out:
1. Work more and better
2. Work by a schedule
3. Wash teeth if any
4. Shave
5. Take bath
6. Eat good fruit vegetables milk
7. Drink very scant if any
8. Write a song a day
9. Wear clean clothes look good
10. Shine shoes
11. Change socks
12. Change bed cloths often
13. Read lots good books
14. Listen to radio a lot
15. Learn people better
16. Keep rancho clean
17. Dont get lonesome
18. Stay glad
19. Keep hoping machine running
20. Dream good
21. Bank all extra money 22. Save dough
23. Have company but dont waste time
24. Send Mary and kids money
25. Play and sing good
26. Dance better
27. Help win war beat fascism
28. Love mama
29. Love papa
30. Love Pete
31. Love everybody
32. Make up your mind
33. Wake up and fight
(Excerpt) Read more at businessinsider.com ...
The song doesn't start turning left until you get to the fourth verse:
As I went walking I saw a sign there
And on the sign it said "No Trespassing."
But on the other side it didn't say nothing,
That side was made for you and me.
I'm sure this won't satisfy my critics but I have no doubts. The song became the hymn of the New Left in the Sixties, as performed by those well-known "Republicans," Peter, Paul and Mary.
I’ve never seen those word before. Pretty darned opaque ... they were left out by my elementary school teachers, I suppose.
As I went walking I saw a sign thereSometimes "Private Property" is replaced with "No Trespassing," but the thought's the same.
And on the sign it said "Private Property."
But on the other side it didn't say nothing,
That side was made for you and me.
Oh, now I see. As I said above, we didn’t sing that verse in the elementary school choir.
By 1943, Guthrie had a "This Machine Kills Fascists" sticker on the front of his guitar. In 1945, he switched to a Gibson Southern Jumbo and put a larger sticker with the same message on that guitar.
Guthrie viewed freedom vs. fascism as the ultimate battle.
As for socialism or communism, that may be another matter (although Guthrie wrote several anti-Hitler songs).
His 1943 autobiography, "Bound for Glory," would go a long way to explain the distinction.
The biggest difference was that Guthrie was born to genuine hardship, and worked every kind of job during the Great Depression to survive: fruit picker, stevedore, merchant marine, farmhand, street musician, cannery hand. He learned what would later be called "folk music," not from "folk music festivals" or recordings, but from other migrants, dock-hands, and bar singers, often down-and-outers, and of all accents and colors.
He said, "I am out to sing the songs that make you take pride in yourself and in your work."
Not a hippie attitude.
In other words he was not a good person.
Thank you. Very informative.
Guthrie’s list really tells us nothing really about his politics.
Obviously there are some aspects to life that are apolitical.
The song “This Land is Your Land” can be taken however one
chooses and maybe he meant it that way. If you include the
lyrics in the context of what he preached you might well believe
it is a commie theme song. If my memory serves me, often lefty
protesters in the ‘60s sang it along with Joan Baez and Peter, Paul
and Mary protest songs.
BTW, Karl Marx had a nanny for his kids and often had to borrow
money to pay her or didn’t pay her at all from time to time.
Socialism is always for the other guy but not for me.
Through the years the verse was never sung. Obama had it sung at his inauguration. True!
I think you meant Irving Berlin, Not George Gershwin.
But it’s the THOUGHT that counts! LOL! :-)
Oakie Boogie--Jack Guthrie & His Oklahomans (1947)
He was sharp enough to see that the Left opposed the Klan, and that appealed to him because his father had been a Klansman, and had participated in the lynching of a couple of people in Oklahoma: Woodie detested that.
He saw that the Left opposed Hitler, and that appealed to him because he despised Hitler. He didn't analyze the convoluted propaganda, let alone produce it. If he sang anti-Fascist, the Communists hired him. That gave a genuine redneck guitar-picker a certain elan in 1940.
His subtitle for "This Land Is Your Land" was "God Blessed This Land for Me."
This isn't Stalinism: it 's pure Woody.
I read the lyrics and dont find reference to communist ideology written therein.
Stalin and other Commies never mentioned “defending Communism” during World War II. It was always “defending the Motherland”.
First performed in 1938, Kate Smith's "God Bless America" was a hit in 1939 and again in 1940, and sold well for years afterwards. As the story goes, Guthrie didn't like the reference to God.
"This Land is Your Land"--Woody Guthrie (1951--this includes the "red" verse)
Good old Peter, Paul and Mary! They also scored with this Communist protest song, popularized by a tub-thumpin' Red quartet.
The Hammer Song--The Weavers (1949)
The Woody Guthrie you describe bears no resemblance to the actual article.
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