TWO RARE AND UNRELEASED
WOODY GUTHRIE ITEMS
FROM MY OWN COLLECTION:
BBC "Children's Hour", London, GB,
July 7, 1944 (5:14)
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(AS LOSSLESS FLAC, 14 MB)
FINGERPRINT FILE (ffp)
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From Guy Logsdon's Discography,
reprinted in Santelli, Robert & Davidson, Emily (eds.),
Hard Travelin' -- The Life and Legacy of Woody Guthrie,
Hanover and London, 1999, p. 196:
"7 JULY 1944. Woody was a Merchant Marine, 'washing dishes on a Liberty Ship,' the troop ship Sea Porpoise which carried troops to the Normandy beach in early July 1944. After the troops were sent ashore, the ship hit a mine but made its way back to England; Woody was routed through London toward Glasgow, Scotland, toward the United States.
On a song manuscript dated 'July 13th, 1944', Woody wrote, 'this train is carrying me outside from London now; on up towards Belfast, and Glasgow.'
While in London, he went to the offices of the BBC where he introduced himself as a member of The Martins and the Coys [produced by Alan Lomax for the BBC in late March 1944, broadcast by the BBC on 26 June 1944] and was given the opportunity to sing on the Children's Hour. After an autobiographical statement, he was recorded singing with his guitar accompaniment two railroad songs:
Wabash Cannonball
900 Miles (this is the minor-key melody that Cisco made popular)."
U.S. Department Of Health, "V.D. Blues",
written and directed by Alan Lomax,
most likely Washington, D.C., unknown date (1940s) (14:55)
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Woody Guthrie as "Rusty, The Traveler"
(with prob. Pete Seeger, banjo,
unknown piano) performs
The Great Historical Bum
(with V.D. lyrics)
unidentified song
Hard Times In That ???? Jail
unidentified song (Empty Boxcar Is My Home?)
The Great Historical Bum
(with V. D. lyrics; Reprise)
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