Ramblin' Man: The Life and Times of Woody GuthrieW. W. Norton & Company, 17 мар. 2006 г. - Всего страниц: 512 Winner of the Oklahoma Book Award and the Deems Taylor ASCAP Award for Best Folk, Pop, or Jazz Biography A patriot and a political radical, Woody Guthrie captured the spirit of his times in his enduring songs. He was marked by the FBI as a subversive. He lived in fear of the fatal fires that stalked his family and of the mental illness that snared his mother. At forty-two, he was cruelly silenced by Huntington’s disease. Ed Cray, the first biographer to be granted access to the Woody Guthrie Archive, has created a haunting portrait of an American who profoundly influenced Pete Seeger, Bob Dylan, Bruce Springsteen, and American popular music itself. |
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... , PUP, u' ED CRAYw.mm»Ewumv swns TERKEL -A bnuulul um In eXD\ovIng We nuance! nl 0nlh!m'swork. cw: exiclml Me -5 nllch-pe|lecL"——los Annie: Tunes um flevrlvr Winner of the Oklahoma Book Award, 2004 Winner of the. Front Cover.
... Oklahoma welcomes. Others provided documents or specialists' information, including Bill Aldacushion; the late Bernard Asbell; Matt Barton, archivist at the Alan Lomax Archive; Thelma Bray; Anna Lomax Chairetakis, Alan Lomax Archive ...
... Oklahoma, and there Sherman, then twenty-seven, drowned while fording a stream on horseback. His widow, left with four children, eventually married a prosperous cattleman, Lee Tanner. They had three sons: Warren, Leonard, and Lawrence ...
... Oklahoma was a troubled land in these early years of the twentieth century. Once set aside for the Five Civilized Tribes—the Choctaw, Chickasaw, Cherokee, Creek, and Seminole—after 1889 the Indian territories had been opened to land ...
... Oklahoma and Arkansas while neighbors looked on benignly. As Starr blandly explained, the banks he had held up were in the “robbery business too.” By the time Oklahoma entered the union in 1907, corporate business interests ...