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Broadside Ballads, Vol. 11: Interviews With Phil Ochs
Phil Ochs
FW05321
/ FH 5321 / FB 5321
"It is dangerous to be a protest singer" writes
Broadside Magazine
publisher Gordon Friesen in the liner notes to this album. This 1968 series of interviews with folk singer Phil Ochs was released following Ochs' suicide in 1976. Ochs discourses at length on the state of American folk and pop music, the impact of the migration of folk musicians from New York to Los Angeles and the West Coast, his reflections on Bob Dylan, his bitterness about being excluded from performing at the Woody Guthrie tribute in 1968, and a dim awareness of the beginnings of his depression. The liner notes contain a transcript of one of the interviews with Israel "Izzy" Young, also conducted in 1968 following the Democratic National Convention in Chicago.
Country(s)
United States
Culture Group(s)
Anglo-American
Keyword(s)
Folk songs--United States
;
Folksong revival
;
Instructional
;
Protest songs
;
Spoken word
Language(s)
English
Year of Recording
1976
Record Label
Folkways Records
Source Archive
Smithsonian Center for Folklife and Cultural Heritage
Credits
Artist Phil Ochs ; Design by Ronald Clyne ; Design by Sis Cunningham
Download Liner Notes
101
Introduction and Background with Phil Ochs. He Comments on the music industry in the early 1960's.
Phil Ochs
27:03
201
Woody Guthrie memorial concert, Vietnam, the movies.
Phil Ochs
11:47
202
Gordon Friesen with Ochs in 1968, the West Coast, The Music Business, The American scene
Phil Ochs
17:04
Click to enlarge
16.98
8.47
21.98