Don't Mourn - Organize!: Songs of Labor Songwriter Joe Hill

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CD

  • Release Date: 07/13/1992
  • Original Release: 1990
  • Sales Rank: 94,654
  • Label: SMITHSONIAN FOLKWAYS
  • UPC: 093074002629
 
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  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Details & Credits
Track List
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Don't Mourn - Organize!: Songs of Labor Songwriter Joe Hill

1LISTENJoe Hill / Billy Bragg 8:26
2LISTENJoe Hill's Last Will / Utah Phillips 3:15
3LISTENJoe Hill's Ashes / Mark Levy 3:22
4LISTENThe Preacher and the Slave / Mac McClintock 3:39
5LISTENJoe Hill / Paul Robeson 2:57
6LISTENPaper Heart / Si Kahn 2:21
7LISTENCasey Jones / Pete Seeger 2:58
8LISTENMr. Block / Mats Paulson 3:00
9LISTENJoe Hill Listens to the Praying / Joe Glazer 7:20
10LISTENThe Tramp / Cisco Houston 3:30
11LISTENJoe Hill / Earl Robinson 2:33
12LISTENThe White Slave / Alfred Esteban Cortez 3:27
13LISTENNarrative / Elizabeth Gurley Flynn 1:06
14LISTENThe Rebel Girl / Hazel Dickens 3:01
15LISTENThere Is Power in a Union / Entertainment Workers IU 630 3:16

Editorial Reviews

The inclusion of Joan Baez's version of "Joe Hill" on the Woodstock album has been single-handedly responsible for keeping Joe Hill in the public consciousness. Sad but true, for Joe Hill, poet, songwriter, and organizer, was the most popular intentionally proletarian artist in American culture. Not an easy feat, especially considering how many people have tried to be popular proletarian artists. This album, named after Joe Hill's famous last words before he was executed by the State of Utah, is a testament to Hill's power as a musical and cultural figure. It also attempts to secure his place in our memory; Baez won't last forever, of course. The album consists of two elements, Hill songs performed by important interpreters and songs about Hill, again in historically important performances. Among the former, number Harry McClintock singing "The Preacher and the Slave," Pete Seeger doing "Casey Jones (The Union Scab)," and Cisco Houston's version of "The Tramp." The latter category contains the more varied and more interesting contributions. Among these are poet Kenneth Patchen's spoken word piece "Joe Hill Listens to the Praying," Billy Bragg singing Phil Ochs' "Joe Hill," and both Paul Robeson and Earl Robinson performing the Robinson-penned number Baez made her own, "Joe Hill," with its classic line, "I never died said he." Excellent as an album and as a cultural document, hopefully this album will not let us forget the important legacy, a sense of purpose, Joe Hill bequeathed to our culture. ~ Brian Whitener, All Music Guide All Music Guide

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