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

Don't Mourn - Organize!:  Songs Of Labor Songwriter Joe Hill Artist: Various Artists
Label: Smithsonian Folkways
Category: Music



Average customer rating: 4 out of 5 stars
Media: Audio CD
Number Of Discs: 1


UPC: 093074002629
EAN: 0093074002629
ASIN: B000001DHC


Release Date: 1992-07-13

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Listmania:

  1. Solidarity Forever!
  2. The Best From Smithsonian Folkways
  3. Wobbly Lit: The Industrial Workers of the World
  4. Music to organize by
  5. The Union Label

Tracks:

  1. Joe Hill - Billy Bragg
  2. Joe Hill's Last Will - Utah Phillips
  3. Joe Hill's Ashes - Mark Levy
  4. The Preacher & The Slave - 'Haywire Mac' McClintock
  5. Joe Hill - Paul Robeson
  6. Paper Heart - Si Kahn
  7. Casey Jones-The Union Scab - Pete Seeger & The Song Swappers
  8. Mr. Block - Mats Paulson
  9. Joe Hill Listens To The Praying - Joe Glazer
  10. The Tramp - Cisco Houston
  11. Joe Hill - Earl Robison
  12. The White Slave - Alfred Esteban Cortez
  13. Narrative - Elizabeth Gurley Flynn
  14. The Rebel Girl - Hazel Dickens
  15. There Is Power In A Union - Entertainment Workers IU 630, I.W.W.

Similar Items:

  1. Rebel Voices: Songs of the Industrial Workers of the World
  2. Fellow Workers
  3. Joe Hill
  4. We Have Fed You All for a Thousand Years
  5. Carry It On, Songs of America's Working People

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars More Punk than the Sex Pistols.......2004-04-01

Though it's true that the consistency on this album is varied, the good stuff is truly good. So good that the CD gets 5 stars just because this material is on there, and it's like nothing you ever heard before. Real 1920's PUNK ROCK!!!

You can hear the incredible insolence of Joe Hill's lyrics, especially as sung by one of the old time Wob's who knew him. Some of this stuff is so subversive it makes Jello Biafra look like a yuppie, and it makes Maralyn Manson look like the poser he is. This is REAL subversion, from real people, native Americans and immigrants like Joe, who weren't playing games or striking poses, but really saw things as they are and really wanted to change the world. Though some of these songs are hippy tunes from the 60's, there is nothing hippyish about Joe Hill. Your boy is a hard core working class true American hero, every bit as tough and no nonsense as any hard-bitten coal miner or any other blue collar American of today, except, unlike so many of todays "Reagan Democrats", this guy had his eyes wide open.

Thats why they shot him, of course.

I just wish the Dropkick Murphy's would cover some of these.

3 out of 5 stars I Had Hoped for Better.......2002-06-21

The story of Joe Hill, executed in Utah on trumped up charges, demands to be told, over and over again. Joe was executed by firing squad in spite of massive national and international protests and an appeal by President Wilson. Joe Hill died because his music and his labor organizing threatened to unravel the threads of society that gave a privileged few access to health, leisure, and comfort, while the masses toiled 60 and 70 hours per week, with no benefits or protections (like the workers who produce all that "made in China" stuff we buy!). Although Joe's story may be nearly 100 years old, with activists like Mumia Abu Jamal sitting on death row--we must remember.

While this CD contains some important music, I really wish I'd gone out and spent the cash to purchase the recordings by the individual artists. I enjoy listening to my Utah Phillips and Pete Seeger CDs more--and each one has a more internally consistent feel than this one.

But, if you're a labor history or folk music buf, purchasing this CD is a no brainer. Do it. Otherwise, spend some time listening to Utah Phillips, Pete Seeger, Billy Bragg, and the other musicians represented here on their own recordings. You'll have a much richer experience.

(If you'd like to discuss this review or CD in more depth, please click on the "about me" link above and drop me an email. Thanks!)

3 out of 5 stars Inconsistent....but when it's good it's great!.......2001-08-11

While historically interesting, this is an inconsistent collection where the minuses are greater than the plusses. For the most part, the songs on this collection are boring, sixties era folk-songs which just don't have any energy. Fortunately, this is all made worthwhile by two cuts: Billy Bragg's "Joe Hill" and Hazel Dicken's "Rebel Girl"....two bluegrass ravers that'll make you wanna get up and head to the picket lines. An interesting cut is a mini-interview with Harry "Haywire Mac" McClintock, who knew Joe Hill and was a Wob. For any fans of the "O Brother Where Art Thou?" soundtrack, Haywire Mac did the original recording of "Big Rock Candy Mountain." But the Haywire Mac selection, as interesting as it might be, doesn't make up for a lackluster collection. On the other hand, if you're a Hazel Dickens fan, "Rebel Girl" will make you want to have this.

5 out of 5 stars Incredible!.......1999-12-20

I felt like I was hearing the history my teachers hadn't told me about. I love the mix of voices and viewpoints. I'd be hard pressed to pick out a favorite, although Utah Phillips comes close. This album made me a Paul Robeson fan. I listen to it whenever I want/need to rev up my engines to fight for justice.

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  2. Po' Girl ~ Po' Girl
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  6. No Regrets ~ Leon Redbone
  7. Plumb ~ Jonatha Brooke & the Story
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  9. A Nod to Bob: An Artists' Tribute to Bob Dylan on His Sixtieth Birthday ~ Greg Brown, Lucy Kaplansky, John Gorka, Guy Davis
  10. Method Actor ~ Eva Cassidy, Method Actor

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