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The Weavers

The Weavers were an American folk music quartet based in the Greenwich Village area of New York City originally consisting of Lee Hays, Pete Seeger, Ronnie Gilbert, and Fred Hellerman. Founded in 1948, the group sang traditional folk songs from around the world, as well as blues, gospel music, children's songs, labor songs, and American ballads. The group sold millions of records at the height of their popularity, including the first folk song to reach No. 1 on popular music charts, their recording of Lead Belly's "Goodnight, Irene." Despite their popularity, the Weavers were blacklisted during much of the 1950s.

The Weavers
OriginGreenwich Village, New York City, United States
GenresFolk
Years active1948–1952, 1955–1964, 1980
(occasional reunions between 1964 and 1980)
LabelsDecca, Vanguard
Past membersRonnie Gilbert
Lee Hays
Fred Hellerman
Pete Seeger
Erik Darling
Frank Hamilton
Bernie Krause

During the Red Scare, members of the group were followed by the FBI and blacklisted, with Seeger and Hayes called in to testify before the House Committee on Un-American Activities

Seeger left the group in 1957. His tenor and banjo part was covered in succession by Erik Darling, Frank Hamilton and finally Bernie Krause until the group disbanded in 1964.

History

Formation

In 1940, Lee Hays and Pete Seeger co-founded the Almanac Singers, which – along with American folk songs and ballads – promoted peace and isolationism in the years preceding World War II, working with the Communist Party-backed American Peace Mobilization (APM). The Almanacs featured many songs opposing entry into the war by the U.S. In June 1941, when Germany invaded the Soviet Union, the APM changed its name to the American People's Mobilization and followed the Party line by altering its focus to supporting U.S. entry into the war.[1][2] The Almanacs supported the change and produced many pro-war songs urging the U.S. to fight on the side of the Allies.[3] The Almanac Singers disbanded after the U.S. entered the war.

The Weavers were formed in November 1948 by Hays, Seeger, Ronnie Gilbert, and Fred Hellerman.[4] At Hellerman's suggestion,[5] the group took its name from a play by Gerhart Hauptmann, Die Weber (The Weavers 1892), a powerful work depicting the uprising of the Silesian weavers in 1844 which contains the lines, "I'll stand it no more, come what may".

Early career

After a period of being unable to find much paid work, they landed a steady and successful engagement at the Village Vanguard jazz club. This led to their discovery by arranger-bandleader Gordon Jenkins and their signing with Decca Records. The group had a big hit in 1950 with Lead Belly's "Goodnight, Irene", backed with the 1941 song "Tzena, Tzena, Tzena", which in turn became a best seller.[4] The recording stayed at number one on the charts for 13 weeks, the first folk song arrangement to achieve such success. "Goodnight, Irene" sold one million copies in 1950.[6] (Pete Seeger later wrote that total sales were about two million records.[7][8]) In keeping with the audience expectations of the time, these and other early Weavers' releases had violins and orchestration added behind the group's own string-band instruments. Because of the deepening Red Scare of the early 1950s, their manager Pete Cameron advised them not to sing their most explicitly political songs and to avoid performing at "progressive" venues and events. Because of this, some folk song fans criticized them for watering down their beliefs and commercializing their singing style. But the Weavers felt it was worth it to get their songs before the public, and to avoid the explicit type of commitment which had led to the demise of the Almanacs. The new approach proved a success, leading to many bookings and increased demand for the group's recordings.[9]

The successful concerts and hit recordings of the Weavers helped introduce to new audiences such folk revival standards as "On Top of Old Smoky"[4] (with guest vocalist Terry Gilkyson), Woody Guthrie's 1935 "So Long, It's Been Good to Know Yuh" (which reached #4 in 1951), "Follow the Drinking Gourd", "Kisses Sweeter than Wine", Tony Saletan's adaptation of "Michael, Row the Boat Ashore", "The Wreck of the John B" (a/k/a "Sloop John B"), "Rock Island Line", "The Midnight Special", "Pay Me My Money Down", "Darling Corey" and "Wimoweh". The Weavers encouraged sing-alongs in their concerts, and sometimes Seeger would shout out the lyrics in advance of each line in lining out style.[4]

Film footage of the Weavers is relatively scarce. The group appeared as a specialty act in a B-movie musical, Disc Jockey (1951), and filmed five of their record hits that same year for TV producer Lou Snader: "Goodnight, Irene", "Tzena, Tzena, Tzena", "So Long", "Around the World", and "The Roving Kind".

McCarthy era

During the 1950s Red Scare, Pete Seeger and Lee Hays were identified as Communist Party USA members by FBI informant Harvey Matusow (who later recanted). Both were called to testify to the House Committee on Un-American Activities in 1955. Hays asserted his rights under the Fifth Amendment,[10] which allows people not to give evidence against themselves.[11] Seeger also refused to answer, but claimed justification under the First Amendment, the first to do so after the conviction of the Hollywood Ten in 1950. Seeger was found guilty of contempt and placed under restrictions by the court pending appeal, but in 1961 his conviction was overturned on technical grounds.[12] Because Seeger was among those listed in the entertainment industry blacklist publication Red Channels, all of the Weavers were placed under FBI surveillance and not allowed to perform on television or radio during the McCarthy era. Despite their enormous popularity, Decca Records terminated the Weavers' recording contract and deleted their records from its catalog in 1953.[13] Their recordings were denied airplay, which curtailed their income from royalties. Right-wing and anti-Communist groups protested at their performances and harassed promoters. As a result, the group's economic viability diminished rapidly and in 1952 it disbanded.[6] After this, Pete Seeger continued his solo career, although as with all of them, he continued to suffer from the effects of blacklisting.

Reunited and later reconstituted

In December 1955, the group reunited to play a sold-out concert at Carnegie Hall.[6] The concert was a huge success. A recording of some of the concert, The Weavers at Carnegie Hall, was issued by the independent Vanguard Records, and this led to their signing by that record label. (Additional tracks from the 1955 Carnegie Hall concert were included on 1957's The Weavers on Tour.[14]) By the late 1950s, folk music was surging in popularity and McCarthyism was fading. Yet it was not until the height of the 1960s that Seeger was able to end his blacklisting by appearing on the nationally broadcast CBS-TV variety show The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour in 1967.[15]

After the April 1957 LP release of the Carnegie Hall concert, the Weavers launched a month-long concert tour. That August, the group reassembled for a series of recording sessions for Vanguard. As Seeger's college concert bookings grew, the singer felt restricted by his obligations to the group. Vanguard booked the Weavers for a January 15, 1958, session to record a rock-and-roll single. The results were embarrassing and fueled Seeger's frustration. The following month Gilbert, Hays, and Hellerman overruled Seeger about recording a cigarette ad for a tobacco company. Seeger, opposed to the dangers of tobacco and discouraged by the group's apparent sell-out to commercial interests, decided to resign. Honoring his commitment to record the jingle, he left the group on March 3, 1958.[6]

Seeger recommended Erik Darling of the Tarriers as his replacement.[6] Darling remained with the group until June 1962, leaving to pursue a solo career and eventually to form the folk-jazz trio the Rooftop Singers. Frank Hamilton, who replaced Darling, stayed with the group nine months, giving his notice just before the Weavers celebrated the group's fifteenth anniversary with two nights of concerts at Carnegie Hall in March 1963.[6] Folksinger Bernie Krause, later a pioneer in bringing the Moog synthesizer to popular music, was the last performer to occupy "the Seeger chair".[6] The group disbanded in 1964, but Gilbert, Hellerman, and Hays occasionally reunited with Seeger during the next 16 years. In 1980, Lee Hays, ill and using a wheelchair, wistfully approached the original Weavers for one last get-together. Hays' informal picnic prompted a professional reunion, and a triumphant return to Carnegie Hall on November 28, 1980, which was to be the band's last full performance. They appeared one final time in June 1981 at the Clearwater Festival, in an informal "rehearsal".[16]

Music style

In a 1968 interview, in response to claims that record companies found the Weavers difficult to classify, Seeger told the Pop Chronicles music documentary to "leave that up to the anthropologists, the folklorists. ... For you and me, the important thing is a song, a good song, a true song. ... Call it anything you want."[4][17]

A documentary film, The Weavers: Wasn't That a Time! (1982), was released after the 1981 death of Hays. The film chronicled the history of the group, including the events leading up to their final reunion.[6] Critic Roger Ebert gave the film four stars out of a possible four in his Chicago Sun-Times review and named it one of his top 10 films for 1982.

After disbanding

Following the dissolution of the band, Ronnie Gilbert toured America as a soloist, and Fred Hellerman worked as a recording engineer and producer. Gilbert also performed and recorded with Holly Near, and then (in 1985) as "HARP," featuring Holly Near, Arlo Guthrie, Ronnie Gilbert, and Pete Seeger.

The group was inducted into the Vocal Group Hall of Fame in 2001. In February 2006, the Weavers received the Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award. Represented by members Ronnie Gilbert and Fred Hellerman, they struck a chord with the crowd as their struggles with political witch hunts during the 1950s were recounted. "If you can exist, and stay the course – not a course of blind obstinacy and faulty conception – but one of decency and good sense, you can outlast your enemies with your honor and integrity intact", Hellerman said. Some commentators see the reference to "blind obstinacy" as a veiled criticism of those who believed uncritically in all the actions of the Communist Party.

Lee Hays died in 1981, aged 67.[18] His biography, Lonesome Traveler by Doris Willens, was published in 1988.[19] Erik Darling died August 3, 2008, aged 74, in Chapel Hill, North Carolina, from lymphoma.[20] After a long career in music and activism, Pete Seeger died at the age of 94 on January 27, 2014, in New York City. Ronnie Gilbert died at the age of 88 on June 6, 2015.[21] Last-surviving founding member Fred Hellerman died at the age of 89 on September 1, 2016.[22]

Members

Partial discography

  • The Weavers' Greatest Hits
  • The Weavers at Carnegie Hall (live)
  • The Weavers at Carnegie Hall Vol. 2 (live)
  • Wasn't That a Time! boxed set
  • Best of the Vanguard Years
  • The Weavers Reunion at Carnegie Hall: 1963 (live)
  • The Reunion at Carnegie Hall, 1963, Pt. 2 (live)
  • The Weavers at Home – Vanguard VRS 9024 (1957–58)
  • Travelling On with The Weavers VRS 9043 (1957–58)
  • Reunion at Carnegie Hall No. 2 (live)
  • Rarities from the Vanguard Vault
  • Kisses Sweeter Than Wine (compilation of 1950–51 live shows, edited by Fred Hellerman)
  • The Weavers Almanac
  • The Best of the Decca Years
  • Ultimate Collection
  • The Weavers Classics
  • Best of the Weavers
  • Gospel
  • Goodnight Irene: Weavers 1949–53 boxed set
  • We Wish You a Merry Christmas
  • The Weavers on Tour (Live) – Vanguard VRS 9013
  • Together Again (Live at Carnegie Hall in 1980, recorded in 1981) Loom 10681
  • The Weavers: Wasn't That a Time! (video)

See also

References

  1. ^ , Time, July 14, 1941, archived from the original on October 19, 2012
  2. ^ "American Peoples Mobilization Collected Records, 1940-1941". Peace Collection, Swarthmore College.
  3. ^ Stadler, Gustavus (2020). Woody Guthrie: An Intimate Life. Boston: Beacon Press. p. 48. ISBN 9780807018910.
  4. ^ a b c d e Pete Seeger interviewed on the Pop Chronicles (1969)
  5. ^ Grimes, William, "Fred Hellerman, Last of the Weavers Folk Group, Dies at 89", The New York Times, September 2, 2016. Retrieved 2016-09-03.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h Colin Larkin, ed. (1997). The Virgin Encyclopedia of Popular Music (Concise ed.). Virgin Books. p. 1238. ISBN 1-85227-745-9.
  7. ^ Seeger, Pete (1972). Schwartz, Jo Metcalf (ed.). The Incompleat Folksinger. New York: Fireside Books, Simon and Schuster. p. 461. ISBN 0-671-22304-6.
  8. ^ Danziger, Meryl (2016). Sing It!: A Biography of Pete Seeger. Seven Stories Press. p. 34. ISBN 978-1-60980-656-9.
  9. ^ Seeger, Pete (1972). Schwartz, Jo Metcalf (ed.). The Incompleat Folksinger. New York: Fireside Books, Simon and Schuster. p. 461. ISBN 0-671-22304-6.
  10. ^ Edward Renehan. Pete Seeger vs. The Un-Americans: A Tale of the Blacklist. p. 43.
  11. ^ Edward Renehan. Pete Seeger vs. The Un-Americans: A Tale of the Blacklist. p. 42.
  12. ^ "Sing out, warning! sing out, love!": the writings of Lee Hays, by Lee Hays and Steven Koppelman (Amherst and Boston: University of Massachusetts Press, 2003), p. 116.
  13. ^ . Vocalhalloffame.com. Archived from the original on March 3, 2016. Retrieved June 26, 2015.
  14. ^ The Weavers. "On Tour". Discogs. Retrieved March 24, 2020.
  15. ^ Dangerously Funny: The Uncensored Story of the Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour, by David Bianculli, Touchstone, 2009.
  16. ^ Blau, Eleanor (June 19, 1981). "Weavers to Be Reunited at Hudson River Revival". New York Times. Retrieved April 25, 2016.
  17. ^ Gilliland, John (1969). (audio). Pop Chronicles. University of North Texas Libraries.
  18. ^ Wilson, John S. (August 27, 1981). "Lee Hays, a Co-Founder of The Weavers, Dies". The New York Times. Retrieved September 29, 2022.
  19. ^ Willens, D. Lonesome Traveler: The Life of Lee Hays, W.W. Norton, 1988.
  20. ^ Weil, Martin (August 7, 2008). "Erik Darling, 74; Singer-Songwriter and Folk Musician". The Washington Post. Retrieved September 28, 2022.
  21. ^ Doc Rock. "January to June 2015". The Dead Rock Stars Club. Retrieved June 26, 2015.
  22. ^ John Burgeson. "Fred Hellerman, 89, the last of the Weavers". ctpost. Retrieved September 2, 2016.

External links

  • Pete Seeger interviewed
  • The Weavers discography at Discogs
  • The Weavers at IMDb

weavers, other, uses, disambiguation, were, american, folk, music, quartet, based, greenwich, village, area, york, city, originally, consisting, hays, pete, seeger, ronnie, gilbert, fred, hellerman, founded, 1948, group, sang, traditional, folk, songs, from, a. For other uses see The Weavers disambiguation The Weavers were an American folk music quartet based in the Greenwich Village area of New York City originally consisting of Lee Hays Pete Seeger Ronnie Gilbert and Fred Hellerman Founded in 1948 the group sang traditional folk songs from around the world as well as blues gospel music children s songs labor songs and American ballads The group sold millions of records at the height of their popularity including the first folk song to reach No 1 on popular music charts their recording of Lead Belly s Goodnight Irene Despite their popularity the Weavers were blacklisted during much of the 1950s The WeaversOriginGreenwich Village New York City United StatesGenresFolkYears active1948 1952 1955 1964 1980 occasional reunions between 1964 and 1980 LabelsDecca VanguardPast membersRonnie GilbertLee HaysFred HellermanPete SeegerErik DarlingFrank HamiltonBernie KrauseDuring the Red Scare members of the group were followed by the FBI and blacklisted with Seeger and Hayes called in to testify before the House Committee on Un American ActivitiesSeeger left the group in 1957 His tenor and banjo part was covered in succession by Erik Darling Frank Hamilton and finally Bernie Krause until the group disbanded in 1964 Contents 1 History 1 1 Formation 1 2 Early career 1 3 McCarthy era 1 4 Reunited and later reconstituted 2 Music style 3 After disbanding 4 Members 5 Partial discography 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksHistory EditFormation Edit In 1940 Lee Hays and Pete Seeger co founded the Almanac Singers which along with American folk songs and ballads promoted peace and isolationism in the years preceding World War II working with the Communist Party backed American Peace Mobilization APM The Almanacs featured many songs opposing entry into the war by the U S In June 1941 when Germany invaded the Soviet Union the APM changed its name to the American People s Mobilization and followed the Party line by altering its focus to supporting U S entry into the war 1 2 The Almanacs supported the change and produced many pro war songs urging the U S to fight on the side of the Allies 3 The Almanac Singers disbanded after the U S entered the war The Weavers were formed in November 1948 by Hays Seeger Ronnie Gilbert and Fred Hellerman 4 At Hellerman s suggestion 5 the group took its name from a play by Gerhart Hauptmann Die Weber The Weavers 1892 a powerful work depicting the uprising of the Silesian weavers in 1844 which contains the lines I ll stand it no more come what may Early career Edit After a period of being unable to find much paid work they landed a steady and successful engagement at the Village Vanguard jazz club This led to their discovery by arranger bandleader Gordon Jenkins and their signing with Decca Records The group had a big hit in 1950 with Lead Belly s Goodnight Irene backed with the 1941 song Tzena Tzena Tzena which in turn became a best seller 4 The recording stayed at number one on the charts for 13 weeks the first folk song arrangement to achieve such success Goodnight Irene sold one million copies in 1950 6 Pete Seeger later wrote that total sales were about two million records 7 8 In keeping with the audience expectations of the time these and other early Weavers releases had violins and orchestration added behind the group s own string band instruments Because of the deepening Red Scare of the early 1950s their manager Pete Cameron advised them not to sing their most explicitly political songs and to avoid performing at progressive venues and events Because of this some folk song fans criticized them for watering down their beliefs and commercializing their singing style But the Weavers felt it was worth it to get their songs before the public and to avoid the explicit type of commitment which had led to the demise of the Almanacs The new approach proved a success leading to many bookings and increased demand for the group s recordings 9 The successful concerts and hit recordings of the Weavers helped introduce to new audiences such folk revival standards as On Top of Old Smoky 4 with guest vocalist Terry Gilkyson Woody Guthrie s 1935 So Long It s Been Good to Know Yuh which reached 4 in 1951 Follow the Drinking Gourd Kisses Sweeter than Wine Tony Saletan s adaptation of Michael Row the Boat Ashore The Wreck of the John B a k a Sloop John B Rock Island Line The Midnight Special Pay Me My Money Down Darling Corey and Wimoweh The Weavers encouraged sing alongs in their concerts and sometimes Seeger would shout out the lyrics in advance of each line in lining out style 4 Film footage of the Weavers is relatively scarce The group appeared as a specialty act in a B movie musical Disc Jockey 1951 and filmed five of their record hits that same year for TV producer Lou Snader Goodnight Irene Tzena Tzena Tzena So Long Around the World and The Roving Kind McCarthy era Edit During the 1950s Red Scare Pete Seeger and Lee Hays were identified as Communist Party USA members by FBI informant Harvey Matusow who later recanted Both were called to testify to the House Committee on Un American Activities in 1955 Hays asserted his rights under the Fifth Amendment 10 which allows people not to give evidence against themselves 11 Seeger also refused to answer but claimed justification under the First Amendment the first to do so after the conviction of the Hollywood Ten in 1950 Seeger was found guilty of contempt and placed under restrictions by the court pending appeal but in 1961 his conviction was overturned on technical grounds 12 Because Seeger was among those listed in the entertainment industry blacklist publication Red Channels all of the Weavers were placed under FBI surveillance and not allowed to perform on television or radio during the McCarthy era Despite their enormous popularity Decca Records terminated the Weavers recording contract and deleted their records from its catalog in 1953 13 Their recordings were denied airplay which curtailed their income from royalties Right wing and anti Communist groups protested at their performances and harassed promoters As a result the group s economic viability diminished rapidly and in 1952 it disbanded 6 After this Pete Seeger continued his solo career although as with all of them he continued to suffer from the effects of blacklisting Reunited and later reconstituted Edit In December 1955 the group reunited to play a sold out concert at Carnegie Hall 6 The concert was a huge success A recording of some of the concert The Weavers at Carnegie Hall was issued by the independent Vanguard Records and this led to their signing by that record label Additional tracks from the 1955 Carnegie Hall concert were included on 1957 s The Weavers on Tour 14 By the late 1950s folk music was surging in popularity and McCarthyism was fading Yet it was not until the height of the 1960s that Seeger was able to end his blacklisting by appearing on the nationally broadcast CBS TV variety show The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour in 1967 15 After the April 1957 LP release of the Carnegie Hall concert the Weavers launched a month long concert tour That August the group reassembled for a series of recording sessions for Vanguard As Seeger s college concert bookings grew the singer felt restricted by his obligations to the group Vanguard booked the Weavers for a January 15 1958 session to record a rock and roll single The results were embarrassing and fueled Seeger s frustration The following month Gilbert Hays and Hellerman overruled Seeger about recording a cigarette ad for a tobacco company Seeger opposed to the dangers of tobacco and discouraged by the group s apparent sell out to commercial interests decided to resign Honoring his commitment to record the jingle he left the group on March 3 1958 6 Seeger recommended Erik Darling of the Tarriers as his replacement 6 Darling remained with the group until June 1962 leaving to pursue a solo career and eventually to form the folk jazz trio the Rooftop Singers Frank Hamilton who replaced Darling stayed with the group nine months giving his notice just before the Weavers celebrated the group s fifteenth anniversary with two nights of concerts at Carnegie Hall in March 1963 6 Folksinger Bernie Krause later a pioneer in bringing the Moog synthesizer to popular music was the last performer to occupy the Seeger chair 6 The group disbanded in 1964 but Gilbert Hellerman and Hays occasionally reunited with Seeger during the next 16 years In 1980 Lee Hays ill and using a wheelchair wistfully approached the original Weavers for one last get together Hays informal picnic prompted a professional reunion and a triumphant return to Carnegie Hall on November 28 1980 which was to be the band s last full performance They appeared one final time in June 1981 at the Clearwater Festival in an informal rehearsal 16 Music style EditIn a 1968 interview in response to claims that record companies found the Weavers difficult to classify Seeger told the Pop Chronicles music documentary to leave that up to the anthropologists the folklorists For you and me the important thing is a song a good song a true song Call it anything you want 4 17 A documentary film The Weavers Wasn t That a Time 1982 was released after the 1981 death of Hays The film chronicled the history of the group including the events leading up to their final reunion 6 Critic Roger Ebert gave the film four stars out of a possible four in his Chicago Sun Times review and named it one of his top 10 films for 1982 After disbanding EditFollowing the dissolution of the band Ronnie Gilbert toured America as a soloist and Fred Hellerman worked as a recording engineer and producer Gilbert also performed and recorded with Holly Near and then in 1985 as HARP featuring Holly Near Arlo Guthrie Ronnie Gilbert and Pete Seeger The group was inducted into the Vocal Group Hall of Fame in 2001 In February 2006 the Weavers received the Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award Represented by members Ronnie Gilbert and Fred Hellerman they struck a chord with the crowd as their struggles with political witch hunts during the 1950s were recounted If you can exist and stay the course not a course of blind obstinacy and faulty conception but one of decency and good sense you can outlast your enemies with your honor and integrity intact Hellerman said Some commentators see the reference to blind obstinacy as a veiled criticism of those who believed uncritically in all the actions of the Communist Party Lee Hays died in 1981 aged 67 18 His biography Lonesome Traveler by Doris Willens was published in 1988 19 Erik Darling died August 3 2008 aged 74 in Chapel Hill North Carolina from lymphoma 20 After a long career in music and activism Pete Seeger died at the age of 94 on January 27 2014 in New York City Ronnie Gilbert died at the age of 88 on June 6 2015 21 Last surviving founding member Fred Hellerman died at the age of 89 on September 1 2016 22 Members EditRonnie Gilbert alto 1948 1952 1955 1964 1980 died 2015 Lee Hays bass 1948 1952 1955 1964 1980 died 1981 Fred Hellerman baritone guitar 1948 1952 1955 1964 1980 died 2016 Pete Seeger tenor long neck banjo 1948 1952 1955 1958 1980 died 2014 Erik Darling tenor 1958 1962 died 2008 Frank Hamilton tenor 1962 1963 Bernie Krause tenor 1963 1964 Partial discography EditThe Weavers Greatest Hits The Weavers at Carnegie Hall live The Weavers at Carnegie Hall Vol 2 live Wasn t That a Time boxed set Best of the Vanguard Years The Weavers Reunion at Carnegie Hall 1963 live The Reunion at Carnegie Hall 1963 Pt 2 live The Weavers at Home Vanguard VRS 9024 1957 58 Travelling On with The Weavers VRS 9043 1957 58 Reunion at Carnegie Hall No 2 live Rarities from the Vanguard Vault Kisses Sweeter Than Wine compilation of 1950 51 live shows edited by Fred Hellerman The Weavers Almanac The Best of the Decca Years Ultimate Collection The Weavers Classics Best of the Weavers Gospel Goodnight Irene Weavers 1949 53 boxed set We Wish You a Merry Christmas The Weavers on Tour Live Vanguard VRS 9013 Together Again Live at Carnegie Hall in 1980 recorded in 1981 Loom 10681 The Weavers Wasn t That a Time video See also EditThe Almanac Singers American folk music revival Lee Hays The Kingston Trio Lead Belly Pete Seeger Red Scare Waist Deep in the Big Muddy the song that ended Pete Seeger s blacklisting in 1968References Edit Radicals Purely for Peace Time July 14 1941 archived from the original on October 19 2012 American Peoples Mobilization Collected Records 1940 1941 Peace Collection Swarthmore College Stadler Gustavus 2020 Woody Guthrie An Intimate Life Boston Beacon Press p 48 ISBN 9780807018910 a b c d e Pete Seeger interviewed on the Pop Chronicles 1969 Grimes William Fred Hellerman Last of the Weavers Folk Group Dies at 89 The New York Times September 2 2016 Retrieved 2016 09 03 a b c d e f g h Colin Larkin ed 1997 The Virgin Encyclopedia of Popular Music Concise ed Virgin Books p 1238 ISBN 1 85227 745 9 Seeger Pete 1972 Schwartz Jo Metcalf ed The Incompleat Folksinger New York Fireside Books Simon and Schuster p 461 ISBN 0 671 22304 6 Danziger Meryl 2016 Sing It A Biography of Pete Seeger Seven Stories Press p 34 ISBN 978 1 60980 656 9 Seeger Pete 1972 Schwartz Jo Metcalf ed The Incompleat Folksinger New York Fireside Books Simon and Schuster p 461 ISBN 0 671 22304 6 Edward Renehan Pete Seeger vs The Un Americans A Tale of the Blacklist p 43 Edward Renehan Pete Seeger vs The Un Americans A Tale of the Blacklist p 42 Sing out warning sing out love the writings of Lee Hays by Lee Hays and Steven Koppelman Amherst and Boston University of Massachusetts Press 2003 p 116 The Weavers Inductees The Vocal Group Hall of Fame Foundation Vocalhalloffame com Archived from the original on March 3 2016 Retrieved June 26 2015 The Weavers On Tour Discogs Retrieved March 24 2020 Dangerously Funny The Uncensored Story of the Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour by David Bianculli Touchstone 2009 Blau Eleanor June 19 1981 Weavers to Be Reunited at Hudson River Revival New York Times Retrieved April 25 2016 Gilliland John 1969 O S interview index audio Pop Chronicles University of North Texas Libraries Wilson John S August 27 1981 Lee Hays a Co Founder of The Weavers Dies The New York Times Retrieved September 29 2022 Willens D Lonesome Traveler The Life of Lee Hays W W Norton 1988 Weil Martin August 7 2008 Erik Darling 74 Singer Songwriter and Folk Musician The Washington Post Retrieved September 28 2022 Doc Rock January to June 2015 The Dead Rock Stars Club Retrieved June 26 2015 John Burgeson Fred Hellerman 89 the last of the Weavers ctpost Retrieved September 2 2016 External links EditFolk music archives article on the Weavers Pete Seeger interviewed The Weavers discography at Discogs The Weavers at IMDb Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Weavers amp oldid 1129219802, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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