Best of Broadside 1962-1988
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Average customer review:Track Listing
Disc 1:
- Links on the Chain - The Broadside Singers, Phil Ochs
- Blowin' in the Wind - The New World Singers
- Paths of Victory - The Broadside Singers
- Ballad of Ira Hayes - Peter La Farge
- Ain't That News? - The Broadside Singers, Tom Paxton
- Times I've Had - The Broadside Singers
- Go Limp - Matt McGinn
- Ding Dong Dollar - The Glasgow Song Guild
- Mack the Bomb - Pete Seeger
- Civil Defense Sign - Mark Spoelstra
- Let Me Die in My Footsteps - Happy Traum
- Hiroshima Nagasaki Russian Roulette - Jim Page
- What Have They Done to the Rain? - Malvina Reynolds
- Ballad of William Worthy - Phil Ochs
- Train for Auschwitz - Tom Paxton
- Do as the Doukhobors Do - Pete Seeger
- Christine - The Broadside Singers, Tom Paxton
- As Long as the Grass Shall Grow - Peter La Farge
Disc 2:
- John Brown - Bob Dylan
- Take Me for a Walk (Morning Dew) - Bonnie Dobson
- Willing Conscript - Pete Seeger
- Kill for Peace - The Fugs
- Plains of Nebrasky-O - Eric Andersen, Phil Ochs
- Benny Kid Peace - Gil Turner
- What Did You Learn in School Today? - Tom Paxton
- Changin' Hands - Phil Ochs
- Welcome, Welcome Emigrante - The Broadside Singers, Buffy Sainte-Marie
- Shady Acres - Janis Ian
- Lord, Hold Back the Waters - William McLean
- Ballad of Donald White - Bob Dylan
- Song for Patty - Sammy Walker
- Very Close Friend of Mine - Richard Black
- Long Time Troubled Road - Eric Andersen
- Hard Rain's A-Gonna Fall - Pete Seeger
Disc 3:
- Mississippi Goddam - Nina Simone
- We'll Never Turn Back - The Freedom Singers
- Freedom Riders - Phil Ochs
- Father's Grace - The Broadside Singers
- Society's Child (Baby I've Been Thinking) - Janis Ian
- I'm Gonna Get My Baby Out of Jail - Len Chandler
- Ballard of Martin Luther King - Mike Millius
- Carry It On - The Broadside Singers, Len Chandler
- Birmingham Sunday - Richard Fariña
- Migrant's Song - Augustin Lira, Danny Valdez
- Picket Sign - El Treato Campesino
- Lucha Continuara - Danny Rose-Redwood
- Cantra la Pro - Raimon Padilla
- Mrs. Clara - Sullivan's Letter
- If It Wasn't for the Union - Matt McGuinn
- More Good Men Going Down - The Broadside Singers
- Sundown - Sis Cunningham
- My Oklahoma Home (It Blowed Away) - Sis Cunningham
- Drag Lines - New Harmony Sisterhood Band, Deb Silverstein
- My Father's Mansions - Pete Seeger
Disc 4:
- Pinkville Helicopter - Thom Parrott
- Hell No, I Ain't Going Go - Matt Jones, Elaine Laron
- We Seek No Wider War - Phil Ochs
- Waist Deep in the Big Muddy - Pete Seeger
- Vietman - Paul Kaplan
- Hole in the Ground - Thom Parrott
- To Be a Killer - Wes Houston
- New York J-D Blues - Pete Seeger
- Little Boxes - Malvina Reynolds
- Not Enough to Live on But Too Much to Die - Michael Strange
- Faucets Are Dripping - Malvina Reynolds
- Bizzness Ain't Dead - The New World Singers
- Business - Pete Seeger
- Legal-Illegal - Pete Seeger
- Brown Water and Blood - Jeff Ampolsk
- Aberfan Coal Tio Tragedy - Thom Parrot
- Lafayette - Lucinda Williams
- Ballard of the Earl Durand - Charles Brown
- Plastic Jesus
Disc 5:
- Burn, Baby, Bur - Jim Collier, Jim Collier, Rev. F.D. Kirkpatrick
- Cities Are Burning - Jim Collier, Jim Collier, Rev. F.D. Kirkpatrick
- Nothing But His Blood - Rev. F.D. Kirkpatrick
- You're Just a Laughing Fool - Rev. F.D. Kirkpatrick
- Time Is Running Out - Wendy Smith
- But If I Ask Them - Sis Cunningham
- Ragamuffin Minstrel Boy - Sammy Walker
- Changes - Phil Ochs
- Bound for Glory - Phil Ochs
- Victor Jara - Arlo Guthrie
- We Will Never Give Up - Kristen Lems
- Inez - Bev Grant, Human Condition
- I'm Gonna Be an Engineer - Peggy Seeger
- Don't Talk to Strangers - Chris Gaylord
- Catcher in the Rye - Sammy Walker
- Time Will Come - Elaine D. White
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #45538 in Music
- Released on: 2000-09-12
- Number of discs: 5
- Format: Box set
Editorial Reviews
Album Description
The Best of Broadside, Anthems of the American Underground from the Pages of Broadside Magazine. 89 songs, including some never commercially released. Compiled and annotated by Jeff Place and Ronald D. Cohen. 5-CD boxed set. It was a small underground magazine smuggled out of a New York City housing project in a baby carriage, filled with new songs by artists who were too creative for the folkies and too radical for the establishment. Underground--yet Bob Dylan, Janis Ian, Rev. Frederick Douglass Kirkpatrick, Phil Ochs, Malvina Reynolds, Buffy Sainte-Marie, Pete Seeger, and dozens of others first published songs like "Blowin' in the Wind," "Little Boxes," and "Society's Child," in Broadside. The Best of Broadside features 89 songs from the Folkways collection, tapes from the Broadside magazine office, and some tracks released on other labels. The set contains a variety of performers, topics, and musical styles that tell tales spanning the 25 years of the Broadside era (1962-1988), but many of them address contemporary issues as well, since the new millennium has not see the end of warfare, nuclear threat, ethnic conflict, immigrants' suffering, women's unequal rights, ecological devastation, and social injustice. This is the underground music that fueled the innocent-sounding Folk Revival on the one hand and the explosions of angry rock and rap on the other. The Best of Broadside brings an era, its musicians, and its many stories to a new audience. The extensive notes feature the graphics of the original Broadside magazine and provide information on the careers of its many musicians with extensive discographies, the stories behind most of the songs as well as their full texts. They also describe the dramatic history of the magazine itself--a remarkable achievement of dedicated musicians and social activists.
Amazon.com
Historically, a broadside was a song (without music) or poem printed on one side of paper, dealing with a topical issue that usually was of a political nature. Itinerant writers peddled broadsides for a few cents, and their message served to spread the news or perhaps create a controversy about a current event.
In 1962 Sis Cunningham and Gordon Friesen began publication of Broadside, a topical song magazine that quickly would help to start a national movement. After the cold war '50s, a social, cultural, and political revolution was in the air. Broadside began publishing hundreds of songs of social dissatisfaction by musicians who later became the leading lights of the folk and protest movements. Bob Dylan, Phil Ochs, Tom Paxton, Pete Seeger, and dozens more all had their songs first published in Broadside.
This five-CD set is a marvelously comprehensive document of the magazine's songs and songwriters, all of whom were recorded by Folkways Records. The lyrics of each song are printed and extensive information is given about the context in which the song was created. Background material is provided on all of the songwriters, too.
The discs are compiled primarily around the main topics: labor, nuclear weapons, social injustice, Vietnam, civil rights. Eighty-nine songs in all are featured, most of which loosely could be termed "folk music" in style: basic rhythms, acoustic instruments, spirited singers. Listening to the songs and following the annotations serve to remind one of an era of potent protest in this country when music really mattered, and the songs themselves were the primary means of expressing dissatisfaction and disillusionment.
Broadside was a small publication, primarily a labor of love, but its historic legacy looms large when all of its material is brought together in such a well-researched, well-presented compilation as this one. --Wally Shoup
Customer Reviews
Superb slice of history
I am sure I would have loved The Best of Broadside even if had been less innovatively packaged, but the scrap-book format is an excellent idea, and the essays, notes, lyrics and discographies leave nothing to be desired. (I have to confess, though, that I'm a wee bit concerned about the way the CDs are housed - I'm not too hot on the idea of jewel boxes, so their absence doesn't bother me, but some sort of protective sleeves for the discs would probably have been useful.) The real treasure, of course, is contained in the five discs, with their broad range of topical songs from Broadside recordings supplemented by a handful of appropriate tracks from other sources as well as a sprinkling of previously unreleased numbers. The likes of Pete Seeger and Phil Ochs are well represented and there are a number of fascinating contributions from the young Bob Dylan - but even more valuable are the songs by artists whose works would be hard to come by elsewhere, such as Sammy Walker, Len Chandler, the Rev Kirkpatrick, Thom Parrott and even Sis Cunningham herself. This box set is a worthy, loving and superbly produced tribute to Broadside magazine. And as a slice of American social history that captures the spirit of the times, it is absolutely indispensable - both on its own, and as a companion volume to the exhaustive (but less affordable) Songs For Political Action. Don't think twice - just get a-hold of it!
An amazing achievement - worth 10 stars if possible.
This is one of the classic box sets of all times and is most definitely a "celebration of songwriters and their songs." It is thoroughly researched, contains a stellar collection of the classic songs that defined the times, and is presented in a wonderfully creative format that captures the spirit of the Broadside magazine. The 89 cuts on the 5 CD's are a treasure trove of songs by all the well-known and lesser known folk heroes of this very special time. Be prepared to spend many enjoyable hours listening to some of the finest early recordings from Bob Dylan, Phil Ochs, Tom Paxton, Pete Seeger, and many others.
I ordered this set sight unseen, and I was not really expecting to be blown away by it. I currently own a number of Bear Family box sets and other Smithsonian sets. If I arranged all these sets by quality, this set would not only be at the top, but would be a good distance beyond that. The couple of friends I have shown it to have echoed my feelings. In fact, I am seriously considering ordering two more sets before they go out of print in order to stash them away for my future grandchildren.
Even if this set were selling in the $100+ range, this set would still be a phenomenal bargain!
An Altogether Beautiful Package
Box sets can be like Christmas presents. Some of them are like that great new book you have been wanting. Or that video game. Or really cool and unusual stocking stuffers. And some are just like socks. Or underwear. Sort of practical, but nothing you wanna write a thank you card about. This box set definitely falls into the treat category.
I grew up with an Irish mother who hummed traditonal folksongs while she worked around the house. Maybe that is why I felt right at home listening to these indispensible songs. Sure, some of the lyrics are completely, shall we say, emeshed in their time, some almost border now on kitsch, but taken as a whole, the music here is a powerful testimony to the ability to use songs as something more than fodder for product-pushing. There is power and compassion and passion and grit and resignation and tenacity and a whole thesaurus more of emotions and feelings crammed into these five disks. I love humming some of these songs at work under my breath, while I grit my teeth and earn my daily bread. Good way to keep sane.
And the packaging! A good many box sets are somewhat tarnished by their disappointing packaging (the Emmylou Harris box comes to mind; stupendous music, anorexic liner notes). But the Smithsonian has done its usual superb job of putting together a package to write...well, if not home, about, at least a review in Amazon. The Amazon review details all the goodies, but the package itself should be commended for its thoroughness and sheer cunning ingenuity (it opens like a Broadside magazine). I predict at least two Grammy nominations if not outright trophies for the liner notes and the packaging.
I have enjoyed the Harry Smith boxes previously put out by The Smithsonian Folkways people tremendously. If you liked them, I can highly recommend this. The two packages compliment each other nicely.
Now, if only we could get the Britneys and Christinas and Hokus and boybands and all the teenyboppers who are currently ruling the airways to listen to this, then they would know that the power of music is not in the number of units pushed but in the passion and commitment of the artist and his/her song.
Thanks Smithsonian for yet another treat.




