Tonight
will be—gasp!—the 33rd annual Music
Party hosted by my dear friends
and old Fellow Workers Kathleen Taylor
and Hannah Frisch at their Hyde Park apartment in Chicago. These are song circle gatherings including many former or current members of
the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW), friends and co-conspirators, accomplished folk
musicians, or folks like me who are content to caterwauler. Traditionally
the evening has been well lubricated with beer
and strong drink, but as the
attendees have aged and grayed we have become a touch less rowdy—just a touch.
Song party hostess Kathleen Taylor belting it out during the 2010 song circle.
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The
parties began not long after I left Chicago for the far-off wilds of McHenry County. I missed a
lot of the early parties because I generally worked a second job on Saturday nights.
Later they were regularly held on the eve of the Diversity Day
Festival I hosted on the Square in
Woodstock. In recent years I have
cleared my calendar to be there, but missed last year after my gallbladder tried to kill me. Nothing will keep me away tonight.
Although
all sorts of songs will be shared, many of them will be ones we learned from
the IWW’s famous Little Red Song Book. There
have been at least 38 editions of the working
people’s hymnal since it appeared in 1909.
Here is the story of those remarkable little books.
The
Wobblies were always a singing union and from the earliest
strikes and job actions after the union’s founding in 1905 music was a part of meeting, rallies, marches, and picket lines. Nowhere was this truer than in the Pacific Northwest where early
organizing drives among lumber workers often
called timber beasts because of
their ragged appearance and often
near starving conditions.
Unable
to effectively get to remote logging
camps, IWW organizers relied on street
meetings in cities like Spokane,
Washington to protest the job shark hiring
agencies that dispatched men to the camps collecting fees from the ax men and employers alike. They found
that songs helped attract crowds for
the union’s soapbox orators. When Salvation Army Bands were often sent to
drown out the meetings workers could
be sing the old hymns with new words.
The
Spokane local issued a song card featuring
four selections in 1906. The sold for a penny, but most were probably handed out for free at the street
meeting. The card featured already familiar labor songs and one original— Harry “Haywire Mac” McClintock’s Hallelujah, I’m a Bum. McClintock was a former Texas cowboy, harvest worker, and Hobo who had become a lumber worker
while also working as a musician in saloons.
The song was originally written in the 1890’s but was popular with all
sorts of migratory workers. McClintock also penned another popular
Hobo song, The Big Rock Candy Mountain.
A rare and battered copy of the Songbook's first edition published by the Spokane, Washington IWW local.
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The
song cards were so successful that the local
decided to assemble and sell a small songbook designed to easily fit into a shirt pocket. It sold for 10¢, not an insignificant sum
in those days when a dime could
generally buy a meal at Skid Road diners, but not a prohibitive one. The first edition did not have the now
familiar red cover, but did have red
lettering. The songbook hit the streets in January of
1909 and was an immediate success. The book’s official title was a mouthful--Songs
of the Workers, on the Road, in the Jungles, and in the Shops – Songs to Fan
the Flames of Discontent. Subsequent
editions shortened that to Songs of the
Workers and/or Songs of the IWW to
Fan the Flames of Discontent. Three
editions were printed in Spokane over the next three years and were bound in heavy
red stock, giving it the enduring nickname, The Little Red Song Book. But
that title appeared on only two of the subsequent 38 official editions.
Each
new songbook included new songs like the labor standards The Red Flag sung to the
tune of O Tannenbaum and the
global Socialist anthem The Internationale, and the easily
adapted Civil War song Hold the Fort.
When
the Spokane local was under siege during aftermath the 1909 Free Speech Fight, issuing and printing
new editions shifted to Seattle. It was in an early Seattle edition that Joe Hill’s song The Preacher and the Slave was
published in 1911. Mac McClintock claimed to be the first to sing it at a
street meeting because Hill was too shy to perform
publicly.
Carlos Cortez's linocut poster tribute Wobbly bard and martyr Joe Hill.
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Joel Hägglund a/k/a Joseph Hillstrom and Joe Hill was a young Swedish and itinerate worker who had been involved with the IWW for
a few years. Several of his songs were
added to editions of the Songbook including The Tramp, Stung Right, Where the
River Frazier Flows, There is Power in a Union, Mr. Block and Casey
Jones Union Scab all of which have become labor standards. Hill was famously
framed on a murder charge in Salt Lake
City, Utah. While being held he was inspired by young IWW
orator Elizabeth Gurly Flynn who
worked tirelessly on his defense
committee and who had visited him in jail
to write The Rebel Girl.
After
Hill’s execution by firing squad on November 19, 1915 his poem Final Will was included
in all subsequent editions of the Songbook.
At least two later versions of the book were officially named Joe
Hill Memorial Edition, including one issued by the Cleveland Metal and Machinery Workers Industrial Union 440 in the
early 1950’s. By popular demand later
editions have also included I Dreamed I Saw Joe Hill Last Night by
Alfred Hayes and Earl Robinson which was popularized by Paul Robeson and Joan Baez, and Phil Ochs long
ballad Joe Hill.
Industrial Worker editor Ralph Chaplin wrote the enduring labor anthem Solidarity Forever.
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Other
notable early additions to the Songbook included Dump the Bosses off Your Back by
John Brill. Industrial Worker editor and commercial artist Ralph Chaplin’s rousing
Solidarity
Forever was included in a 1916 edition and has become the leading labor
anthem of all time. Chaplin’s
illustrations were also used on the covers of several editions. The powerful We Have Fed You All for a
Thousand Years with words by an “Unknown
Proletarian” and music by Rudolph
Von Liebich appeared in 1919.
Somewhat
surprisingly a song closely associated with the IWW’s 1912 Lawrence Textile Strike did not make it into the Songbook until
1984 although it appeared in the union magazine
Industrial Pioneer in 1946. James
Oppenheimer’s Bread and Roses was
first published as a poem in the American Magazine in December of
1911 shortly before the strike. The
mostly women mill workers adopted Bread
and Roses as their strike slogan. It
wasn’t until the 1940’s that Carolyn
Kohlsatt adapted the song to the melody most Wobblies still sing, although an
alternative tune by Mimi Fariña in
1976 is gaining popularity. In the 1970’s
the song became a Women’s Liberation anthem
as much as a labor one and it has even been included in the Unitarian Universalist hymnal Singing the Living Tradition.
Production
of the Songbooks moved to IWW General
Headquarters in Chicago and resumed after the great post-World War I Red Scare
sent most Wobbly leaders, including Ralph Chaplin, to prison. The ‘20’s saw the appearance
of another notable contributor, Matt
Valentine Huhta, who signed is contributions T-Bone Slim including The
Popular Wobbly, Mysteries Of A Hobo’s
Life, and The Lumberjack’s Prayer.
Editions
of the Songbook have also included labor songs from other sources notably Woody Guthrie’s Union Maid with an updated final verse by Nancy Katz, The Banks are Made of Marble by Lee Rice and popularized by the Almanac Singers with more contemporary
lyrics added, Which Side are You On by Florence
Resse, and the old British rouser The Black Leg Miner as sung by Billy Brag.
The "double tall" 1995 36th edition featured music from around the world as well as old favorites an music for each song.
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In
1995 the union issued an unusual “double
tall” International Edition, one
of only two editions to use the words Little Red Songbook on the cover, which
in addition to most of the standard songs included more modern songs and songs from around the world including songs in Spanish it also included for the first
and only time the full musical notation
of each song.
Wobblies
have continued to add new songs and adapted old ones, especially with more gender inclusive language. Bruce “Utah” Phillips was the union’s
popular balladeer, philosopher, story teller, and inveterate
agitator who died much loved and
mourned in 2008. His contributions to
the book included Larimer Street, Starlight on the Rails, and All
Used Up but he introduced the music from the Songbook to a whole generation.
Bruce "Utah" Phillips introduced the IWW and its songs to a new generation.
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Other
newer contributors include Anne Feeney, Scabs and Whatever Happened to the Eight
Hour Day; Kathleen Taylor, The LIP Song and Soul
Stealers; Goddard Graves, Go I
Will Send Thee; Leslie Fish, Babylon
Updated and Freedom Road; Carlos Cortez, Outa Work Blues; Darryl
Cheney, Where Are We Gonna Work When the Trees Are Gone and Who
Bombed Judi Bari; and Tom Morello,
Union Song.
Hell,
even I made an appearance under the moniker
The Irish Cowboy with a rock and roll picket line song Roll
the Hours Back and The Dark and Dreary Slum Where I Was Born,
a take-off on Woody Guthrie’s Oklahoma Hills.
Rebel Voices was the realization of a long cherished dream to produce a "Little Red Record."
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Utah
Phillips gathered both touring and Chicago-based
member of the IWW’s Entertainment
Workers Industrial Union #630 for a concert
performance at Holstein’s on Lincoln Avenue to record a long dreamed
of “Little Red Record.” Released under the title Rebel Voices in 1988 by
the record include performances by Phillips, Faith Petric, Fred Holstein, Bruce Brackney, Marion Wade, Bob Bovee, Jeff Cahill,
Kathleen Taylor, J. B. Freeman, Robin Oye, Eric Glatz, and Mark Ross. It is still available on CD or by Download.
Almost all of the songs included in the first 36 editions of the Songbook are included in The Big Red Songbook.
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In
2007 noted folklorist Archie Green published
The
Big Red Songbook which included 250 songs culled from the various editions
of the IWW songbook. In 2016
a new edition was co-edited by Green, labor historian David Roediger, Franklin Rosemount, and Salvatore Solerno with an introduction
by Tom Morello, the Wobbly rocker of
Rage Against the Machine and Audioslave, and posthumous afterward by
Utah Phillips.
We
will be singing a lot of these songs and remembering many friends and musicians
who are no longer with us tonight.
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