Arlo Guthrie Lyrics, Kill Kill Kill Burnt Babies in My Teeth

American folk singer

Arlo Guthrie

Guthrie in 1979

Guthrie in 1979

Background information
Nativity proper name Arlo Davy Guthrie
Born (1947-07-10) July 10, 1947 (age 74)
Brooklyn, New York City, U.S.
Genres
  • Folk
  • folk rock
  • talking blues
  • protest music
Occupation(southward)
  • Musician
  • songwriter
  • actor
  • social activist
  • humanitarian
Instruments
  • Guitar
  • pianoforte
  • vocals
  • autoharp
  • banjo
  • harmonica
  • saxophone
Years active 1965–2020
Labels
  • Warner Bros.
  • Rising Son
  • Koch
Associated acts Shenandoah (ring)
Pete Seeger
Woody Guthrie

Musical artist

Arlo Davy Guthrie (born July 10, 1947)[1] is an American retired folk vocalist-songwriter.[2] He is known for singing songs of protest against social injustice, and storytelling while performing songs, following the tradition of his father Woody Guthrie. Guthrie'due south best-known work is his debut piece, "Alice'south Restaurant Massacree", a satirical talking blues song nearly 18 minutes in length that has since become a Thanksgiving anthem. His only top-40 hit was a embrace of Steve Goodman's "Metropolis of New Orleans".[ane] His vocal "Massachusetts" was named the official folk song of the state, in which he has lived well-nigh of his adult life. Guthrie has too made several acting appearances. He is the male parent of four children, who have also had careers as musicians.

Early life [edit]

Guthrie was built-in in the Coney Island neighborhood of Brooklyn, the son of the folk vocaliser and composer Woody Guthrie and dancer Marjorie Mazia Guthrie.[one] He is the 5th, and oldest surviving, of Woody Guthrie's viii children; two older half-sisters died of Huntington's disease (which as well killed Woody in 1967), an older one-half-brother died in a train accident, some other half sis died in a automobile accident, and a quaternary sister died in childhood. His sister is the record producer Nora Guthrie. His mother was a professional dancer with the Martha Graham Company and founder of what is at present the Huntington'south Affliction Guild of America. Arlo'due south father was from a Protestant family and his mother was Jewish.[three] His maternal grandmother was Yiddish poet Aliza Greenblatt.[4]

Guthrie received religious training for his bar mitzvah from Rabbi Meir Kahane, who formed the Jewish Defense League. "Rabbi Kahane was a really squeamish, patient teacher," Guthrie later recalled, "but shortly subsequently he started giving me my lessons, he started going haywire. Maybe I was responsible."[v] Guthrie converted to Catholicism in 1977,[6] before embracing interfaith beliefs later in his life.[7] "I firmly believe that different religious traditions tin can reside in 1 person, or i nation or even i earth," Guthrie said in 2015.[8] In 2020, following his retirement, Guthrie expressed a philosophical affinity for gospel music, noting: "Gospel music to me is the biggest genre of protest music. If this world ain't doing information technology for you, and your hopes are in the adjacent i – you can't go more protest than that."[9]

Guthrie attended Woodward Schoolhouse in Clinton Hill, Brooklyn, from get-go through 8th grades and later graduated from the Stockbridge School, in Stockbridge, Massachusetts, in 1965. He spent the summer of 1965 in London, somewhen coming together Karl Dallas, who connected Guthrie with London'south folk rock scene and became a lifelong friend of his.[10] He briefly attended Rocky Mount Higher, in Billings, Montana. He received an honorary doctorate from Siena College in 1981 and from Westfield State College in 2008.

As a vocalizer, songwriter and lifelong political activist, Guthrie carries on the legacy of his father. He was awarded the Peace Abbey Courage of Censor honor on September 26, 1992.[11]

"Alice's Restaurant" [edit]

Guthrie performing during his 2005 Alice'due south Restaurant Massacree 40th Anniversary bout

On November 26, 1965, while in Stockbridge, Massachusetts, during Thanksgiving break from his brief stint in college, 18-year-onetime Guthrie and his friend, Richard Robbins, were arrested for illegally dumping on private belongings what Guthrie described as "a half-ton of garbage" from the habitation of his friends, teachers Ray and Alice Brock, after he discovered the local landfill was airtight for the holiday. Guthrie and Robbins appeared in court, pled guilty to the charges, were levied a nominal fine and picked up the garbage that weekend.[12]

This littering charge served as the basis for Guthrie'due south nearly famous work, "Alice's Eating house Massacree", a talking blues vocal that runs eighteen minutes and 34 seconds in its original recorded version. In 1997, Guthrie jokingly pointed out that this was also the exact length of 1 of the infamous gaps in Richard Nixon's Watergate tapes, and that Nixon owned a re-create of the record. The Alice in the song is Alice Brock, who had been a librarian at Arlo's boarding school in the boondocks before opening her eatery. She afterwards opened an fine art studio in Provincetown, Massachusetts.[13]

The song lampoons the Vietnam War draft. However, Guthrie has stated in multiple interviews that the song is more an "anti-stupidity" song than an anti-war vocal, adding that it is based on a true incident.[14] In the vocal, Guthrie is called up for a typhoon examination and rejected as unfit for military service every bit a issue of a criminal record consisting solely of one conviction for the aforementioned littering. Alice and her eating place are the subjects of the refrain, but are generally mentioned but incidentally in the story (early drafts of the song explained that the eating house was a place to hide from the law). Though her presence is implied at certain points in the story, Alice herself is described explicitly in the tale simply briefly when she bails Guthrie and a friend out of jail. On the DVD commentary for the 1969 movie, Guthrie stated that the events presented in the song all really happened (others, such every bit the absorbing officer, William Obanhein, disputed some of the song's details,[15] only generally verified the truth of the overall story).[16]

"Alice's Restaurant" was the vocal that earned Guthrie his first recording contract, later on counterculture radio host Bob Fass began playing a tape recording of i of Guthrie's live performances of the song repeatedly one nighttime in 1967.[17] A performance at the Newport Folk Festival on July 17, 1967, was also very well received.[ane] [18] Presently afterward, Guthrie recorded the song in forepart of a studio audience in New York City and released it every bit side one of the anthology, Alice's Eatery.[18] By the end of the decade, Guthrie had gone from playing coffee houses and small venues to playing massive and prestigious venues such as Carnegie Hall and the Woodstock Festival.[19]

For a short period afterward its release in October 1967, "Alice'due south Restaurant" was heavily played on U.S. college and counterculture radio stations. It became a symbol of the belatedly 1960s, and for many it defined an attitude and lifestyle that were lived out across the country in the ensuing years. Its leisurely finger-picking acoustic guitar and rambling lyrics were widely memorized and played by irreverent youth. Many stations in the United states take a Thanksgiving Day tradition of playing "Alice'south Restaurant".[twenty]

A 1969 pic, directed and co-written by Arthur Penn, was based on the true story told in the song,[ane] only with the add-on of a big number of fictional scenes. This film, also called Alice'due south Restaurant, featured Guthrie and several other figures in the vocal portraying themselves. The function of his begetter Woody Guthrie, who had died in 1967, was played by actor Joseph Boley; Alice, who made a cameo advent equally an actress, was besides recast, with extra Pat Quinn in the title role[21] (Alice Brock later disowned the motion picture's portrayal of her).[22] [23]

Despite its popularity, the song "Alice'south Restaurant Massacree" is not ever featured on the setlist of any given Guthrie operation. Since putting it back into his setlist in 1984, he has performed the vocal every x years, stating in a 2014 interview that the Vietnam War had ended by the 1970s and that everyone who was attending his concerts had likely already heard the song anyhow. So, later a cursory period in the late 1960s and early 1970s when he replaced the monologue with a fictional one involving "multicolored rainbow roaches", he decided to do it only on special occasions from that point forward.[24]

Musical career and critical reception [edit]

Guthrie performing with the Guthrie Family Legacy Tour 2007

The "Alice's Restaurant" song was one of a few very long songs to become popular just when albums began replacing hit singles as young people's primary music listening. But in 1972 Guthrie had a highly successful single besides, Steve Goodman's vocal "City of New Orleans",[one] a wistful paean to long-altitude passenger rail travel. Guthrie's offset trip on that train was in Dec 2005 (when his family joined other musicians on a train trip across the country to enhance coin for musicians financially devastated by Hurricane Katrina and Hurricane Rita, in the South of the The states). He as well had a minor striking with his vocal "Coming into Los Angeles", which was played at the 1969 Woodstock Festival, simply did not get much radio airplay because of its plot (involving the smuggling of drugs from London by airplane),[25] and success with a live version of "The Motorcycle Song" (ane of the songs on the B-side of the Alice'southward Restaurant album). A cover of the folk song "Gypsy Davy" was a hit on the easy listening charts.

In the fall of 1975 during a benefit concert in Massachusetts, Guthrie performed with his ring, Shenandoah, in public for the first time. They continued to tour and record throughout the 1970s until the early on 1990s.[2] Although the band received good reviews, it never gained the popularity that Guthrie did while playing solo. Shenandoah consisted of (after 1976) David Grover, Steve Ide, Ballad Ide, Terry A La Drupe and Dan Velika[26] and is not to be confused with the country music grouping Shenandoah. The Ides, along with Terry a la Berry, reunited with Guthrie for a 2018 bout.[27] Guthrie has performed a concert virtually every Thanksgiving weekend since he became famous at Carnegie Hall, a tradition he announced would come up to an end after the 2019 concert.[28]

Guthrie'south 1976 album Amigo received a five-star (highest rating) from Rolling Stone, and may exist his best-received work. Notwithstanding, that album, similar Guthrie's earlier Warner Bros. Records albums, is rarely heard today, fifty-fifty though each contains strong folk and folk rock music accompanied past widely regarded musicians such every bit Ry Cooder.[ citation needed ]

A number of musicians from a multifariousness of genres have joined Guthrie onstage, including Pete Seeger, David Bromberg, Cyril Neville, Emmylou Harris, Willie Nelson, Judy Collins, John Prine, Wesley Gray, Josh Ritter, and others. A video from a concert with Seeger at Wolf Trap in 1993 has been a staple of YouTube,[29] with Guthrie'southward story-telling showcased in a operation of Tin't Help Falling in Love. In 2020, Guthrie collaborated with Jim Wilson on a cover of Stephen Foster'south "Difficult Times Come Once more No More than."[xxx]

On October 23, 2020, Guthrie announced via Facebook that he had "reached the hard decision that touring and stage shows are no longer possible," due to a series of strokes that had impaired his power to walk and perform. All of his scheduled tour appearances for 2020 were cancelled, and Guthrie said he will non accept any new bookings offered. His final performance at Carnegie Hall was on November 29, 2019. His final live touring concert was on March 7, 2020, at The Caverns in Pelham, Tennessee.[31] He had attempted to record some private concerts in the summer of 2020 but concluded his playing was no longer up to his standards.[32]

Acting [edit]

Though Guthrie is best known for being a musician, singer, and composer, throughout the years he has also appeared as an actor in films and on television. The film Alice'due south Restaurant (1969) is his best known function, but he has had modest parts in several films and fifty-fifty co-starred in a television drama, Byrds of Paradise.

Guthrie has had minor roles in several movies and television series. Unremarkably, he has appeared as himself, often performing music and/or being interviewed about the 1960s, folk music and various social causes. His goggle box appearances take included a wide range of programs from The Muppet Show (1979) to Politically Incorrect (1998).[33] A rare dramatic film part was in the 1992 moving picture Roadside Prophets. Guthrie'southward memorable appearance at the 1969 Woodstock Festival was documented in the Michael Wadleigh movie Woodstock.[2]

Guthrie likewise made a pilot for a Tv set multifariousness bear witness called The Arlo Guthrie Evidence in Feb 1987. The hr-long program included story telling and musical performances and was filmed in Austin, Texas. Information technology was broadcast nationally on PBS. Special guests were Pete Seeger, Bonnie Raitt, David Bromberg and Jerry Jeff Walker.[34] [35]

Politics [edit]

In his earlier years, at to the lowest degree from the 1960s to the 1980s, Guthrie had taken what seemed a left-leaning approach to American politics, influenced by his father. In his ofttimes lengthy comments during concerts, his expressed positions were consistently anti-war, anti-Nixon, pro-drugs and in favor of making nuclear power illegal. Nevertheless, he apparently did non perceive himself as the major youth civilization spokesperson he had been regarded as past the media, as evidenced by the lyrics in his 1979 song "Prologue": "I tin remember all of your smiles during the demonstrations ... and together we sang our victory songs though we were worlds apart."[36] A 1969 rewrite of "Alice's Eating place" pokes fun at and then-former President Lyndon Johnson and his staff.

In 1984, he was the featured celebrity in George McGovern's campaign for the Democratic presidential nomination in Guthrie's home state of Massachusetts, performing at rallies and receptions.[37] [38] [ non-chief source needed ]

Guthrie identified as a registered Republican in 2008. He endorsed Texas Congressman Ron Paul for the 2008 Republican Party nomination, and said, "I dear this guy. Dr. Paul is the only candidate I know of who would have signed the Constitution of the U.s. had he been there. I'm with him, because he seems to be the only candidate who actually believes it has equally much relevance today equally it did a couple of hundred years ago. I expect frontwards to the 24-hour interval when nosotros tin can piece of work out the differences we have with the aforementioned revolutionary vision and enthusiasm that is our American legacy."[39] He told The New York Times Magazine that he (had become) a Republican because, "We had enough good Democrats. Nosotros needed a few more good Republicans. We needed a loyal opposition."[40]

Commenting on the 2016 election, Guthrie identified himself as an independent, and said he was "equally suspicious of Democrats as I am of Republicans". He declined to endorse a candidate, noting that he personally liked Bernie Sanders despite disagreeing with parts of Sanders' platform. While he thought information technology "wonderful" that Donald Trump was not relying on campaign donations, he did not believe that information technology necessarily meant that Trump had the all-time interests of the country in listen.[41]

In 2018, Guthrie contacted publication Urban Milwaukee to analyze his political stance. He stated "I am not a Republican," and expressed deep disagreement with the Trump administration's views, especially the policies on immigration and treatment of detained immigrants past ICE. Guthrie further antiseptic, "I left the party years agone and practise not identify myself with either party these days. I strongly urge my fellow Americans to stop the current trend of guilt by association, and look beyond the party names and affiliations, and work for candidates whose policies are more closely aligned with their own, whatever they may be. ... I don't pretend to be right all the fourth dimension, and sometimes I've gone so far equally to change my listen from time to time."[42]

Guthrie expressed support for the George Floyd protests in June 2020, stating that information technology would exist practiced if politicians "embraced information technology rather than resist the evolving nature of what it means to exist an American".[43]

Legacy [edit]

Arlo Guthrie in 2010 in Nuremberg

Like his male parent, Woody Guthrie, he often sings songs of protest against social injustice. He collaborated with poet Adrian Mitchell to tell the story of Chilean folk singer and activist Víctor Jara in vocal. He regularly performed with folk musician Pete Seeger, one of his father'due south longtime partners. Ramblin' Jack Elliott, who had lived for two years in the Guthries' home before Arlo left for boarding schoolhouse, had absorbed Woody'southward style mayhap amend than anyone; Arlo has been said to have credited Elliott for passing it forth to him.[ commendation needed ]

In 1991, Guthrie bought the church that had served as Alice and Ray Brock's former habitation in Great Barrington, Massachusetts, and converted information technology to the Guthrie Eye, an interfaith meeting identify that serves people of all religions. The center provides weekly free lunches in the community and support for families living with HIV/AIDS, also as other life-threatening illnesses. It also hosts a summer concert serial and Guthrie does six or vii fund raising shows at that place every year. At that place are several annual events such equally the Walk-A-Thon to Cure Huntington's Disease and a "Thanksgiving Dinner That Can't Be Trounce" for families, friends, doctors and scientists who live and work with Huntington's disease.[44]

I of the title characters in the comic strip Arlo and Janis is named after Guthrie. Cartoonist Jimmy Johnson noted he was inspired past a friend who resembled Guthrie to proper name one of his characters Arlo.[45]

Personal life [edit]

Guthrie owns a habitation in Washington, Massachusetts, where he and Jackie Hyde, his wife of 43 years, were longtime residents.[ citation needed ] Jackie died on Oct xiv, 2012, shortly after being diagnosed with liver cancer.[ citation needed ] He and wife Marti Ladd live in Micco, Florida.[46]

Guthrie'southward son Abe Guthrie and his daughters Annie, Sarah Lee Guthrie, and Cathy Guthrie are also musicians.[ citation needed ] Abe Guthrie was formerly in the folk-rock band Xavier and has toured with his father.[ commendation needed ] Annie Guthrie writes songs, performs, and takes care of family touring details.[ citation needed ] Sarah Lee performs and records with her husband Johnny Irion.[ citation needed ] Cathy plays ukulele in Folk Uke, a grouping she formed with Amy Nelson, a daughter of Willie Nelson.[ citation needed ]

On October 23, 2020, Guthrie appear he was retired from touring and stage shows, citing health bug, including a stroke on Thanksgiving Day 2019 which required brief hospitalization and physical therapy.[47] On his official website and in social media, he posted, "A folksinger'southward shelf life may be a lot longer than a dancer or an athlete, but at some betoken, unless you're incredibly fortunate or just plain whacko (either one or both) it's time to hang upward the 'Gone Line-fishing' sign. Going from town to town and doing phase shows, remaining on the road is no longer an selection."[32]

On October 23, 2021, Guthrie appear that he was engaged to Marti Ladd, with whom he had been in a relationship since soon later Jackie's death in 2012. The couple married December 8, 2021.[48] [49] Information technology is the 2nd marriage for each of them. Guthrie had met Ladd 20 years before[49] when he went to Woodstock, New York with his wife Jackie to do a picture. They were put up at The Wild Rose Inn, where Ladd was the owner/operator. In September 2016, Ladd sold the Inn and moved in with Guthrie.[50]

Discography [edit]

Guthrie tuning up before a operation in Kodiak, Alaska, in 2013

Studio albums [edit]

  • Alice's Restaurant (1967)
  • Running Downward the Road (1969)
  • Washington County (1970)
  • Hobo'due south Lullaby (1972)
  • Last of the Brooklyn Cowboys (1973)
  • Arlo Guthrie (1974)
  • Amigo (1976)
  • One Night (1978), with Shenandoah
  • Outlasting the Blues (1979)
  • Ability of Love (1981)
  • Anytime (1986)
  • Babe's Storytime (1990)
  • Son of the Wind (1992)
  • Woody'south twenty Grow Big Songs (1992)
  • Mystic Journey (1996)
  • This Land Is Your Land: An All American Children's Folk Classic (1997), with Woody Guthrie
  • 32¢ Postage Due (2008)
  • Tales of '69 (2009)[ii]

Other works [edit]

Selected filmography [edit]

  • Alice'south Restaurant (1969)
  • Renaldo and Clara (1978)
  • Baby's Storytime (1989)
  • Roadside Prophets (1992)

Notable television receiver appearances [edit]

  • Trounce Order (season 1, episode 52) February 28, 1970
  • The Byrds of Paradise (1994, 8 episodes), a short-lived ABC drama set in Hawaii
  • Relativity December 29, 1996
  • Renegade, invitee-starring in "Top X with a Bullet" (flavor 5, episode 14) aired on Jan 24, 1997
  • Rich Man, Poor Man Volume II: ii episodes, 1976
  • The fourth season of The Muppet Show.
  • The Fiftieth Anniversary of "Alice's Restaurant". PBS special on Thanksgiving Twenty-four hour period, Nov 26, 2015

Pic and television composer [edit]

  • Alice's Restaurant (1969) (song "Alice's Restaurant Massacree")
  • Woodstock (1970)
  • Clay Pigeon (1971) also known as Trip to Kill (U.k.)
  • Baby's Storytime (1989)

Producer and writer [edit]

  • Isn't This a Time! A Tribute Concert for Harold Leventhal (2004)
  • Mooses Come Walking (1995) (children's book)[51]

Appearances every bit himself [edit]

  • The Johnny Cash Testify (season two, episode 1), January 21, 1970
  • Hylands hörna (episode # 4.iv) January 31, 1970
  • Woodstock (1969) (also known every bit Woodstock 25th Ceremony Edition and as Woodstock, 3 Days of Peace & Music)
  • The Dick Cavett Show September viii, 1970
  • Arthur Penn 1922–: Themes and Variants (1970) (Idiot box)
  • The Tonight Bear witness Starring Johnny Carson, August 17, 1972
  • The Muppet Show (episode # 4.viii) June xix, 1979
  • The Weavers: Wasn't That a Time (1982)
  • Woody Guthrie: Hard Travelin' (1984)
  • Subcontract Assistance '85 (1985) (Tv set)
  • Farm Aid '87 (1987) (Goggle box)
  • A Vision Shared: A Tribute to Woody Guthrie and Leadbelly (1988)
  • Woodstock: The Lost Performances (1990)
  • Woodstock Diary (1994) (Television receiver)
  • The Kennedy Center Honors: A Celebration of the Performing Arts (1994) (Tv set)
  • The History of Rock 'N' Gyre, Vol. half-dozen (1995) (TV) (also known every bit My Generation)
  • This Land Is Your Land: The Animated Kids' Songs of Woody Guthrie (1997)
  • Healthy Kids (1998) (Goggle box series)
  • The Ballad of Ramblin' Jack (2000)
  • Hollywood Rocks the Movies: The Early Years (1955–1970) (2000) (Boob tube)
  • Terminal Party 2000 (2001) (likewise known as The Party'south Over)
  • Pops Goes the 4th! (July 4, 2001)
  • NPR'south Talk of the Nation radio circulate (November xiv, 2001)
    • "St. James Infirmary" and "City of New Orleans"
  • Singing in the Shadow: The Children of Rock Royalty (2003)
  • Get Upward, Stand (2003) (TV serial)
  • From Wharf Rats to the Lords of the Docks (2004)
  • Isn't This a Time! A Tribute Concert for Harold Leventhal (2004)
  • Sacco and Vanzetti (2006)
  • 1968 with Tom Brokaw (2007)
  • Pete Seeger: The Ability of Vocal (2008) (American Masters PBS Goggle box special)
  • The 84th Annual Macy'southward Thanksgiving Day Parade (2010) (TV special)

See likewise [edit]

  • List of 1970s one-hit wonders in the United States

Notes [edit]

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  2. ^ a b c d Strong, Martin C. (2000). The Corking Rock Discography (5th ed.). Edinburgh: Mojo Books. pp. 410–411. ISBN1-84195-017-3.
  3. ^ Guthie, Nora. "Woody Guthrie". Voices of Oklahoma. Archived from the original on June 2, 2012. Retrieved May 21, 2012.
  4. ^ Shavelson, Susanne A. "Aliza Greenblatt: 1885–1975". Jewish Women's Archive . Retrieved January one, 2012.
  5. ^ Tugend, Tom (December 2, 2004). "A Jewish Visit to Guthrie's Country". JewishJournal.com . Retrieved January one, 2012.
  6. ^ Jones, Landon Y. (December 5, 1977). "Remember That Happy Hippie? At xxx, Arlo Guthrie Has Done His Own Hard Travelin'". People . Retrieved Apr eighteen, 2014.
  7. ^ Goldscheider, Eric (January v, 2002). "In a Quest, Arlo Guthrie Is Back in That Church". The New York Times . Retrieved March 22, 2015.
  8. ^ "Arlo Guthrie: "Alice" at fifty – Page 2 of two". Jambands.com. November 25, 2015. Retrieved April 24, 2020.
  9. ^ Daley, Lauren (Nov 23, 2020). "Folk Singer Arlo Guthrie Reflects On A Life Spent Making Music". WBUR . Retrieved April 25, 2021.
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  12. ^ "Youths Ordered to Make clean Up Rubbish Mess". Berkshire Eagle. Pittsfield, Massachusetts. Nov 29, 1965. p. 25 – via Newspapers.com. Richard J. Robbins, 19, of Poughkeepsie, N.Y., and Arlo Guthrie, 18, of Howard Beach, N.Y.. each paid a fine of $25 in Lee Commune Court subsequently pleading guilty of illegally disposing of rubbish. open access
  13. ^ Brock, Alice. "All About Alice". AliceBrock.com. Alice Brock. Archived from the original on Dec 29, 2011. Retrieved January 1, 2012.
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  15. ^ Saul Braun, "Alice & Ray & Yesterday's Flowers," in Playboy's Music Scene, Chicago, IL, 1972, pp. 122–125. Online re-create
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  17. ^ Fisher, Marc. Something in the Air: Radio, Rock, and the Revolution That Shaped a Generation. p. 136. Books.google.com
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  25. ^ Art Edelstein. "'Alice's Eating house' is dorsum". Rutlandherald.com . Retrieved October 28, 2018.
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  27. ^ "Arlo Guthrie going on "The Alice's Restaurant – Back Past Popular Demand Tour"". Brooklynvegan.com . Retrieved October 28, 2018.
  28. ^ Arlo Guthrie To Play Concluding Carnegie Hall Thanksgiving Show, Patch.com, November eight, 2019
  29. ^ "Arlo Guthrie/I Can't Help Falling In Love With You". YouTube. Archived from the original on November 17, 2021. Retrieved September 9, 2021.
  30. ^ "Arlo Guthrie and Jim Wilson Release Have on Stephen Collins Foster'due south "Difficult Times Come Once more No More"". July 31, 2020.
  31. ^ "About | Arlo Guthrie". Arloguthrie.com . Retrieved September nine, 2021.
  32. ^ a b Guthrie, Arlo (October 23, 2020). "Gone Fishing". Arloguthrie.com . Retrieved October 26, 2020.
  33. ^ Arlo Guthrie at IMDb
  34. ^ "Astonishing Grace ARLO GUTHRIE & FRIENDS". Archived from the original on November 17, 2021. Retrieved Feb 3, 2019 – via YouTube.
  35. ^ Guthrie, Arlo. "Alice'southward Stone & Roll Restaurant by Arlo Guthrie". Knowyoursong.com. Archived from the original on Jan xxx, 2018. Retrieved January 29, 2018.
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  37. ^ Marano, Richard Michael (2003). Vote Your Censor: The Concluding Campaign of George McGovern. Praeger Publishers. p. 172.
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  39. ^ Kronholz, June (January 29, 2008). "Group W Grad Endorses Ron Paul". The Wall Street Periodical . Retrieved Oct 24, 2012.
  40. ^ Solomon, Deborah (July 26, 2009). "Questions for Arlo Guthrie: Just Folk". The New York Times . Retrieved October 24, 2012.
  41. ^ "Arlo Guthrie on 'Stupid' Politicians and 50 Years of Thanksgiving Classic 'Alice's Restaurant'". The Daily Beast. November 26, 2015. Retrieved November 26, 2015.
  42. ^ ""I'm Non Republican," Arlo Guthrie Says". Urban Milwaukee. July ii, 2018. Retrieved July 4, 2018.
  43. ^ "ArloNet News and Announcements". Arlo.internet . Retrieved September ix, 2021.
  44. ^ Harrington, Richard (Baronial 12, 2005). "Arlo Guthrie's Storied Career". The Washington Post . Retrieved October 24, 2012.
  45. ^ Johnson, Rheta Enchanted Evening Barbie and the Second Coming: A Memoir, NewSouth Books, 2010 ISBN 978-1-58838-250-4 p. 90
  46. ^ "Exclusive: Arlo Guthrie to get married in Sebastian". October 24, 2021.
  47. ^ Rogers, John. "'Gone Fishing': Arlo Guthrie, citing health, says he'south retired from touring". Usatoday.com . Retrieved October 24, 2020.
  48. ^ "Log into Facebook". Facebook . Retrieved January 23, 2022.
  49. ^ a b Gorce, Tammy La (Dec 31, 2021). "They Could Be Annihilation They Want (Together)". The New York Times . Retrieved January 23, 2022.
  50. ^ Andy Hodges (October 24, 2021). "Sectional: Arlo Guthrie to become married in Sebastian". Sebastian Daily . Retrieved October 24, 2021.
  51. ^ Guthrie, Arlo (1995). Mooses Come Walking . Chronicle Books. ISBN9780811810517.

References [edit]

  • "Youths Ordered to Clean Up Rubbish Mess", The Berkshire Eagle (Pittsfield, Massachusetts), November 29, 1965, page 25, column 4. Reprinted in: Guthrie, Arlo (1969). This Is the Arlo Guthrie Songbook. Amsco Music Pub. Co. p. 39.
  • Lee, Laura (2000). Arlo, Alice & Anglicans: The Lives of a New England Church. Countryman Press. ISBN978-1581570106.
  • Lee, Laura (2000). "Arlo Guthrie Convicted of Littering: November 28, 1965". Mass Moment. Massachusetts Foundation for the Humanities. Retrieved October 24, 2012.

External links [edit]

  • Official website Edit this at Wikidata
  • The Guthrie Center
  • World Music Cardinal "Arlo Guthrie"
  • Arlo Guthrie at IMDb
  • Audio 2007 Interview on the Horace J. Digby Study, Ann Arbor, Michigan

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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arlo_Guthrie

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