American Pastimes
American Pastimes
Tom, Grant and Darla or Erik bring you folk, Bluegrass, acoustic blues and more. Doc Watson to David Grisman, Ralph Stanley to Steve Earle, and Emmylou Harris to Maybelle Carter.
On American Pastimes: “The Death of Ellenton,” the story of an American town killed by the military industrial complex.
Ellenton, South Carolina was incorporated in 1880. A quintessential southern rural community, it was established along a railroad line. Local lore says that it was named Ellen’s Town by the railroad superintendent who was smitten by the beauty of a young local girl.
On American Pastimes Two Armies Wage Peace on Christmas Eve.
Wars have been fought for stupid reasons, and World War I epitomizes war at its most stupid. The conflict was preceded by four decades of diplomatic disagreements and minor clashes between individual European nations over colonialism and territorial disputes.
An American Pastimes Thanksgiving Eve tradition continues: Arlo Guthrie's "Alice's Restaurant Massacree Revisited."
According to his biographer Joe Klein, “one of the last things that Woody Guthrie did before he died was to listen to a recording of his son Arlo singing a long, convoluted talking blues about how he’d been arrested for littering in Stockbridge, Massachusetts, and how he’d parlayed that ‘criminal record’ into a means of dodging the draft and avoiding the war in
On American Pastimes: Hank Williams, the Lost Notebooks. A One-Hour Radio Special.
Hank Williams had developed a habit of constantly jotting down lyric ideas on napkins, receipts, hotel stationery, and any other scrap of paper that came in handy. While his personal life may have been in a drug and alcohol induced shambles he managed write down these song fragments and meticulously store them in a set of notebooks he carried around in an old leather satchel.
On American Pastimes this week: Martin Carthy, the Pentangle & Sinead O'Connor perform the ballad “Lord Franklin,” a true story.
We were homeward bound one night on the deep
Swinging in my hammock I fell asleep
I dreamed a dream and I thought it true
Concerning Franklin and his gallant crew
american pastimes...9/20/11
Rita Hosking/when miners sang/burn
dry branch fire squad/miners refrain/live @ newbury firehouse
david grisman bluegrass xpress/old in the way/dgbx
poor mans whiskey/whiskey in heaven/darkside fo the moonshine
little willies/tennesse stud/little willies
old crow medicine show/tennesse pusher/self titled
tony furtado/staggerlee/american gypsy
On American Pastimes we commemorate the 10th Anniversary of "O Brother, Where Art Thou?"
This week American Pastimes features a one hour radio special commemorating the 10th anniversary of the release of O Brother, Where Art Thou? The program features interviews with the actors and musicians who contributed to the film and soundtrack.
On American Pastimes August 10: Gordy Ohliger
Gordy Ohliger, musical historian, banjo & guitar artiste extraordinaire, all-round good guy, and an irregular guest on American Pastimes stops by to play and talk up "Honky-Tonkin' On The River", a multi-band extravaganza at Scotty's Boat Landing on Saturday August 20th.
American Pastimes: Woody Guthrie in Chico Ca. 1941, Part Three.
In late 1938, Woody was back in Los Angeles with a new program on radio station KFVD. Within a short time his road partner, the actor Will Geer, convinced him to move to New York. In New York his fame escalated as he recorded albums and hosted a new radio show for CBS.
American Pastimes: Woody Guthrie in Chico Ca. 1938, Part Two
After his traveling partner Roy Crissman returned to southern California to move his family north, Woody Guthrie continued his trek throughout the central valley of California, staying and singing with farm workers in labor camps, living under bridges, hanging out in skid rows, writing in his notebooks, and sending his reports off to “The Light”, a Los Angeles-based progressive
Woody Guthrie in Chico Ca. 1938, part one.
Due to the combined hardships of the Great Depression and ongoing drought, many people from Oklahoma, Texas, Arkansas, and Missouri packed up their belongings and traveled west in search of work. An estimated four hundred thousand made their way to California in the 1930’s.
American Pastimes features the classic folk tale of Duncan & Brady
This week American Pastimes features the true but fabled tale of “Duncan & Brady”. In October 1880, Patrolman James Brady was shot and killed while responding to a barroom brawl at the Charles Starkes Saloon in the red-light district of St. Louis, Missouri. Harry Duncan, a boot-black, porter and actor/singer, was arrested and convicted of the crime.
On American Pastimes: One of the most well known songs in the whole wide world, “House of the Rising Sun.” (Origins, Part 2).
Alan Lomax is the one. It was Lomax who brought “House of the Rising Sun” back with him from one of his many field excursions in search of American folk tunes and folklore. In his 1937 expedition through the Cumberland Gap into Appalachia Lomax recorded three separate renditions of this song on his Presto disc making machine.
On American Pastimes: The Railflowers perform live in the KZFR studio.
This local trio of sisters weave a folky Americana with guitar, banjo, mandolin and a bit of the eggshaker. The Railflowers blend three part harmonies to create a musical tapestry of memories and experiences that have inspired their lives.
On American Pastimes: What does the Baltimore Fire of 1904 have in common with the 1991 Oakland hills firestorm?
Cities burned. Especially the rapidly growing American cities of the 19th and early 20th centuries. The close proximity of their buildings, the use of easily combustible material, non-existent or un-enforced building codes, and the lack of quality fire fighting equipment contributed to a litany of tragic fires across the country during this time.
American Pastimes: "House of the Rising Sun" origins, pt. 1.
Most people assume that the “House of the Rising Sun” is about a brothel in New Orleans. It may be. There were definately hotels there named "Rising Sun" and perhaps they were bordellos.
Gordon Lightfoot Changes Lyrics to "Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald"
by Jane Stevenson, QMI Agency 3/26/2010:
RAMA, Ont. - Gordon Lightfoot says the families of some of the crewmen of the Edmund Fitzgerald are pleased he's changed the lyrics to his iconic song about the mysterious ship sinking in Lake Superior 35 years ago.
At least in a live setting.
A Musical Call for Unity on American Pastimes
As Democrats and Republicans take off their gloves and pummel each other and the President into submission, American Pastimes features the 60’s anthem “Let’s Get Together.”
On American Pastimes, the satire of Greg Keeler: Songs of Manly Men, Old Rich Ladies, and Cold Dead Fingers.
Greg Keeler is a manly man of letters. He holds degrees from Oklahoma State University and Idaho State University. He has taught English and Literature at Montana State University since 1975. As a writer he has produced numerous books of poetry, many articles in popular and academic journals and magazines, six plays and several books.
On American Pastimes, Peggy Seeger’s “Ballad of Springhill Mine” proves to be just as relevant today as it was 50 years ago.
This past week the world watched the rescue of 33 gold and copper miners who were trapped 2,300 feet below the surface of the Chilean desert for over two months. It was 52 years ago, almost to the day, that the first ever world-wide broadcast of a mining disaster rescue mission captured the attention of people all across the globe: October 23, 1958.
Jim Hightower in Chico for KZFR Fundraiser
Popular (even though he's from Texas!) populist Jim Hightower, writer and radio commentator, will be coming to Chico on Thursday Oct. 7th.
The Kingston Trio sings of wanton sexual promiscuity, adultery, syphilis and murderous revenge on American Pastimes.
In one of popular music’s most sublime ironies, The Kingston Trio, with their polished harmonies, conservative matching stage attire and milquetoast clean-cut image, turned a true 19th century story about lascivious lust and murder into a chart-topping hit that briefly changed the economic trajectory of folk music.
American Pastimes features "John Henry," the ballads and the instrumentals.
The story of John Henry has been a part of America’s folklore fabric for the past 125 years. The hammer pounding, steel-driving railroad tunnel digger challenged a mechanized steam-powered drill and won, only to die when the contest was over.
Gordy Ohliger - The Banjo-ologist. PBS Documentary on KIXE TV. Wednesday Aug. 11 at 8:00 p.m.
PBS Documentary about Gordy Ohliger on KIXE TV. Wednesday Aug. 11 at 8:00 p.m.Gordy has appeared numerous times on American Pastimes, and will be in the KIXE studio for a live presentation during the broadcast of this program.
Here is link to Promo video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V8STPstx6qo




