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WOODY GUTHRIE
Recipient of the 2002 Magic
Penny Award
The 2002 CMN Magic Penny Award honored
the great children's songs of Oklahoma-born singer, songwriter and
activist Woody Guthrie. Representing the Guthrie family at CMN's
National Gathering Oct 19-20 in Freedom NH was Woody's daughter,
Nora Guthrie, Executive Director of the Woody
Guthrie Foundation and Archives.
Woody
Guthrie once said, "By far my best audience for folksongs and
ballads have been the kids. The story you're telling them in words
goes through their minds like a newsreel, only plainer." He
wrote dozens of children's songs, eighteen of which first appeared
on the 1951 Folkways recording "Songs to Grow On." Chock
full of classics such as "Car Car," "Put Your
Finger In the Air" and "Don't You Push Me," the
album is recognized as one of the most influential collections in
the history of children's music in the US. In 1990 during a
routine cleaning, a librarian at Sarah Lawrence College
rediscovered twenty more of Woody's classic songs, tunes that were
presumed forever lost by his family.
Working out of a small office on West 57th Street in New York,
Nora Guthrie keeps Woody's memory alive through books, recordings,
exhibits, films and a superb website found at www.woodyguthrie.org.
In 1998, she invited British recording artist Billy Bragg to comb
through the lyrics to nearly 2,500 of Woody's unpublished songs,
and to come up with tunes to those that moved him most. The
result, in collaboration with the alt-country band Wilco, were two
Grammy-nominated albums, "Mermaid Avenue" and
"Mermaid Avenue Vol II." Nora narrated the
feature-length film, "Man in the Sand," documenting
Bragg's quest to find "the spirit of Woody Guthrie"
through the Mermaid Avenue projects.
As Nora put it, "I'm not the musician in my family, but I
can tell you about Woody the Dad." Not to worry. The weekend
will give us plenty of opportunities to sing Woody's songs.
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The Magic Penny Award,
named after the song by Malvina Reynolds, is a Children's
Music Network tribute to people in our community who have
dedicated their lives to empowering children through
music. CMN gives this award annually at our national
gatherings to honor the lifetime achievement of someone
whose work most embodies our mission. In October 1999 the
first award was given posthumously to Malvina herself,
through her daughter, Nancy Schimmel.
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