Arlo Guthrie (Photo by Jon C. Hancock) |
Arlo Guthrie is the 65-year-old son of legendary folksinger Woody Guthrie. Sixty-five years old! He was just a kid in 1967 when he hit the ground running with his 20-minute classic tale of taking the garbage out one Thanksgiving, “Alice’s Restaurant.” But now he’s 65. Woody was only 55 years old when he passed away the same year Arlo hit it big. Huntington’s chorea was the cause, and Arlo spent a few years wondering if he’d inherited that curse. He looks pretty good, still fairly hippie-like with his long white hair and droopy moustache, but he walks straight, and plays guitar with confidence and skill. And he is one heck of a storyteller.
The week before, Jackie, his wife of 43 years, passed away. Inoperable cancer they said. Arlo was in the middle of a Canadian tour, and while he announced that he would be cancelling some shows and rescheduling others he promised to complete this Canadian tour. He was booked for Brampton, and St. Catharines, as well as Burlington’s new theatre all within a few days, and I wondered what he might be like. Would grief cause him to fail? Absolutely not. He mentioned Jackie only once in a charming story about his first trip from his Coney Island home to California. He was 18 and his mother told him he’d have to stay with family or friends. “We don’t have any family or friends in California!” he reminded her. “Well,” she replied, “You can stay with Jack.” Jack was Ramblin’ Jack Elliott (Woody was a major influence on Ramblin’ Jack), and what 18-year-old kid wouldn’t want to stay with Ramblin’ Jack? He took Arlo to a rodeo, where Arlo saw the most beautiful girl in the world riding a pony at the head of the parade. A couple years later he married that girl, and they stayed together for 43 years, through thick and thin. Then he sang a song that wasn’t on his set-list for the night: “Highway in the Wind” from that first album. It was a moving moment.
Woody the merchant seaman was torpedoed in the Atlantic. Twice. He brought back a fiddle from one of
those trips and Arlo still has it. Woody wrote “The Sinking of the Ruben James”
to honor the dead. The song names all 86 victims. Arlo didn’t sing this one,
but he did sing “Deportees (Plane Wreck at Los Gatos)” which goes:
Goodbye to my Juan, goodbye Rosalita
Adios mis
amigos, Jesus y Maria.
You won’t have a name when you ride the big airplane.
All they will call you will be … Deportees.
Names were important to Woody. That’s how you remember
someone.
There were plenty of tales like this. Easy-going
remembrances told in Arlo’s laconic voice, with a hint of Okie accent added for
authenticity. After all, “the Kid” grew up in New York
and has lived in Massachusetts
for years. He had the audience in the palm of his hand from the minute he
walked on stage.
His own songs were potent too. A song from 1989 which he
wrote about Russian soldiers leaving Afghanistan took on new meaning in
2012 as my wife and I recalled our own son arriving home from the same place:
And there won't be any victory parades
For those that's coming back
They'll fly them in at midnight
And unload the body sacks
And the living will be walking down
A long and lonely road
Because nobody seems to care these days
When a soldier makes it home
Fortunately our son and his compatriots all walked off the
plane, but there were plenty who didn’t. At the airport that day, there were
quite a few of us who cared when
their soldiers made it home. I shared a tear or two with my wife.
After nearly an hour, Arlo took a 15 minute break, and when
we gathered again he sat behind the piano. He told of how his mother had
encouraged (read forced) him to take piano lessons. How he got his teacher to
play the piece three times so he could memorize it rather than read the music.
How his step-father tried to enforce the practice regimen, but since he
couldn’t read music either, Arlo could easily play some ragtime piece and claim
that it was Beethoven. Then how Marjorie (his mother) said, “You will sit at
that piano for an hour!” and he sat there on the piano bench … practicing his
guitar. He must have done some work on the 88s because his New Orleans piano solo was superb. Then it
was back to the stool and guitars for more songs and stories.
There have been several Woody Guthrie tributes in this 100th
anniversary of his birth. Repackaged and re-mastered CDs, concerts, tributes at
festivals and even new music added to Woody’s archived lyrics, but none more
appropriate than having Arlo sing his father’s songs, and tell the history of
their creation. Although the weather outside was threatening, cold and rainy,
it was a warm and memorable night inside the Performing Arts Centre. The Kid
did all right. He even sang “This Land Is Your Land” with the Canadian place
names. The Kid’s got class!
– David Kidney has reviewed for Green Man Review and Sleeping Hedgehog. He published the Rylander Quarterly (a Ry Cooder-based newsletter) for 8 years before turning it into a blog, at http://rylander-rylander.blogspot.com. He works at McMaster University as Director of Learning Space Development and lives in Dundas, Ontario with his wife.
No comments:
Post a Comment