Albert Grossman – AcousticMusicScene.com https://acousticmusicscene.com Mon, 11 Aug 2025 19:54:01 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 Peter Yarrow of Peter, Paul and Mary, 1938 -2025 https://acousticmusicscene.com/2025/01/09/peter-yarrow-of-peter-paul-and-mary-1938-2025/ Thu, 09 Jan 2025 18:39:07 +0000 http://acousticmusicscene.com/?p=13014
Peter Yarrow, a celebrated singer-songwriter and social activist, has died at 86.
Peter Yarrow, a celebrated singer-songwriter and social activist, has died at 86.
Peter Yarrow — the singer-songwriter and social activist best known as part of the seminal folk harmony trio Peter Paul & Mary — died at his home in New York City on January 7, 2025 following a four year-bout with bladder cancer. He was 86.

Peter, Paul and Mary’s music and social activism helped to shape a generation. Through the years, the popular and inspirational folk trio who frequently sang out against war and injustice touched the hearts and consciences of millions of people worldwide, won five Grammy Awards, received eight gold and five platinum records, released six Billboard top 10 singles, had two #1 Billboard chart-topping albums and a dozen top 40 hits, and have been the subject of five PBS documentaries.

Peter Yarrow was born on May 31, 1938 in New York City. Although he took violin lessons as a child, inspired by folks like Woody Guthrie and Pete Seeger, he later switched to guitar. After graduating from Cornell University in 1959 with a degree in Psychology (although he also was a teaching assistant in an American folklore class), Yarrow returned to NYC and began playing the folk clubs and basket houses of Greenwich Village. After meeting music impresario Albert Grossman (who managed Dylan, Janis Joplin, Odetta, and others) who was eager to work with a folk harmony group, Yarrow set about with Grossman to launch one.

Peter, Paul and Mary – featuring Yarrow (guitar and tenor vocals), Noel Paul Stookey’s (guitar and gentle baritone vocals) and Mary Travers’ (contralto vocals) — formed in 1961, having made its first public appearance that fall at the Bitter End on Bleecker Street in New York City’s Greenwich Village. The trio’s eponymous debut album, released on Warner Brothers Records in May 1962, topped the charts that summer, remained in the Billboard magazine top 10 for ten months and the top 20 for two years, sold more than two-million copies, and featured the Grammy Award-winning hit single, “If I Had a Hammer.” That song, penned by Pete Seeger and Lee Hays of The Weavers (whom Yarrow viewed as early mentors), became an anthem of the civil rights movement and was performed by the trio on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial, along with its rendition of Bob Dylan’s “Blowin’ in the Wind,” during the historic 1963 March on Washington at which the late Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr. delivered his “I Have a Dream” speech.

Folk trio Peter, Paul and Mary captured live in concert (Photo: Robert Corwin)
Folk trio Peter, Paul and Mary captured live in concert (Photo: Robert Corwin)
The trio’s sophomore release, Movin’, featured “Puff the Magic Dragon,” a now classic song co-written by Yarrow and his college friend Lenny Lipton while at Cornell that has been a children’s favorite for decades and also was the inspiration behind a 1978 animated TV special and was made into an illustrated children’s book by Yarrow. Although some believe that the song contains drug references, suggesting that “puff” refers to marijuana smoke, Yarrow maintained that the song about a young boy and his make-believe dragon friend just reflected the loss of childhood innocence. “A dragon lives forever, but not so little boys.”

Peter, Paul and Mary’s rendition of “ Bob Dylan’s “Blowin’ in the Wind” was released in the summer of 1963 and also became a big hit for the trio. Archival footage of the trio performing the song during the march appears in the 2014 PBS documentary 50 Years with Peter, Paul and Mary, produced and directed by Emmy Award-winner Jim Brown. As Yarrow observes in the documentary, it was time when “music began to inspire America, tweak its conscience, and articulate its dreams.”

Besides “Blowin’ in the Wind,” the trio also recorded Dylan’s “When the Ship Comes In” and Don’t Think Twice, It’s All Right,” with its rendition of the latter song also landing in Billboard’s top 10. Yarrow served on the board of the Newport Folk Festival and helped to emcee the event in 1965 when Dylan went electric. Famously, as recreated in the widely acclaimed Dylan biopic A Complete Unknown that is currently screening at movie theaters, Dylan borrowed Yarrow’s guitar to play “It’s All Over Now, Baby Blue.”

Although Peter, Paul and Mary performed together over the span of 50 years, there were times when the trio was on hiatus with each of its members pursuing solo careers and projects. The first such break came in 1970, shortly after the release of the trio’s cover of John Denver’s “Leavin’ on a Jet Plane” and Yarrow’s conviction after pleading guilty to taking “indecent liberties” with an under-age girl who had come to his dressing room seeking an autograph in 1969, for which he served three months in prison.

While “Leavin’ on a Jet Plane” was its last number one hit, Yarrow penned “Light One Candle” for the trio in 1982 – while war was raging in Lebanon – that has since become a popular Chanukah song. Peter, Paul and Mary performed “Light One Candle” — whose lyrics commemorate a war of national liberation fought by the Maccabees, while also calling for peace in the Middle East – for several years before recording it on its 1986 studio album No Easy Walk to Freedom. Its moving lyrics include: “Light one candle for the terrible sacrifice justice and freedom demand. Light one candle for the wisdom to know when the peacemaker’s time is at hand.” The 1986 album’s title track is a civil rights anthem that Yarrow co-wrote with Margery Tabankin.

Peter Yarrow is all smiles in this publicity photo.
Peter Yarrow is all smiles in this publicity photo.
Both prior to and in the years since Mary Travers passing in 2009, Peter — both solo and with Noel “Paul” Stookey and others –- continued to make music and to lend his voice and support to causes in which he passionately believed.

An anti-war activist, Yarrow helped to organize and produce a number of large events including peace concerts at NYC’s Madison Square Garden and Shea Stadium, as well as the 1969 “Celebration of Life” march and demonstration in Washington, DC during which some 500,000 people demanded an end to America’s involvement in Vietnam.

Yarrow was a major champion of other songwriters who particularly sought to nurture the talents of new and emerging ones who, as he put it, “write from the heart.” A founding board member of the Newport Folk Festival, he also developed and hosted a Sunday afternoon concert focused on emerging folk artists and songwriters – providing earl opportunities to such artists as Eric Anderson, Tim Hardin and Buffy St. Marie. Ten years later, in 1972, he partnered with Rod Kennedy, the late founder-producer of the Kerrville Folk Festival to establish what’s now the Grassy Hill Kerrville New Folk Competition for Emerging Songwriters. The Kerrville New Folk Concerts have become a highlight of the annual festival that is geared towards singer-songwriters of various musical styles and is the longest continuously running festival of its kind in North America.

Yarrow believed that music could be a transformative tool for informing the ethical sensibilities of children. In 1999, he established Operation Respect — an educational nonprofit organization and program that seeks to teach children about tolerance and respect for each other’s differences – using music, video, and conflict resolution curricula developed by Educators for Social Responsibility. In an interview with AcousticMusicScene.com in 2010, Yarrow maintained that “all kids deserve to grow up accepting each other,” expressing concern that 160,000 American children refuse to go to school because of cruelty, according to the American Association of School psychologists. Citing “our need to inherit a peaceful world,” he noted that peace education was regarded as “seditious” when the Operation Respect program was launched. It has since been incorporated into the curriculum of some 22,000 U.S. elementary and middle schools.

A former board member of the Connecticut Hospice, where he also periodically sang for patients and staff, he was long active on behalf of the hospice movement.

Last April, Yarrow joined Stookey in in performing in Boston during a Folk Americana Roots Hall of Fame induction ceremony. Peter, Paul and Mary were among the inaugural class of inductees.

As Yarrow told AcousticMusicScene.com in 2010: “”Music can be used as a powerful force in a world where we desperately need it … Music is something that binds the hearts and can bring us together.” Here’s a link to read that article: https://acousticmusicscene.com/2010/11/27/the-peter-yarrow-sing-along-special-airs-on-pbs-stations/

Many of Peter Yarrow’s songs and those by other songwriters that Peter, Paul and Mary covered over the decades have a timeless quality to them and multigenerational appeal. For Peter Yarrow, “Day is Done,” yet his music and that of Peter, Paul and Mary lives on. So too do his widow Mary Beth (the niece of the late Sen. Eugene McCarthy (D-MN), whom he met during a 1968 Democratic presidential primary campaign event and married the following year), his daughter Bethany, son Christopher, granddaughter Valentina, and lots of adoring fans.

Peter Yarrow is shown here with AcousticMusicScene.com's Michael Kornfeld in 2010. (Photo: Walter Hansen)
Peter Yarrow is shown here with AcousticMusicScene.com’s Michael Kornfeld in 2010. (Photo: Walter Hansen)
Editor’s Note: I’m glad that I got to see Peter Yarrow in concert and at various political events & social actions over the years and had the opportunity to meet and interview him for AcousticMusicScene.com and a couple other publications.

Our folk community mourns his passing, as well as the recent deaths of Mike Brewer (a Missouri-based folk-rock singer-songwriter who, with his musical partner Tom Shipley, recorded the hit song “One Toke Over the Line”), David Mallet (the Maine-based singer-songwriter best known for “Garden Song”), and Josh White, Jr. (a Michigan-based singer and guitarist who followed in his late father’s folk and blues footsteps for decades).

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Remembering Ian Tyson, 1933-2022 https://acousticmusicscene.com/2023/01/07/remembering-ian-tyson-1933-2022/ Sat, 07 Jan 2023 16:48:05 +0000 http://acousticmusicscene.com/?p=12440
Ian Tyson
Ian Tyson
Ian Tyson, an influential Canadian troubadour best known for having penned the hit songs “Four Strong Winds” and “Someday Soon” as half of the internationally acclaimed folk duo Ian & Sylvia, died on December 29, 2022 at his ranch in southern Alberta at age 89. Folk DJ Charlie Backfish will pay tribute to him and his music during a special edition of his long-running weekly radio show Sunday Street that airs January 8 from 9 a.m. to 12 p.m. ET on WUSB 90.1 FM on Long Island, NY and online at wusb.fm or https://tunein.com/radio/WUSB-901-s2324/.

Born to British immigrants in Victoria, British Columbia on September 25, 1933, Tyson grew up in Duncan, BC. He was a rough-stock rodeo rider in his late teens and early 20s and took up the guitar as “the means by which to pass the time” during a two-week hospital stay while recovering from a shattered ankle — an injury he sustained in a bad fall while competing in the Dog Pound Rodeo in Alberta.

Tyson hitchhiked from Vancouver to Toronto in 1958 after graduating from the Vancouver School of Art and became part of the city’s nascent folk scene centered around the coffee houses of its bohemian Yorkville neighborhood. There he met a young singer named Sylvia Fricker, who would become his musical and life partner for a while. They moved to New York, where noted manager Albert Grossman (Bob Dylan, Peter, Paul & Mary, Pozo Seco Singers, etc.) signed Ian & Sylvia to Vanguard Records and they became an important part of the early 1960s folk revival.

Ian & Sylvia - Four Strong WindsThe duo released its eponymously titled debut album in 1962 before getting hitched two years later. They would go on to record and release nearly a dozen albums. Although Ian and Sylvia’s 1964 sophomore release, Four Strong Winds, featured primarily covers of songs by others, its original title track became one of Canada’s best-loved songs and, along with “Someday Soon” and Sylvia’s “You Were on My Mind,” has been covered by numerous other artists — a number of whom will be featured on Sunday Street.

Here’s a link to view a video of Ian and Sylvia performing Four Strong Winds for the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC):

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B3m7ckGhnsc

As the folk boom began to wane later in the 1960s, spurred in part by the British Invasion, Ian & Sylvia moved to Nashville and began incorporating elements of country and rock into their music. They formed the band Great Speckled Bird in 1969 and becoming pioneers of country-rock, along with the Byrds and others.

After hosting a national Canadian television music show from 1970 to 1975, Tyson realized his dream of returning to the Canadian West. His marriage to Sylvia had ended in divorce in 1975 and Tyson, disillusioned with the Canadian country music scene, opted to return to his first love – training horses in the ranch country of southern Alberta.

Tyson Turns to Cowboy Songs and Western Music

His songwriting was greatly affected by his change in lifestyle – most notably on his third solo album, 1983’s Old Corrals & Sagebrush, comprised solely of traditional and new cowboy songs that he recorded after spending three idyllic years cowboying in the Rockies at Pincher Creek. Although Tyson didn’t know it at the time, a cowboy renaissance was about to find expression at the first Elko Cowboy Poetry Gathering that year in a small cow town in northern Nevada. Invited to perform his ‘new western music” at it, Tyson was a regular attendee at the gatherings for more than 30 years. Tyson’s 1987 album Cowboyography also helped to re-launch his touring career across Canada and the U.S.

Tyson seriously damaged his voice following a particularly tough performance at an outdoor country music festival in 2006. “I fought the sound system and I lost,” he said afterwards. With a virus that took months to pass, his smooth voice was now hoarse, grainy, and had lost much of its resonant bottom end. After briefly entertaining thoughts that he would never sing again, he began relearning and reworking his songs to accommodate his ‘new voice.’ To his surprise, audiences now paid rapt attention as he half-spoke, half-sung familiar words, which seemed to reveal new depths for his listeners, according to publicist Eric Alper. Although a heart attack, followed by open heart surgery in 2015, further damaged his voice, Tyson continued to release music well into his senior years – including the 2015 album Carnero Vaquero and his last single, “You Should Have Known.” Released in September 2017 on Stony Plains Records, the Canadian label on which he released 15 albums since the 1980s, that song unapologetically celebrates the hard living, hard drinking, hard loving cowboy life.

Tyson was a Much-Honored Artist During His Lifetime

Tyson earned numerous awards and accolades over the years. A Juno Award recipient for country male vocalist of the year in 1987 and a Canadian Country Music Hall of Famer since 1989, Tyson was inducted into the Canadian Music Hall of Fame – along with his former wife and singing partner, Sylvia, three years later. He became a member of the Order of Canada in 1994, received a Governor General’s Performing Arts Award in 2003, and was inducted into the Alberta Order of Excellence in 2006. ASCAP paid tribute to him during the 20th annual Folk Alliance International Conference in 2008, while he was inducted into the Canadian Songwriters Hall of Fame in 2019.

January 7 Sunday Street Tribute to Ian Tyson will Feature Music, Stories and Reflections

On the January 7 edition of Sunday Street, Backfish will explore Tyson’s wide-ranging career. He’ll share some recently-recorded reflections from Tom Russell, a widely acclaimed folk and Americana singer-songwriter, painter and essayist who co-wrote may songs with Tyson and recorded Play One More: The Songs of Ian and Sylvia (2017), featuring some of the duo’s lesser-known songs.

A Tom Russell painting of his longtime friend, mentor and musical collaborator Ian Tyson.
A Tom Russell painting of his longtime friend, mentor and musical collaborator Ian Tyson.
“It’s hard to come forth with words about the passing of Ian Tyson, wrote Russell in a Facebook post shortly after he died. “My friend and mentor for so many years. He was the best man at our wedding in Elko. We co-wrote at least 10 songs including Navajo Rug [the 1986 Canadian country song of the year], Claude Dallas, Rose of San Joaquin, When The Wolves No Longer Sing, and Ross Knox. We had a good talk a little while ago. My thoughts go back to many great memories of co-writing songs in a cabin in the Rockies. It’s a sad day. He’ll be with me forever.”

Here are links to view videos of Russell and Tyson performing Tyson’s classic “Summer Wages” and their co-write “Navajo Rug” in Calgary in 2019:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w4Rk-E_spoI

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VGlbCQ_DjdE

The three-hour radio show will also feature stories and observations from Tyson himself, Sylvia Tyson, and Ramblin’ Jack Elliot, interspersed with music. “Many of Tyson’s songs, as well as his vocals on the songs of others will be part of the three-hour program, according to Backfish. Besides Tyson himself, Ian and Sylvia, The Great Speckled Bird, and Tom Russell, listeners will hear from Neil Young (who covered “Four Strong Winds” on his 1978 album Comes A Time), Gordon Lightfoot (who Ian and Sylvia mentored and whose song “Early Morning Rain” was the title track of their 1965 release), Greg Brown and Bill Morrissey, Lucy Kaplansky, Fourtold, Gretchen Peters, James Keelaghan and Jez Lowe, Marianne Faithfull, Cindy Church, Corb Lund (an Alberta-based Canadian country artist with whom Tyson performed a series of concerts in 2018 and who told CBC News in a 2019 interview “He’s kind of our Willie Nelson or Johnny Cash or Leonard Cohen. He’s a guy who’s most embodied the region in art, musically at least.”), Ramblin’ Jack Elliott, The McDades, Michael Martin Murphey, and Bob Dylan (who recorded Tyson’s song “One Single River,” along with the Band, in Woodstock, New York, in 1967).

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Remembering Richie Havens, 1941-2013 https://acousticmusicscene.com/2013/04/23/remembering-richie-havens-1941-2013/ Tue, 23 Apr 2013 13:15:12 +0000 http://acousticmusicscene.com/?p=6544 By Michael Kornfeld

I wasn’t at Max Yasgur’s Farm in 1969 when Richie Havens impressed throngs of people at the Woodstock festival. I was just a youngster then. But I did get to hear him up close and personal in the late 1970s at my alma mater, Huntington High School, in Huntington, New York. He was performing in the auditorium, along with Harry Chapin, at one of the late singer-songwriter’s many benefit concerts. Richie joined his fellow Brooklyn NY-born folksinger in heaven or wherever kindhearted gentle souls go, on April 22, after suffering a heart attack at home in Jersey City, New Jersey. He was 72.

Richie Havens (Photo: Jake Jacobson)
Richie Havens (Photo: Jake Jacobson)

Although my memories of that concert some 35 or so years ago have faded a bit, Richie Havens became a favorite artist of mine at that time, and he — and Harry — helped to forge my lifelong love of folk music. Through the years, I added most of Richie Havens’ albums to my collection, mostly on vinyl. And I had the pleasure of seeing him in concert a number of times and of speaking with him on several occasions. I last saw him a few years ago at an outdoor concert on Governor’s Island in New York City. An engaging performer, he really knew how to connect with an audience.

Richie Havens Mixed BagThe eldest of nine children, Richard P. Havens began singing doo-wop on Brooklyn street corners at the age of 12, before picking up a guitar in his 20s after discovering and immersing himself in New York’s Greenwich Village folk scene. He forged a reputation playing the coffeehouses and nightclubs there and soon attracted the attention of folk impresario Albert Grossman, Bob Dylan’s manager, who helped him secure a record deal with Verve Forecast, which released his famed breakout album, Mixed Bag, in 1967. That album, which was preceded by two more obscure, independently released ones, included “Handsome Johnny,” an anti-war anthem that he wrote with actor Louis Gossett Jr, and covers of Bob Dylan’s “Just Like a Woman” and Gordon Lightfoot’s “Follow.”

Before the decade was out, he would release five more albums, including 1968’s Something Else Again, his first to hit the Billboard chart. However, it was his live performances that helped to cement his reputation and bring him much acclaim – notably his stirring opening set at Woodstock, which featured his encore performance of “Freedom,” an improvisational take on the old spiritual “Motherless Child.”

Buoyed by the accolades he received at Woodstock, Havens launched his own record label, Stormy Forest, and released two albums in 1970, Stonehenge and Alarm Clock. The latter recording, which featured his version of George Harrison’s “Here Comes the Sun” became his first album to make it into Billboard’s Top 30. He released several more albums on his own label during the 1970s.

An ardent champion of environmental causes, Richie Havens began to devote time and effort to educating young people about ecology – first through co-founding an oceanographic children’s museum on City Island in the Bronx and later through establishing The Natural Guard to help youngsters realize, though hands-on activities, the positive changes they can make for the environment. (It’s ironic that he died on Earth Day).

Havens continued actively performing and touring throughout the 1980s and 1990s and also experienced some success as a commercial jingle writer and performer. He performed at the inauguration of President Clinton in 1993 and at a Tibetan Freedom Concert that attracted more than 100,000 people in 1999. The following year, he published an autobiography entitled They Can’t Hide Us Anymore (co-written with Steve Davidowitz). In the years that followed, he continued to release albums, perform in concert, and also appeared in a number of films.

The National Music Council awarded Havens the American Eagle Award for being an important part of America’s musical heritage in 2003, and he was inducted into the Long Island Music Hall of Fame three years later. In June 2009, it was a delight to see and hear him perform at the Clearwater’s Great Hudson River Revival. Less than two months earlier, he had taken part in a fundraising concert in New York City in honor of folk icon and Clearwater founder Pete Seeger’s 90th birthday. Havens stopped touring just over a year ago, citing health concerns.

Richie Havens at the 2008 Newport Folk Festival (Photo:Steven Sandick)
Richie Havens at the 2008 Newport Folk Festival (Photo:Steven Sandick)
Richie Havens had a distinctive, poignant and powerful voice. At times he used it to exhort us to work for freedom and justice and to protect our environment. His guitar playing also was distinctive. His style was very rhythmic and frequently employed open tunings — whether he was playing his own songs or unique and soulful interpretations of classic numbers by Lennon and McCartney, Dylan, and other pop and folk music luminaries. He was, himself, an iconic figure in the music world. But he never took on the trappings that one might associate with that. Although he played some of the world’s major music festivals and concert halls, he also enjoyed playing smaller venues and seemed to relish and truly appreciate the adoration of his fans and felt blessed, as he often said, that people would come out to hear him sing.

Richie, it is us who were blessed by your presence — both as an artist and as a caring person. You were indeed a kindhearted and gentle soul, whose ageless music will live on and be enjoyed by many for generations to come.

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Clearwater Honors George Wein with Power of Song Award https://acousticmusicscene.com/2011/10/07/clearwater-honors-george-wein-with-power-of-song-award/ Fri, 07 Oct 2011 22:29:45 +0000 http://www.acousticmusicscene.com/?p=4252
George Wein and Pete Seeger at Newport
Music festival impresario George Wein, founder of the Newport Folk Festival, among others, will receive the first Power of Song Award during an Oct. 21 benefit concert in New York City. Monies raised during the event, which is set for 8 p.m. at the Peter Jay Sharp Theatre at Symphony Space, will support the environmental education programs of Clearwater, a nonprofit organization launched by Pete Seeger and others more than 40 years ago to help spur awareness of and preserve and protect the Hudson River and its tributaries.

Seeger, along with other folk music luminaries — including Theodore Bikel, Oscar Brand and Albert Grossman — backed Wein when he founded the Newport Folk Festival, which has been held in or near the coastal Rhode Island resort city since 1959. A pioneer among producers of outdoor music festivals, Wein had earlier created the renowned Newport Jazz Festival and also founded the New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival and the JVC Jazz Festival in cities around the world.

Over the years, the Newport Folk Festival has featured a wide array of established and emerging artists. During the folk revival era, the festival helped launch the careers of such artists as Joan Baez (who was introduced to the world by Bob Gibson at the inaugural event in 1959) and Bob Dylan during the 1960s. Financial problems forced its cancellation in 1970, and a last-minute license rescission by the Newport City Council the following year was followed by a 15-year hiatus. It was revived in 1985. Wein sold the production company that staged both the Newport Folk and Jazz Festivals in 2007 but stepped in to help keep the festivals afloat in 2009 and has been at their helm since then. Both festivals are now produced under the umbrella of the nonprofit Newport Festivals Foundation, Inc.

Artists slated to join Seeger in performing during the benefit concert include David Amram, Richard Barone, Jonatha Brooke, Guy Davis, Arlo Guthrie, Lucy Kaplansky, Tom Paxton, Toshi Reagon, Tao Rodriguez Seeger, Suzanne Vega and Loudon Wainwright III, among others. Tickets, priced at $70-$90, are available at www.SymphonySpace.org or by calling (212) 864-5400. A limited number of $250 tickets include premium seating and a post-concert reception with the artists at the venue, which is located at 2537 Broadway at 9th Street in Manhattan.

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