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Utah Phillips : We Have Fed You All a Thousand Years
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Recorded live before an audience of striking Canadian telecommunications workers, this rousing album of IWW (Industrial Workers of the World/Wobblies) songs and stories tells about working class culture.
Genre: Folk: Political
Release Date: 1983
We Have Fed You All a Thousand Years Record Label: Philo/Rounder Records
  • Buy CD - $15.00
Preview Song Name Time Format Price Select
The Boss 0:15 Album Only
We Have Fed You All a Thousand Years 2:05 Album Only
Sheep and Goats 1:01 Album Only
The Timberbeast's Lament 1:38 Album Only
Dump the Bosses Off Your Back 4:13 Album Only
The Lumberjack's Prayer 1:48 Album Only
Mr. Block 4:24 Album Only
The Preacher and the Slave 4:12 Album Only
The Popular Wobbly 2:03 Album Only
Casey Jones '” The Union Scab 2:56 Album Only
Where the Fraser River Flows 2:52 Album Only
Bread and Roses 2:55 Album Only
Joe Hill 4:13 Album Only
Union Burying Ground 3:32 Album Only
The Two Bums 0:54 Album Only
Hallelujah, I'm a Bum! 5:33 Album Only
Solidarity Forever 4:29 Album Only
There Is Power in a Union 3:46 Album Only

Album Notes

Utah Phillips has crafted a fascinating show out of his life. In the course of seventy years he has labored as a dishwasher, archivist, printer, and warehouseman; soldiered in the Korean War; lived as a tramp (he is still a Grand Duke of Hoboes), and for the past 36 years made his way telling stories and singing songs. He has the wit, humor, bite, and intelligence of a Mark Twain or a Will Rogers, and behind his "Everyman" appearance is a consummate artist. Peppered with one-liners and offhand philosophical commentary, Utah's revealing stories, about such spirited American characters as Charley Goodnight, Mother Jones, and Idaho Blackie, tell our true history and connect us to American traditions that are genuinely ours.
Utah Phillips is described as "a national treasure, a writer of haunting songs, a storyteller of hilarious presence and subtle depth, a union organizer, historian and scholar, a Celtic-Yiddish bard, a Pleistocene bon vivant, a post-modern ne'er-do-well, and a heck of an engineer." A 40-year member of the Industrial Workers of the World, he is the most entertaining labor troubadour of our time, leading his audience on an emotional rollercoaster with side-splitting storytelling and fire-breathing working class songs. According to one reviewer, "Phillips exemplifies some of the traits which Americans most value: an open and inquisitive mind, a daring heart, and a sharp but humorous tongue." The Boston Globe said, "Phillips above all is a consummate showman, a master of the theater...Phillips has a genius for making people laugh and care at the same time." He is the recipient of the Lifetime Achievement Award presented by the North American Folk Alliance, the Lifetime Achievement Award from the Western Labor Heritage Foundation, and the Joe Hill Award from the Labor Heritage Foundation-AFL-CIO, among many others.

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REVIEWS

We Shall All Be All
author: Joel Smith
The I.W.W. and black cats! A radical folk singer that doesn't care which way you vote. He has his Union Card on his sleeve. A nine out of 10 here!
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Hallelujah, We're Bums!
author: Buzz Malone
As a union organizer I find myself singing outloud along with the songs on long and short drives. With clarity of sound and purity of message this is one of the best live recorded folk albums I have ever heard. I expect to wear the plastic right off of the cd on this one!
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We Have Fed You All a Thousand Years
author: Janet Jones
This album is brilliant both in the beauty of the storytelling style and delivery and the quality of the music playing. For me though it is in the education it gives me on workers rights, the powerful history of what has gone before, that is so important for us to remember and learn from today.
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great!
author: Greg Nicholson
This is not just great music, but great story-telling and a superb history lesson as well. This man, and his music, are national treasures. He represents the best in our society.
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