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MP3 John Pietaro & the Flames of Discontent - I Dreamed I Heard Joe Hill Last Night...A Century of IWW Song

An eclectic mix that tells the story of radical Labor in song, incorporating the Left political edginess of classic folk/protest music with the sounds of rock, rockabilly, old-timey, spoken word and improv.

10 MP3 Songs
FOLK: Political, FOLK: Power-folk



Details:
John Pietaro & The Flames of Discontent
I DREAMED I HEARD JOE HILL LAST NIGHT...
A CENTURY OF IWW SONG

"Don''t miss these folks. They illustrate the radical heart of Labor through art and song" - Almanac Weekly, 9/06

"The Flames of Discontent breathe new fire into protest music" - Ulster Publishing/Woodstock Times, 7/06

"Anchored by the transfixing, melodic basslines of Laurie Towers, Pietaro''s rallying cries are heightened by a band cooking with the heartfelt passion of making kicking-ass music for the masses...a timely, noble work."
-''Chronogram'' Magazine, 9/05

"Radicalism in voice and song" - ''Pulse'' Magazine, 12/05

"John Pietaro is a Joe Hill for the new century"
-Paul Buhle, historian/author, 9/05

A compact disc collection in honor of the centenary of the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW): This gathering of radical union song and prose by Labor organizer/musician John Pietaro was developed in collaboration with historian/author Paul Buhle and musicologist/guitarist Clifford Murphy. It was sponsored by the Rhode Island Labor History Society. Pietaro, on vocals, 5-string banjo and other instruments, expanded his original duet with Laurie Towers (electric bass guitar) to include Murphy''s steel-string and electric guitars and a cast of other veteran musicians. The line-up rounds out with fiddles, trombone, baritone saxophone, drumkit, and several spoken word selections.

Pieces by Wobbly bards are heard as both products of their time and activist vehicles for today in this musical journey through the first hundred years of the IWW. ...Joe Hill''s The Preacher and The Slave offers an approximation of a raucous New Orleans parade ensemble that bridges a traditional Jazz sentiment with Cajun sounds. The declamatory trombone and fiddles as well as throbbing rhythm section of this track implode into the seemingly polite next number...The Popular Wobbly. This song is a 1917 parody written over a pre-World War I pop tune. The horn and string sections play in a style characteristic of the time, yet the insubordination of the lyric by T-Bone Slim somehow sneaks out into the ensemble''s pre-Swing parody...ES Nelson''s Workingfolk Unite celebrates the history of folk/protest music by virtue of both its traditional tune (that which Woody Guthrie would use decades later when writing Union Maid) and its line-up. Old-timey banjo and fiddles lead the ensemble in this classic melody so closely associated with the folk revival of the 1940s...Joe Hill''s Where the Fraser River Flows, realized as a slow, driving song, the arrangement of which owes much to the more commercial Country music sounds of the 1950s-60s...Rebel Girl by Joe Hill is presented here as a pounding Rockabilly-influenced number. Cliff Murphy''s electric lead guitar is especially effective in a Scotty Moore manner...The Cage, a musical adaptation by Pietaro of Arturo Giovannitti''s multi-versed poem of imprisoned organizers during the 1912 struggle for Lawrence, the famed Bread & Roses strike. Stylistically, this one''s influenced by singer-songwriter sounds of the 1970s...Bread & Roses by James Oppenheim and Caroline Kohlsaat, is a closing anthem is there ever was one. In the hands of this ensemble, this early 1900s piece transforms into pounding post-Punk protest.

In addition, the songs are interspersed by spoken word selections by Wobbly journalists Matilda Robbins, Justus Ebert, and Joe Hill, himself. The dramatic readings by Brown University students are accompanied by Pietaro''s improvisations on nylon-string guitar or piano.

The stories in these songs and poems tell of the workers, the toilers, the activists, the people. The IWW made its music the core of its philosophy. Itinerant songwriters such as Joe Hill, Mac McClintock, Ralph Chaplin, T-Bone Slim and countless more, doubled as organizers for the IWW, the very first US workers organization that was fully equitable in both membership and constitution. Wobblies unionized workers not by individual craft but by the wider industry in which they were employed. This type of industrial organizing, decades later replicated by the CIO, quashed management''s attempts to divide and conquer. And they embraced workers in all lands. The IWW was deemed dangerous by the status quo, by the very virtue of its mission and thereby became a primary target of the reactionary forces in government. But the songs, even one hundred years hence, live on. Angrily. And proudly! I Dreamed I Heard Joe Hill Last Night is an album celebrating the IWW''s first 100 years, but it''s a statement made by a member of today''s Labor Movement from the confines of today''s USA. Its never too late to, as the Wobblies shouted, Sing and Fight!

-John Pietaro: vocals, 5-string banjo, nylon string guitar, piano
-Laurie Towers: electric bass guitar
-Clifford Murphy: acoustic steel string guitar, electric guitar
-Tim Nylander: drumset
-Emily Miller: fiddle
-James Ruchala: fiddle
-Jim Costanza: trombone
-Emily Nemens: baritone saxophone
-and spoken word selections by Sarah Goldstein, Sarah Bowman and Steven Levenson

{The original duet of Pietaro and Towers continues performing, now under the exclusive name, "The Flames of Discontent", offering music not only to Labor causes, but to peace rallies and other events of social justice. For more info see https://www.tradebit.com }

AIRPLAY: This CD has been broadcast on Oscar Brand''s noted folk program on WNYC(New York City), WBAI-FM (New York City), WVKR-FM (Poughkeepsie, NY)and others in the New York and surrounding area, as well as on KAOS (Olympia, WA). It has also been heard on Worker Independent News programming (heard in various parts of the US)and internet broadcasts via ''Radio Labourstart'', based out of London, UK, and free103.9, based out of Cairo, https://www.tradebit.comtions of the CD were also selected as a ''Song of the Week'' at various points on websites https://www.tradebit.com and https://www.tradebit.com

OFFICIAL ALBUM RELEASE: September 13, 2005, City University of New York Graduate Center event: "The 100th Anniversary of the Wobblies" organized by Paul Buhle.
*****************************************************
John Pietaro
Labor Organizer/Musician:

"Joe Hill''s spirit lives"
-1199 SEIU News

John Pietaro is a musician whose repertoire is based in the body of Labor and topical songs. As a 5-string banjo player, vocalist and/or percussionist (with doubles of piano and guitar), he has performed with
the legendary Pete Seeger, famed poet Alan Ginsburg, saxophonist/composer Fred Ho, poet and vocalist Amina Baraka, "Freedom Singer" Matt Jones, topical songwriter Charlie King, the Ray Korona Band and punk-folk troubadour Kirk Kelly, among others. Events he has organized have featured the likes of Nora Guthrie, Amiri Baraka, David Rovics, Anne Feeney, Bev Grant, Louis Reyes Rivera, Judy Gorman, Sandra Rodriguez, the People''s Music Network, Tuli Kupferberg of the Fugs and others.

"The Flames of Discontent" is comprised of Pietaro and electric bass guitarist Laurie Towers. Following the release of this CD, Pietaro and Towers chose to keep the band name intact, however in a more democratic presentation. In performance, the Flames range in size from the core duet to quartet and beyond and their repertoire grows from unique reconstructions of classic songs of protest, Labor and social justice. Stylistically, their music reflects the folk/protest genre threaded through rock of the 1960s and 50s with touches of punk, roots, free improv, spoken word and more. Pietaro originals such as "Revenge of the Atom Spies" are also features. The duet relocated from NYC to NY''s Hudson Valley area in March 0f 2005 and has focused most of their efforts in their new region. Performances have occured in Beacon, Woodstock, Kingston, Poughkeepsie, Cairo, Nyack and other areas, in addition to several in NYC. They have also performed live in the studios of WDST-FM (Woodstock NY) and WVKR-FM (Poughkeepsie NY). There are currently plans for the release of a second CD, REVENGE OF THE ATOM SPIES, as well as a special weekend-long event in celebration of the protest song, "The Dissident Folk Festival", organized and hosted by the https://www.tradebit.com will occur on Oct 14-15 at the Howland Cultural Center, Beacon NY. For more info on this event or other aspects of the Flames'' performance schedule go to https://www.tradebit.com

Apart from the Flames, Pietaro''s music was also heard at The Million Worker March (10/04, Lincoln Memorial, Washington DC); benefit concert for the IWW''s campaign to organize Starbucks (8/04, NYC); the 85th Birthday Celebration of Henry Foner (3/04, New York University, NYC); the Solidarity Rally for the Transport Workers Union Local 100 (12/02,City Hall, NYC); and numerous other Labor-oriented events. He was also a performer at the commemoration of the life of Moe Foner, founder of 1199 SEIU''s Bread & Roses Cultural Project, "Celebrate Moe" (Town Hall, NYC, 2002) and a member of Pete Seeger''s accompanying ensemble for Music in The History of Struggle, a lecture and concert by Pete Seeger (11/99, NYC).

Pietaro served as organizer, host and performer of a variety of events in the recent past including Which Side Are You On? The Music of May Day (5/04, Union Square Park, NYC); The Arts Still Say ''No!'' To War, a benefit concert for United for Peace & Justice (3/04, Brecht Forum, NYC); I Ain''t Marchin'' Anymore, a commemoration of Phil Ochs'' music (12/03 NYC); The Workers Memorial Day-May Day Festival (4-5/03, NYC) a month-long celebration of Labor arts for which The Cultural Workers Consort was created; Made For You and Me...Over 60 Years of ''This Land is Your Land'', a fundraiser for striking workers and a celebration of Woody Guthrie''s music (2/01, NYC); Solidarity Forever: A Concert for International Labor Unity--a fundraiser for the NYC Central Labor Council ''9/11 Relief Fund'' (10/01, NYC); and The Hanns Eisler Centenary Festival (9/98, Brecht Forum, NYC).From 2000-2004, Pietaro organized NYC concerts in honor of May Day, the international workers'' holiday. In 1999 he acted as musical director for part of the international cultural event in defense of Mumia Abu-Jamal, Mumia 911 (9/99, NYC).

Pietaro works professionally as a Labor organizer in New York State''s Hudson Valley/Catskill area for a public workers union, where he, like all of that union''s staff, is a member of United Steelworkers Local 9265. He is also affiliated with the Industrial Workers of the World. Pietaro''s articles have been published in Z magazine, the Indypendent, Groundscore, the People''s Weekly World, Portside, Fifth Estate and others. His music and activism have been covered by WBAI-FM (New York City), WDST-FM (Woodstock, NY), WVKR-FM (Poughkeepsie, NY), Radio Labourstart (internet broadcasts based out of London, UK) and various media and Labor publications. Pietaro holds degrees in Music Performance, Music Education and Music Therapy and Organizing Certification from AFSCME.

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