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MP3 David Rovics - Live at Club Passim

Songs of social significance in the vein of Phil Ochs, Billy Bragg and Bob Dylan

22 MP3 Songs
FOLK: Political, FOLK: Modern Folk



Details:
I''d like to dedicate this recording to the memory of Eric Mark. Eric was a very dear friend of mine. We lived together in San Francisco along with our close friends, David and Annie and other wonderful folks. It was a great gang there on Macalester Street. Mostly cab drivers and late-night waitresses, all with crazy stories to tell each night during the kitchen gatherings at 2 am or so.
Eric had quit his job as a mechanical engineer in Berkeley to be a cab driver in San Francisco. He had such a love of life and all things alive. He was one of the most intelligent people I ever met. Always thinking hard, questioning. He had gotten into Marxism and dialectical materialism and such, and was quickly leaving me in the dust when it came to conversations about dialectics (a favorite topic of mine as well).

Me and Eric and a few other folks were out in the Mission District during the wee hours of May Day, 1993, when a gang of kids pulled up and blew Eric''s head off with a shotgun. They had gotten all his money and had no reason to kill him, if there ever is such a thing. He was 24 years old. Beautiful inside and out, brilliant, so alive, so much potential.

It was Eric''s death that got me into songwriting, essentially. I had dabbled in it before that, and had been involved in various activist circles as well. In a way nothing changed for me; my thinking, my life, my music more or less continued along some kind of similar trajectory, I suppose. But it was as if the world suddenly went from black & white to color, and so full of blood as well as beauty.

I know so many other people who have had similar awakenings, whether from growing up in southcentral Los Angeles or from visiting a war-torn country or whatever. I know that there are people reading this who haven''t had such shocking experiences, and there are many who have. Regardless, I hope you will realize that you don''t need to have such an experience for your views on the world to be legitimate.

Don''t let anyone tell you that there''s something wrong with you if you find yourself sobbing with the empathy you feel for the malnourished, dying children of Basra. Don''t let anyone tell you that the pain you feel at the felling of an old-growth redwood is somehow misplaced or not a real emotion. Don''t let anyone tell you that you''re just one person and you can''t save the world.

Aim high and throw hard.

"For those of us who knew him
We will now and then recall
And shed a tear on poverty
The tombstone of us all"
--Phil Ochs, from the song "Lou Marsh"

OK, next I''d like to do the acknowledgements thing. I always have such a hard time with this part. Maybe it''s not really necessary; the songs take care of that part too, perhaps. It''s an overwhelming task, thanking all those deserving of thanks (and so much more). It''s out of the question to thank all the giants upon whose shoulders we stand, the great social movements and freedom fighters who have come and gone. But then, even on a completely personal level, I can''t even fit in all the names of the folks all over the world who have set up gigs for me, organized conferences and protests that I''ve played at, put me up in their houses and cooked for me, and so on. I''d like to thank all of those people, and all the songwriters, activists and other folks who have been my inspiration. But there''s no room in this insert, and to be honest, I don''t even remember most of their names, though I have so much respect and admiration for every one of them.

So I guess that''s why people usually limit themselves in these situations to thanking people who were directly involved with the recording in question. So first and foremost, I''d like to thank the amazing musicians who learned my songs and played with me on the concert at Club Passim on April 12th, 2000. Eric Royer, Sean Staples, Rob Laurens, Rich Caloggero, Gregor Harvey, Maria Nazzaro and Bonnie Rovics. I''d like to thank Stephen Friedman at Melville Park Studio for the excellent live recording and mixing jobs; Jon Sulkow at the Tape Complex for his work on the graphics and the poster for the concert; Club Passim, the Colombia Support Network, and the Lucy Parsons Center for getting people out there that night; my dad, Howard Rovics, for filming the event and taking pictures; my mom, Anne Chamberlain for all her ceaseless support, and I guess I''ll leave it at that.


* * * * *

OK, so on to the songs and the CD itself. First of all, the CD should perhaps be called "Mostly Live at Club Passim," since Maria Nazzaro''s gorgeous harmony vocals were actually done after everything else was recorded, in the studio. Other than her vocals, it was all recorded live.

Information about the topics involved can be found on my website, https://www.tradebit.com. For example, if after listening to "Song for Big Mountain" you want to know how you can get involved with the struggle of the Dineh people against relocation, my website will point you to Black Mesa Indigenous Support''s website. If after listening to "Terror in the Skies" you want to know how you can get involved with groups trying to end the sanctions on Iraq, you will find a link to Voices in the Wilderness, etc.

Also, on the version of these liner notes that are on my website, you can click on the song titles below to read the lyrics to each song.

The musicians:
David Rovics, vocals and guitar
Sean Staples, mandolin
Eric Royer, banjo
Rich Caloggero, second guitar
Bonnie Rovics, flute
Rob Laurens, bass guitar
Gregor Harvey, harmony vocals
Maria Nazzaro, harmony vocals

All the songs are written by David Rovics except "Hobo''s Lullaby," which was written by Goebel Reeves. The phrase "pray for the dead and fight like hell for the living" came from labor organizer Mother Jones.

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