Home > Joan Baez to play concert at Camp Casey

Joan Baez to play concert at Camp Casey

by Open-Publishing - Wednesday 17 August 2005
8 comments

Edito Demos-Actions Music Wars and conflicts USA Cindy Sheehan

Today on the Mike Malloy show, Cindy announced that Joan Baez will be

Coming to Camp Casey to play a concert for Cindy and her supporters.

Woodstock 2005 begins....

At a time in our country’s history when it was neither safe nor fashionable, Joan put herself on the line countless times, and her life’s work was mirrored in her music. She sang about freedom and Civil Rights everywhere, from the backs of flatbed trucks to the steps of the Lincoln Memorial at Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King’s March on Washington in 1963.

In 1964, she withheld 60% of her income tax from the IRS to protest miltary spending, and participated in the birth of the Free Speech movement at UC Berkeley. A year later she co-founded the Institute For The Study of Nonviolence near her home in Carmel Valley. In 1966, Joan Baez stood in the fields alongside Cesar Chavez and migrant farm workers striking for fair wages, and opposed capital punishment at San Quentin during a Christmas vigil.

The following year she turned her attention to the draft resistance movement. As the war in Vietnam escalated in the late ’60s and early ’70s, she traveled to Hanoi with the U.S.-based Liaison Committee and helped establish Amnesty International on the West Coast.

The soundtrack to those times was provided by a stunning soprano whose natural vibrato lent a taut, nervous tension to everything she sang. Yet even as an 18-year-old, introduced onstage at the first annual Newport Folk Festival in 1959, and during her apprenticeship on the Boston-Cambridge coffeehouse folk music circuit leading up to the recording of her first solo album for Vanguard Records in the summer of 1960, Joan’s repertoire reflected a different sensibility from her peers. In the traditional songs she mastered, there was an acknowledgment of the human condition - underdogs in the first, inequity among the races, the desperation of poverty, the futility of war, romantic betrayal, unrequited love, spiritual redemption, and grace.

Hidden within the traditional ballads and blues, lullabies, Carter Family songs, cowboy tunes, and ethnic folk staples were messages that won Joan strong followings here and abroad. Among the songs she introduced on her earliest albums that would find their ways into the rock vernacular were "House Of The Rising Sun" (The Animals), "John Riley" (The Byrds), "Babe, I’m Gonna Leave You" (Led Zeppelin), "What Have They Done To The Rain" (the Searchers), "Jackaroe" (Grateful Dead), and "Long Black Veil" (The Band), to name but a few. "Geordie," "House Carpenter," and "Matty Groves" became staples for a multitude of British artists whose origins are traced to three seminal groups: Fairport Convention, Pentangle, and Steeleye Span.

In the wake of the Beatles, the definition of what constituted folk music - a solo performer with an acoustic guitar - broadened significantly and liberated many artists. Rather than following the pack into amplified folk-rock, Joan recorded three remarkable LPs with classical instrumentation. Later, when the time was right, as the ’60s turned into the ’70s, she began recording in Nashville. It provided the backdrop for her last four albums on Vanguard Records (including her biggest career single, a cover of The Band’s "The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down") and her first two releases on A&M.

Within the context of those albums and the approaching end of hostilities in Southeast Asia, Joan decided to cast light on the suffering of those living in Chile under the rule of Augusto Pinochet. To those people she dedicated her first album sung entirely in Spanish, a record that inspired Linda Ronstadt, later in the ’80s, to begin recording the Spanish songs of her heritage. One of the songs Joan sang on that album, "No Nos Moveran" (We Shall Not Be Moved), had been banned from public singing in Spain for more than forty years under Generalissimo Franco’s rule, and was excised from copies of the album sold there. Joan became the first major artist to sing the song publicly when she performed it on a controversial television appearance in Madrid in 1977, three years after the dictator’s death.

Joan’s productive years at A&M Records in the 1970s included the landmark release of her self-penned "Diamonds & Rust" single, the title track of an album that included songs by Jackson Browne, Janis Ian, John Prine, Stevie Wonder & Syreeta, Dickey Betts of the Allman Brothers Band - and Bob Dylan. His Rolling Thunder Revues of late 1975 and 1976 (and resulting movie Renaldo and Clara, released in 1978) would co-star Joan Baez. Later that year she traveled to Northern Ireland and marched with the Irish Peace People, calling for an end to the violence plaguing the country.

Even as she began brief associations with new record labels in the late ’70s (CBS Portrait) and after a long hiatus, the late ’80s (Gold Castle), Joan Baez did not diminish her political activities. She appeared at rallies on behalf of the nuclear freeze movement, and performed at benefit concerts to defeat California’s Proposition 6 (Briggs Initiative), legislation that would have banned openly gay people from teaching in public schools. She received the American Civil Liberties Union’s Earl Warren Award for her commitment to human and civil rights issues, and founded Humanitas International Human Rights Committee, which she headed for the next 13 years.

http://www.joanbaez.com/officialbio05.html

Forum posts

  • That’s the perfect way to bring this administration down. Good old American protests against war and crime in their country.
    Get them!!!

  • joan is a true american patriot ;she deserves the nobel prize

    • Good to see Joan Baez still defending the
      plight of the grieving, wronged, and those
      seeking a relief from senseless and unreasonable war. She is,indeed, a noble
      person worthy of the Nobel Peace Prize
      for decades of service in the cause of peace. GS Jones

    • She might not accept, but the Nobel is indeed within reach for Baez. Cindy Sheehan is a wonderful touchstone for the voices of reason to finally be heard. - Alice Timmins

  • Joan Baez, thank you for bringing your voice, your sanity, your love to Camp Casey. Your heart is true and you will keep the candles burning. Peace, Alice T.

  • Bless Joan Baez! She was right about the first ’Vietnam War’, and she and Mrs. Sheehan are right about bush’s new Vietnam War, based on lies and deceit. The entire bush administration needs to be held accountable for their continuous string of lies about their war, their inability to show even the slightest bit of genuine concern about the deaths of many brave American men and women, who died directly because of their lies, as well as the deaths of thousands of Iraqi civilians, while leading our country down a trail of debt at the expense of the middle class and poor, and all the while, rewarding the rich including his own family with excessive tax breaks. Donald Rumsfield, Condellissa Rice, Dick Cheney, are all a part of bush’s madness and need to be held accountable. How can anyone believe a word out of any of this deceptive, cunning, self-righteous, self-centered, self-absorbed administration? It appears, after all hopes for the best have failed, only the hardcore Republican base has been so brainwashed! It is encouraging to know that aware, conscientious and honorable people like Cindy Sheehan and Joan Baez are setting the bush record straight by getting the facts out there and not letting this administration get away with, among other dishonorable things, a war based on lies!
    Jim Stewart, Marana, Arizona

  • What time is the concert expected to begin?

    • i came from germany 1964 and just finished my 12 month time as a consciences objector. this is a choice in germany
      if you do not believe that wars can solve problems. one of the first things a family i stayed showed me was an album
      of joan baez. i was so moved and had to cry. and when i saw joan in camp casey it had a special meaning and i hope
      a special healing for all the mothers or wife’s who had lost a loving person for a reason i’m still searching to understand.
      just change the information to fit the new picture. i hope this can be done only so many times until a sleeping tiger
      will wake up.

      jan knabe new ulm tx.