Woody Guthrie, the Great Depression, and American Protest Songs

Event Details

When
02/09/2009 - 1:30pm
Where
McHenry Township Hall
3703 N Richmond Rd (McHenry Township Office Building)
Johnsburg, IL, 60051-5451
United States
See map: Google Maps
County: 
McHenry
Fee: 
Free. Open to the public.
Sponsor Organization: 
McHenry Senior Citizens Club
Where
McHenry Township Hall
3703 N Richmond Rd (McHenry Township Office Building)
Johnsburg, IL, 60051-5451
See map: Google Maps
County: 
McHenry
Fee: 
Free. Open to the public.
Sponsor Organization: 
McHenry Senior Citizens Club

A Road Scholar Program by Bucky Halker

During the 1930s, the Depression and the Dustbowl ravaged America's economy and left millions of Americans unemployed and homeless. Even those who didn't lose their jobs or farms often experienced the hardship of reduced incomes. Not surprisingly, music became an important method for expressing dissatisfaction with the status quo. Indeed, protest songs emerged as the collective voice of this army of migrants and downtrodden and the era produced a great outpouring of protest songwriting, including the songs of Woody Guthrie. Join Bucky Halker for a program that combines performance and commentary, as he reviews working-class protest songs from the Dustbowl and Great Depression. Bucky Halker is a performer, songwriter, and recording artist, as well as a PhD in American History. He has lectured and performed throughout the USA, Canada, and Europe and is the author of For Democracy, Workers, and God: Labor Protest and Labor Song-Poems. Bucky produced the Illinois Humanities Council's celebrated CD series, Folksongs of Illinois, vols. 1-3 (2007).

This event is Free and Open to the public. For more information, please contact Berniece T. Tobiaski, c/o McHenry Township Hall, 815.385.5605.