![]() |
WOODY GUTHRIE - BIOGRAPHY |
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
||||
Guthrie made some recordings for RCA in 1940, but much of his work was issued on the small Folkways label. Meanwhile, in the late '40s and early '50s, versions of his songs became hits for such artists as The Weavers. By then, Guthrie himself was in physical decline, suffering from Huntington's chorea, a hereditary neurological disorder. But during his long illness, Guthrie's influence spread to the next generation, fostering the folk boom of the late '50s and early '60s. Not only is Bob Dylan unimaginable without him, but large segments of popular music are permanently affected by his concerns as a songwriter and his approach to the form. Guthrie also composed a body of children's music toward the end of his performing career in the early '50s, when he was raising a family with his wife Marjorie. The songs, many sung from a child's point of view, have been covered and performed extensively since. |
Search Artists Styles Biographies Home ![]() Order My Account Shipping Info ![]() Live Radio Free E-Mail MP3 DVD Movies ![]() Hot Picks TLC Moby N'Sync Dr. Dre Eiffel 65 Faith Hill Kid Rock Santana D'Angelo The Cure No Doubt Macy Gray Dixie Chicks Marc Anthony Savage Garden Christina Aguilera |