Darryl Holter Music

The Darryl Holter Music Blog, an original taste of Americana music,
 drawing from country, blues and folk traditions. Darryl Holter is also a noted Archival researcher and writer on Woody Guthrie.

Archive for the category “Chevalier’s Books”

Authors Darryl Holter and Greg Vandy Live Discussion Thurs June 9

DJ Greg Vandy, Author of 26 Songs in 30 Days, in Conversation with Woody Guthrie L.A. Biographer Darryl HolterTune into the continuing resonance of Woody Guthrie’s 30-day songwriting tear of 1941 with 26 Songs in 30 Days: Woody Guthrie’s Columbia River Songs and the Planned Promised Land in the Pacific Northwest. 

Join Chevalier’s co-owner, musician and all round Guthrie-man Darryl Holter as we dig author and DJ Greg Vandy’s treasure trove of musical history on Thursday, June 9th at 7 p.m.  Signing to follow.

Thursday, June 9th at 7 p.m.
Chevalier’s Books
126 N. Larchmont Blvd.
Los Angeles, CA 90004
323-465-1334
All the Info here

Greg Vandy has been the host of The Roadhouse on Seattle’s KEXP radio since 2000 where he brings a world of folk, blues, and roots-inspired music to listeners in the Pacific Northwest and around the world.

Darryl Holter is both the co-author of Woody Guthrie L.A.: 1937-1941 and his album Radio Songs: Woody Guthrie in Los Angeles, 1937-1941, was released to critical acclaim in 2015. He is a musician and singer-songwriter, a former labor leader, an urban developer, an adjunct professor of history at USC, and a member of the Professional Musicians Union Local 47 in Los Angeles. He is also the co-owner of Chevalier’s.

Follow Darryl Holter:
www.darrylholter.com
https://www.facebook.com/DarrylHolterMusic
https://twitter.com/DarrylHolter

Sat April 30th: Darryl Holter Signing at Book Soup & Live Music with Julia Holter

holterCelebrate Independent Bookstore Day: One Day, Two Events:
Book Soup at 1pm | Chevalier’s Books at 5pm

At 1pm: Book Signing at Book Soup
Celebrate Independent Bookstore Day with Angel City Press
Sat April 30th, 1pm

Authors Darryl Holter and William Deverell will discuss and sign “Woody Guthrie L.A. 1937 TO 1941” Edited by historians Darryl Holter and William Deverell, is the product of many years’ research and close cooperation with members of Woody Guthrie’s family and estate. Lyrics Guthrie wrote about Los Angeles, many of which he never set to music, are published in this remarkable volume for the first time. Also at Book Soup on April 30: Author April Dammann will discuss and sign “Corita Kent. Art And Soul. The Biography”.

For more information on the book visit http://www.angelcitypress.com/products/guth.

Book Soup
8818 Sunset Blvd, West Hollywood, CA 90069
310-659-3110

At 5pm: Darryl Holter & Julia Holter Live at Chevalier’s Books
Darryl & Julia will be performing songs from his new CD Radio Songs plus Julia will perform a few of her own. Sat April 30th, 5pm

Chevalier’s Books
126 N. Larchmont Blvd.
Los Angeles, CA 90004
323-465-1334
https://chevaliersbooks.com/

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Pre-publication party and book signing

Pre-publication party and book signing with Darryl Holter and Bill Deverell for their new book, “Woody Guthrie in L.A.: 1937-1941” Darryl will perform some Woody Guthrie songs.

Chevalier’s Books
visit-chevaliers1Thurs December 17, 2015 at 7 pm
126 N. Larchmont Blvd.
Los Angeles, CA 90004
323-465-1334

About Woody Guthrie in L.A.: 1937-1941:
Woody Guthrie L.A.: 1937 to 1941 , edited by historians Darryl Holter and William Deverell, argues that the famed folk singer’s brief residence in Los Angeles in the later years of the Great Depression forever changed his music, his politics, and his legacy. Those changes became the basis of his incredible influence on the world’s music.

Darryl Holter

Woody Guthrie L.A. 1937 to 1941 by Darryl Holter and William Deverell

The book’s twelve essays, richly illustrated by photographs from the era, explore such themes as Guthrie’s early radio success in Los Angeles with the Woody and Lefty Lou Show , his first recordings made on old Presto disks, and the important friendship he forged with the actor and leftist radical Will Geer (later of “Grandpa Walton” fame). Other pieces cover Guthrie’s racial egalitarianism, as he threw off the worst of his Oklahoma and Texas roots and pushed past a notorious lynching in which his father may have participated, his ability to mold evangelical perspectives into politically savvy folk songs, and the impact he still exerts in his songs about migrants and workers looking for the main chance in
California.

Chevalier’s Books Website

Because Woody Guthrie came to Los Angeles when he did, his music stridently addresses inequities and inequalities amplified by the Depression. In Los Angeles, the ever observant Dust Bowl troubadour became the urban folksinger. His time in L.A. created the Woody that—eighty years later—bears witness to America’s promise and its problems.

Preorder this book at http://www.angelcitypress.com/products/guth

Darryl Holter is the author of Workers and Unions in Wisconsin: A Labor History and The Battle for Coal: Miners and the Nationalization of CoalMining in France. He is a musician and singersongwriter, a former labor leader, an urban developer, an adjunct professor of history at the University of Southern California, and a member of the Professional Musicians Union Local 47 in Los Angeles.

William Deverell is professor of history and director of the HuntingtonUSC Institute on California and the West at the University of Southern California. He is the author of numerous studies of the nineteenth and twentieth century American West, including Whitewashed Adobe: The Rise of Los Angeles and the Remaking of Its Mexican Past.

Read more about Woody Guthrie L.A.: 1937 to 1941

Preorder this book at http://www.angelcitypress.com/products/guth

Follow Darryl Holter:
www.darrylholter.com
https://www.facebook.com/DarrylHolterMusic
https://twitter.com/DarrylHolter

New Book: Woody Guthrie L.A. 1937 to 1941

Woody Guthrie L.A.: 1937 to 1941
Darryl Holter and William Deverell

$40.00 / 50+ vintage photos
208 pages / hardcover / 9″x9″
Preorder this book at http://www.angelcitypress.com/products/guth

Darryl Holter

Woody Guthrie L.A. 1937 to 1941 by Darryl Holter and William Deverell

Woody Guthrie L.A. 1937 to 1941
Darryl Holter and William Deverell

Woody Guthrie L.A.: 1937 to 1941 , edited by historians Darryl Holter and William Deverell, argues that the famed folk singer’s brief residence in Los Angeles in the later years of the Great Depression forever changed his music, his politics, and his legacy. Those changes became the basis of his incredible influence on the world’s music.

Bob Dylan said of Guthrie “The songs themselves, his repertoire, were really beyond category. They had the infinite sweep of humanity in them. . . . Woody Guthrie tore everything in his path to pieces. To me [his music] was an epiphany.” Guthrie became a role model for Bruce Springsteen, who has extolled Guthrie’s “fatalism tempered by practical idealism” and his conviction that “speaking truth to power was not futile.” Guthrie taught today’s musical legends to cry out and be heard—his impact makes him more than a legend. He is musical history.

Woody Guthrie L.A.: 1937 to 1941 began by way of a 2012 conference and concert celebrating the centennial of Woodrow Wilson Guthrie’s birth. Put on by the University of Southern California in close cooperation with the GRAMMY Museum, the conference featured academic papers exploring Guthrie’s time in L.A. and concluded with a concert which featured musicians, and Guthrie fans, including Steven Stills, Jackson Browne, Noel Paul Stookey (of Peter, Paul, and Mary), and Tom Morello (of Rage Against the Machine).

The book is the product of many years’ work and close cooperation with members of Woody Guthrie’s family and estate. Lyrics Guthrie wrote about Los Angeles, many of which he never set to music, are published here for the first time. The book also features more than a dozen of Guthrie’s brilliant cartoons—his quickly drawn satires on politics, the wealthy, and the future of Los Angeles.

The book’s twelve essays, richly illustrated by photographs from the era, explore such themes as Guthrie’s early radio success in Los Angeles with the Woody and Lefty Lou Show , his first recordings made on old Presto disks, and the important friendship he forged with the actor and leftist radical Will Geer (later of “Grandpa Walton” fame). Other pieces cover Guthrie’s racial egalitarianism, as he threw off the worst of his Oklahoma and Texas roots and pushed past a notorious lynching in which his father may have participated, his ability to mold evangelical perspectives into politically savvy folk songs, and the impact he still exerts in his songs about migrants and workers looking for the main chance in California.

Because Woody Guthrie came to Los Angeles when he did, his music stridently addresses inequities and inequalities amplified by the Depression. In Los Angeles, the ever observant Dust Bowl troubadour became the urban folksinger. His time in L.A. created the Woody that—eighty years later—bears witness to America’s promise and its problems.

Darryl Holter is the author of Workers and Unions in Wisconsin: A Labor History and The Battle for Coal: Miners and the Nationalization of Coal Mining in France. He is a musician and singersongwriter, a former labor leader, an urban developer, an adjunct professor of history at the University of Southern California, and a member of the Professional Musicians Union Local 47 in Los Angeles.

William Deverell is professor of history and director of the Huntington USC Institute on California and the West at the University of Southern California. He is the author of numerous studies of the nineteenth and twentieth century American West, including Whitewashed Adobe: The Rise of Los Angeles and the Remaking of Its Mexican Past.

Preorder this book at http://www.angelcitypress.com/products/guth

Follow Darryl Holter:
www.darrylholter.com
https://www.facebook.com/DarrylHolterMusic
https://twitter.com/DarrylHolter

Bob Dylan Mural and Darryl Holter brings “Dylan Goes Electric” to Los Angeles on Wed, Oct 14

Over the past few weeks, pedestrians gathered to watch Brazilian artist Eduardo Kobra paint his five-story mural of Bob Dylan near 5th and Hennepin in downtown Minneapolis. Named ‘The Times They Are A-Changin’, it is 160 feet wide and five stories tall. Kobra and his team of five artists completed the massive painting on Sept. 8.

bob-dylan-darryl-holter-blog

The mural commemorates where Dylan really fell in love with folk music. It freezes him in the brief moment between his life as an adolescent and his life as an artist: the space in Dylan’s history when he lived simply as a young man. Adorning the side of a five-story building, the three Bob Dylans look out, their faces checkered with polychromatic squares, all of it representing the many eras and styles of Dylan. This massive mural is a loving tribute to one of the most important figures in 20th-century music.

What is Dylan’s unique connection to Minneapolis? Born in Duluth and raised in Hibbing, Minnesota, Dylan moved to Minneapolis in September 1959 to attend the University of Minnesota. As acknowledged in Martin Scorsese’s 2005 documentary No Direction Home, his time in the Dinkytown area sparked his interest in folk music.

Watch a time-lapse of video of Brazilian artist, Eduardo Kobra’s Bob Dylan mural – The Times They Are A-Changin’

This Week: Darryl Holter brings “Dylan Goes Electric” to Los Angeles

In 1965 Bob Dylan took the stage the Newport Folk Festival and plugged in his Fender Stratocaster. Backed by an electric band, Dylan blew away the folkies and political activists with a blistering version of “Maggie’s Farm”. It was a moment that provoked widespread bewilderment, a lot of boos and a few cheers from the crowd. And as Elijah Wald shows in his great new book, Dylan Goes Electric, it marked Dylan’s declaration of musical independence, the end of the folk revival, and the beginning of rock as the voice for a new generation.

I’m bringing my friend Elijah to LA for a book signing at Chevalier’s Books on October 14. I’ll be joining Elijah, who is also a musician, and we will do a couple of Dylan’s songs from that controversial concert. I hope you can join us Wed, October 14, at 7 pm.

Darryl Holter & Elijah Wald Live at Chevalier’s Books
Wed October 14th at 7pm

126 N. Larchmont Blvd.
Los Angeles, CA 90004
323-465-1334, www.chevaliersbooks.com

Read More About The Show Here

Follow Darryl Holter:
www.darrylholter.com
https://www.facebook.com/DarrylHolterMusic
https://twitter.com/DarrylHolter

Darryl Holter brings “Dylan Goes Electric” to Los Angeles

In 1965 Bob Dylan took the stage the Newport Folk Festival and plugged in his Fender Stratocaster. Backed by an electric band, Dylan blew away the folkies and political activists with a blistering version of “Maggie’s Farm”. It was a moment that provoked widespread bewilderment, a lot of boos and a few cheers from the crowd. And as Elijah Wald shows in his great new book, Dylan Goes Electric, it marked Dylan’s declaration of musical independence, the end of the folk revival, and the beginning of rock as the voice for a new generation.

I’m bringing my friend Elijah to LA for a book signing at Chevalier’s Books on October 14. I’ll be joining Elijah, who is also a musician, and we will do a couple of Dylan’s songs from that controversial concert. I hope you can join us October 14 at 7 pm.

dylancover-blog

Darryl Holter & Elijah Wald Live at Chevalier’s Books
Wed October 14th at 7pm

126 N. Larchmont Blvd.
Los Angeles, CA 90004
323-465-1334, www.chevaliersbooks.com

More about Elijah Wald:
In Dylan Goes Electric!, Elijah Wald explores the cultural, political and historical context of this seminal event that embodies the transformative decade that was the sixties. Wald delves deep into the folk revival, the rise of rock, and the tensions between traditional and groundbreaking music to provide new insights into Dylan’s artistic evolution, his special affinity to blues, his complex relationship to the folk establishment and his sometime mentor Pete Seeger, and the ways he reshaped popular music forever. Breaking new ground on a story we think we know, Dylan Goes Electric! is a thoughtful, sharp appraisal of the controversial event at Newport and a nuanced, provocative analysis of why it matters.

Radio Songs Available Now at CD Baby

More about Darryl Holter:
Musician, historian, and activist Darryl Holter’s new album is Radio Songs: Woody Guthrie in Los Angeles 1937–1939, out last month via 213 Music. Radio Songs features ten renditions of original Guthrie material as collected, curated, and performed by Holter. A sort of aural history text, Ben Wendel’s production and Holter’s arrangements are clean and concise; as a glimpse into Guthrie’s beginnings as a musician, Radio Songs is fascinating if its listener finds intrigue in the subject.

Darryl Holter: Radio Songs
Elijah Wald: Dylan Goes Electric

Follow Darryl Holter:
www.darrylholter.com
https://www.facebook.com/DarrylHolterMusic
https://twitter.com/DarrylHolter

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