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Seller's Description:
May have some shelf-wear due to normal use. Your purchase funds free job training and education in the greater Seattle area. Thank you for supporting Goodwill's nonprofit mission!
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Seller's Description:
Fair. Item in acceptable condition including possible liquid damage. As well answers may be filled in. May be missing DVDs, CDs, Access code, etc. 100%Money-Back Guarantee! Ship within 24 hours! ! WATER DAMAGED! ! !
Folksinger's Wordbook: Deluxe Edition: Words and Chords for Over 1, 000 Songs Including a Concise Chord Dictionary for Guitar and a Folk Music Bibliography
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Seller's Description:
Good Plus. No Dust Jacket. The book is spiral bound, previous owner's name to front end page, the last thirty pages have a corner crease, Index to songs at rear with 430 pages.
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Seller's Description:
Good. Quarto, 10.8 in. x 8.4 in., pp. 430. Rubbing to extremities. Spine creases, thumbing. Unmarked interior. A lot of song-filled evenings amongst friends, left in this well-used book! Over 1000 folk songs with guitar chords. "Irwin Silber prospered as a writer, left-wing organizer, and book editor, but his greatest claim to fame originates from his editorial duties at Sing Out during the 1950s and 1960s. He, like Gordon Friesen and Sis Cunningham of Broadside magazine, became an important broker behind the scenes of the American folk revival. Silber was born on October 17, 1925 in New York City and attended public school in Manhattan. A committed ideologue from the get-go, he had joined the American Student Union, the Young Communist League, and the American Youth for Democracy before his 18th birthday. At Brooklyn College, he formed the American Folksay Group, and remained active in N.Y.C. folksinging circles following graduation in 1945. Two years later, he became the executive director for People's Songs, an organization that promoted folk artists and published the People's Songs Bulletin. Deep involvement with Henry Wallace's third-party campaign for President in 1948, however, would have a disastrous backlash on the American left. People's Songs fell apart in 1949 and many ex-communists--Silber included--would be called to testify before the House of Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC). Silber, Pete Seeger, and others persevered, nonetheless, forming the People's Artists in 1950 and establishing a small magazine dedicated to folk music called Sing Out! . Silber knew from his experience with People's Songs that running a magazine was no picnic, so when Sing Out! debuted in 1952, he had no plans to help with the editing chores. When the original editor became sick, however, circumstances dictated otherwise. Silber's work for the small magazine was a labor of love filled with headaches, long hours, and little pay. Sing Out! would only become folk's most respected periodical after years of struggling in obscurity on the edge of bankruptcy. Silber edited "the Folk Song Magazine" from 1951 to 1967...but by 1967, the ideological battles had taken their toll on Silber, leading him to sell his shares in Sing Out! and leave the magazine. The following year he began writing for the Guardian and became the executive editor of the magazine in 1972. Besides his editorial duties at these periodicals, he has edited and authored a number of books including Songs of the Civil War, The Vietnam Songbook (with his wife, folksinger Barbara Dane), and Socialism: What Went Wrong. Silber also worked for ten years with Moses Asch at Folkways Records in the late 1950s and 1960s, and helped found Oak Publications in 1960." (from All Music).
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Seller's Description:
Acceptable. Book Quarto, softcover, first several pages dog-eared, book shows much use, and cover shows edgewear else good working copy in pink wraps with white spiral binding. A resource book. The lyrics to more than 1, 000 songs, mostly folk and traditional, giving a ready reference for a vast repertoire of songs of the English speaking world. Sections on comic glee, hoedowns, green places, roving and gambling, chain gangs and jail, sailing ships, blues, railroaders, cowboys, land workers, true love, losing at love, marriage and courtship, hell raising and lots more. 429 pp.