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	<title>workotheweavers.com &#187; News</title>
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		<title>VIDEO: Live at the Guthrie Center (distilled)</title>
		<link>http://workotheweavers.com/new-video-work-o-the-weavers-distillation/</link>
		<comments>http://workotheweavers.com/new-video-work-o-the-weavers-distillation/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 22 Jan 2011 19:04:29 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Admin</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[A new video called "Work o' the Weavers - Distillation" is now available.]]></description>
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		<title>Latest News: New WOODY CENTENNIAL Celebration</title>
		<link>http://workotheweavers.com/latest-news/</link>
		<comments>http://workotheweavers.com/latest-news/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 01 Nov 2010 19:34:27 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://workotheweavers.com/?p=429</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[NEWS FLASH: Beginning on July 15, 2011 at the Guthrie Center in Great Barrington MA &#8211; the first day of Woody Guthrie&#8217;s Centennial Year, and continuing throughout 2012 Work o&#8217; the Weavers offers a NEW PROGRAM celebrating Woody&#8217;s life, highlighting many of his beloved songs as well as some not-so-well-known, interwoven with an edifying narrative [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><span style="color: #ff0000;"><em><strong>NEWS FLASH:</strong></em></span> <strong>Beginning on July 15, 2011 at the Guthrie Center in Great Barrington MA &#8211; the first day of Woody Guthrie&#8217;s Centennial Year, and continuing throughout   2012 Work o&#8217; the Weavers offers a NEW PROGRAM celebrating Woody&#8217;s life, highlighting many of his beloved songs as well as   some not-so-well-known, interwoven with an edifying narrative that tells   his story. Woody&#8217;s songs were integral to the Weavers&#8217; tapestry and have become an invaluable component of our collective musical consciousness. Ideal for Concerts, Festivals, Schools &amp; Colleges, etc. </strong><strong>Work o&#8217; the Weavers programs are rousing, relevant and revelatory! </strong><strong><span style="color: #ff0000;">BOOK NOW! Write: WorkOTheWeavers@aol.com or Phone: 888.560.5755 tollfree.</span><br />
</strong></p>
<h3><span style="color: #003300;">WotW CD <em>We&#8217;re Still Here</em> Brings Peace to Neighborhood</span></h3>
<p><span style="font-family: arial; color: black; font-size: x-small;"><span style="font-family: arial; color: black; font-size: x-small;"> </span></span></p>
<pre style="font-size: 9pt;"><tt>On Oct 31, 2010, our friend Dena Fisher wrote from Belize:
So I live in a fine although poor neighborhood and my only "issue" is
the very loud Latin, rap and I-know-not-what music that is played very
loudly by my neighbors. My immediate neighbors are a Nicaraguan
refugee family--lovely but the speakers are in the back yard along
with the dog and the chickens (so I always get up at 5am anyway--no
big deal about the creatures).  However, finally I decided the music
(was) just too loud. (My husband<em>-ed.</em>) John gave me speakers that I plugged
into my laptop (you may guess where this is going). I put on the
(Walkabout Clearwater Chorus) <em>We Have A Song</em> album and I really had
to turn up the volume to hear it. Suddenly I noticed that it was too
loud and the reason was that my neighbors had turned off their music
and were standing on the road--listening. Mostly it was the youth,
including the drummers who live a few houses down the road. They
stayed out</tt><tt> there, never coming near my house, while they listened to <strong>
Work o' the</strong></tt><tt><strong> Weavers</strong>. And then I gather we all went to sleep peacefully.
At least that's what I did.

So thank you Walkabout for giving me peace and Work o' the Weavers for
<em>We're Still Here</em> (even the peace songs seemed to be a big hit). I'll
hope this works regularly!!!!

--Dena Fisher
Peace Corps Belize, Central America, 2010-2012
Business Development/Organizational Management
</tt><strong>
</strong></pre>
<h4><strong>27 January 2010</strong></h4>
<p>We&#8217;ve just returned from our annual southerly tour, with concerts in Savannah GA, Boynton Beach FL, the South Florida Folk RoundUp in Davie, Atlanta, Columbia SC, Morehead City NC, Fredericksburg VA and Little Washington VA. In several venues we set attendance records and without exception we were rewarded with standing O&#8217;s and encores everywhere we played. <em>Very</em> gratifying indeed!</p>
<p><strong><em>&#8220;A delightful concert. I know that everyone in the audience enjoyed themselves just as much as I did. The standing ovation and enthusiasm said it all.&#8221;</em></strong> &#8211;Wendy Weinberg, The Theatre at Washington VA</p>
<p>As we exceeded attendance expectations in Savannah, Hank and Jane Weisman agreed to contribute $100 from the unexpected profits to the Red Cross for Haitian relief efforts.</p>
<p>Half the venues had the requisite PowerPoint equipment to enable us to include our new visual component comprised of archival photos, posters and such. Halfway through the tour fortune smiled and gave us an off day in which we could catch our breath and visit Mark&#8217;s mom and dad on the South Carolina coast. Ah, serendipity!</p>
<p>We&#8217;re already projecting our return to Florida in February of 2011. Stay tuned.</p>
<p><strong>29 November 2009</strong></p>
<p>2009 has provided both opportunities and challenges. When, at the top of the year, we were challenged with serious health issues, the group was faced with having to fulfill several of its obligations with a sandwich or two short of a picnic. Nonetheless, with creativity and help from friends, we managed to keep the show on the road. I confess to having been overly optimistic about time required to recover fully from the treatment (radiation/chemo) for my base-of-the-tongue carcinoma diagnosed in January and completed in mid-April. The all-out assault of 70,000 rads (I don&#8217;t really understand what that means, either) daily for 2 months took its toll on vocal facility, but I&#8217;m happy to report that slowly (glacially) but surely, function continues to improve. Somehow, we made our way through our first West Coast tour in June, with memorable performances at the Kate Wolf Memorial Festival in Laytonville CA, full house of singalong longtime Weavers fans at the Ojai Center for the Arts in Ojai CA, and crowning the trip at the new Grammy Museum in Los Angeles. A guest appearance by young actor/singer Rob Tepper as Woody Guthrie highlighted the performance.</p>
<p>Looking ahead to 2010, we&#8217;re developing an idea that has waited patiently in the wings since we first formed in 2003: a visual component consisting of archival photos, posters, etc. projected on a screen behind us. It&#8217;ll take the program a step or two closer to the theatrical presentation we&#8217;ve envisioned since the beginning. Stay tuned.</p>
<p>&#8211;James</p>
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		<title>Past Performances</title>
		<link>http://workotheweavers.com/past-performances/</link>
		<comments>http://workotheweavers.com/past-performances/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 27 Nov 2009 16:51:33 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>James</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Featured]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://65.254.40.37/~weavers/?p=213</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Since its 2003 inception Work o’ the Weavers has played to enthusiastically participatory audiences in 28 states, Canada and Israel. Here are some highlights!]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>Since its 2003 inception Work o’ the Weavers has played to enthusiastically participatory audiences in 28 states, Canada and Israel. Here are some highlights:</strong></p>
<p><strong>FESTIVALS</strong><br />
• Clearwater Revival, Croton NY (2x)<br />
• Kate Wolf Memorial Festival, Laytonville CA (2009)<br />
• 30th Annual Jacob’s Ladder Festival, Nof Ginosar, Israel (2006)<br />
• 35th Annual Kerrville Folk Festival, Kerrville TX (2006)<br />
• MusikFest, Bethlehem PA<br />
• Woody’s Children, Greenwich CT<br />
• Boston Folk Festival, Boston MA<br />
• Roots &amp; Shoots, Danbury CT<br />
• Liveable West Side, NYC</p>
<p><strong>PERFORMING ARTS CENTERS</strong><br />
• Grammy Museum, Los Angeles CA<br />
• The Palladium, St. Petersburg FL<br />
• Ojai Arts Center, Ojai CA<br />
• Guthrie Center, Great Barrington MA (14x)<br />
• Amazing Things PAC, Framingham MA (3x)<br />
• Theatre at Washington VA (2x)<br />
• PAC, Tarpon Springs FL<br />
• PAC, Lake Wales FL<br />
• Court Square, Harrisonburg VA<br />
• PACE, Easthampton MA (2)<br />
• Flickinger PAC, Alamogordo NM<br />
• Fredonia Opera House, Fredonia NY<br />
• Arts Barn, Gaithersburg MD<br />
• BIG Arts, Sanibel Island FL<br />
• Orpheum Theatre, Wichita KS<br />
• Ciccone Theatre, Bergen Community College, Paramus NJ<br />
• <strong>7</strong> PACs in Delta, Loveland, Ft. Morgan &amp; Holyoke CO, Ogallala NE,<br />
Chanute KS &amp; Perryville MO (Fall ‘06)<br />
• <strong>20</strong> PACs in Park Falls &amp; Watertown WI, Denison IA, Redwood Falls, Hastings, Glencoe, Sauk Centre, Wadena, Crookston, Virginia, Albert Lea, Willmar &amp; Worthington MN, Mobridge SD, Lander WY, Anaconda MT, Miles City MT, Valley City, Hettinger &amp; Bottineau ND (Spring ‘07)</p>
<p><strong>COFFEEHOUSES</strong><br />
• Uptown Coffeehouse, Bronx NY<br />
• Caffé Lena, Saratoga Springs NY (3x)<br />
• Walkabout Clearwater, Katonah NY (2x)<br />
• uNi, Springfield MA (2x)<br />
• Sounding Board CH, West Hartford CT (2x)<br />
• One World CH, Essex MA<br />
• Mine Street, New Brunswick NJ<br />
• Our Times, Garden City NY<br />
• Hurdy Gurdy, Fairlawn NJ (2x)<br />
• UUCCN, Garden City NY<br />
• Woods Hole FMS, E. Falmouth MA<br />
• Acoustic Sounds CH, Little Rock AR<br />
• South Salem Coffeehouse, South Salem NY<br />
• St. James Coffeehouse, Greenfield MA</p>
<p><strong>CLUBS &amp; CABARETS</strong><br />
• Don Quixote’s, Felton CA<br />
• Turning Point, Piermont NY (3x)<br />
• Towne Crier, Pawling NY<br />
• The Metropolitan Room, NYC (3x)<br />
• Danny’s Skylight Room, NYC (2x)<br />
• Rosendale Café, Rosendale NY (2x)<br />
• Cheesecake Charlie’s, Great Barrington MA (15x)<br />
• Karmi’el Folk Klub, Karmi’el, Israel<br />
• Jerusalem Folk Club at the Zoo, Jerusalem, Israel</p>
<p><strong>SCHOOLS</strong><br />
• American International School, Tel Aviv, Israel<br />
• Walton Middle &amp; High Schools,  Walton NY</p>
<p><strong>CONCERTS</strong><br />
• Philadelphia Folksong Society, Germantown PA<br />
• Norman Rockwell Museum, Stockbridge MA<br />
• Music for a Change, Hartford CT<br />
• Institute of Musical Traditions, Silver Spring MD (2x)<br />
• Unison Arts Center, New Paltz NY<br />
• Mohonk Arts Series, New Paltz NY (2x)<br />
• Kibbutz Tzora, Beit Shemesh, Israel<br />
• Linda Norris Auditorium, Albany NY<br />
• Bathurst JCC, Toronto ONT, CN<br />
• JCC, Gloversville NY<br />
• JCC, Poughkeepsie NY<br />
• Mariposa at the Cloud, Toronto ON<br />
• Camp Kinderland, Tolland MA (2x)<br />
• Temple Israel, Croton NY (2x)<br />
• Temple Beth Shalom, Hastings-on-Hudson NY<br />
• Orangetown Jewish Center, Orangeburg NY (3x)<br />
• Coffee &amp; Soul, Greenfield MA<br />
• World Fellowship Center, Conway NH<br />
• Heritage Hills, Somers NY<br />
• Paramus Picture Show, Paramus NJ (2x)<br />
• Boca Pointe Country Club, Boca Raton FL (3x)<br />
• Hochman JCC, Boynton Beach FL (2x)<br />
• Sanctuary Series, Chatham NJ<br />
• Flanzer JCC, Sarasota FL<br />
• Neshoba UU, Cordova TN<br />
• Neve Shalom/Wahat al Salaam Community, Israel<br />
• Temple Beth Avodah,  Newton MA<br />
• Temple Beth Sholom, Clifton NJ (2x)<br />
• Aaron Family JCC/Congregation Shearith Israel, Dallas TX<br />
• Savannah Folk Music Society, Savannah GA<br />
• Beth Sholom Congregation w/Fred Hellerman, Elkins Park PA<br />
• Kol Ami Congregation, White Plains NY<br />
• Congregation Ohav Shalom, Albany NY<br />
• Clifton Park Common, Clifton Park NY (2x)<br />
• Canal Walk Homeowners Association, Somerset NJ (2x)<br />
• Sundaes in the Park, Souderton PA<br />
• Whitehall Residences, Riverdale NY (w/Pete Seeger) (2x)<br />
• Temple Emanuel, Tucson AZ<br />
• Tidewater Friends of Folk Music, Norfolk VA</p>
<p><strong>SPECIAL EVENTS</strong><br />
• American Museum of Natural History, NYC<br />
<em>Hudson  River Quadricentennial &amp; Global Warming</em> (1/09)<br />
• ’Woody’s Children’ w/Christine Lavin &amp; Tom Chapin,<br />
Shippensburg PA (‘06) &amp; Greenwich CT (‘07)<br />
• Issachar Miron&#8217;s 85th Birthday, NYC<br />
• Issachar Miron&#8217;s 90th Birthday, NYC<br />
• Bob Sherman’s ‘Woody’s Children’ 35th Anniversary, NYC<br />
• &#8216;For the Love of Pete&#8217; (Seeger), NYC<br />
• <em>“How To Beat the Blacklist”</em> w/ Pete Seeger &amp; Fred Hellerman,<br />
Walkabout Clearwater Coffeehouse, Katonah NY<br />
• Martin Luther King Day, King Center, Atlanta GA<br />
• <em>‘Wasn’t That a Time!’</em> film screening &amp; Harold Leventhal interview,<br />
Jacob Burns Film Center, Pleasantville NY<br />
• POCLAD 35th, CIPA 10th Anniversaries, NYC<br />
• Fundraiser for WBAI Pacifica Radio, Huntington NY<br />
• Concert for Berkshire Public Radio, Great Barrington MA<br />
• RiverBuild ‘08 Fundraiser, Ossining NY</p>
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		<title>Work o&#8217; the Weavers: They&#8217;re Singing Our Lives</title>
		<link>http://workotheweavers.com/work-o-the-weaverstheyre-singing-our-lives/</link>
		<comments>http://workotheweavers.com/work-o-the-weaverstheyre-singing-our-lives/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 25 Nov 2009 22:49:40 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://65.254.40.37/~weavers/?p=183</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[by Michael Carman Struggling to describe what Billie Holliday&#8217;s music had meant to him, a jazz piano player once told me, &#8220;It&#8217;s like this: Other blues singers sing about their pain. Billie is singing about mine.&#8221; From the first few bars of Darling Corey, the opening song of the new Work o&#8217; the Weavers folk [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>by Michael Carman</strong></p>
<p>Struggling to describe what Billie                                  Holliday&#8217;s music had meant to him, a jazz                                  piano player once told me, &#8220;It&#8217;s like                                  this: Other blues singers sing about their                                  pain. Billie is singing about mine.&#8221;</p>
<p>From the first few bars of <em>Darling                                  Corey</em>, the opening song of the new Work                                  o&#8217; the Weavers folk music quartet, you feel a                                  similar jolt of recognition: Four people have                                  just come onstage, ripping into a give- &#8216;em-hell                                  Appalachian Mountain tune at breakneck speed,                                  singing about a pistol-packin&#8217; mama who                                  operates a still, beds down whomever and                                  wherever she wants, and drinks herself to                                  death. Yet somehow, the song feels both                                  contemporary and urgent. Somehow, Darlin&#8217;                                  Corey is you, or your lover, or maybe just your                                  splendid fantasy. You can hardly sit still in                                  your seat.</p>
<p>What&#8217;s going on?</p>
<p>For starters, sitting still is definitely                                  not on the agenda. Work o&#8217; the Weavers, who                                  opened in the greater New York area at                                  Walkabout Clearwater Coffeehouse in Katonah,                                  New York, last December 13 (2003), is a new group                                  created and assembled by folksingers David                                  Bernz and James Durst to present the work of                                  the original Weavers folk music quartet-Pete                                  Seeger, Lee Hays, Ronnie Gilbert and Fred                                  Hellerman. The show is a kind of reification of                                  the original group&#8217;s musical and social                                  ideal, a two-hour-plus musical performance of                                  more than 40 Weavers&#8217; songs, interlaced with                                  the story of who the Weavers were and why their                                  music and their lives captivated this country                                  during one of its most difficult times.</p>
<p>It&#8217;s a tall order, but for the most part,                                  this group of consummate musicians more than                                  fills the bill. The music itself is infectious                                  and sounds surprisingly relevant. In some kind                                  of visceral way, it touches an emotional nerve.                                  The musicians are top-notch, and the                                  performance itself is thrilling like a                                  runaway train, with all of us giddy on the                                  ride.</p>
<p>The original Weavers got together as a group                                  in 1948 to sing folk music they liked and that                                  meant something to them in their lives. They                                  sang and made famous <em>Goodnight                                  Irene</em> and <em>Tzena, Tzena</em>, a                                  double-sided hit that skyrocketed them to the                                  top of the pop music charts in the summer of                                  1950; <em>So Long, It&#8217;s Been Good to Know                                  Yuh; This Land is Your Land</em>,                                  an all-time American favorite tune by Pete                                  Seeger&#8217;s friend and mentor, Woody Guthrie;                                  the patriotic Woody Guthrie standard, <em>Roll On, Columbia; If I Had A                                  Hammer</em>, a song Hays and Seeger wrote                                  together; and hundreds of others.</p>
<p>The Weavers were the inspiration for, if not                                  the musical parents of, the Limeliters, the                                  Kingston Trio, Peter, Paul, and Mary, and Don                                  McLean. They were musical godparents to Woody                                  Guthrie&#8217;s son, Arlo. And they influenced                                  everyone from Joan Baez and Bob Dylan on down                                  to any singer today who sets out to sing music                                  that rises up out of people&#8217;s real-life                                  experience.</p>
<p>Writer/raconteur Studs Terkel, interviewed                                  for the documentary, <em>Wasn&#8217;t That a Time</em>,                                  a full-length feature written by Lee Hays after                                  the original Weavers&#8217; legendary reunion at                                  Carnegie Hall in New York City in the fall of                                  1980, said, &#8220;Folk music is anything that                                  deals with the daily lives of people. The                                  Weavers were able to enter authentic folk music                                  into the mainstream of American popular music.                                  This had never been done before.&#8221;</p>
<p>From today&#8217;s vantage-point, it sounds as                                  if the Weavers provided the most wholesome of                                  family entertainment, but in 1955 the Weavers                                  were threatened with imprisonment for their                                  socially conscious songs like <em>Union                                  Maid</em> and <em>Solidarity Forever</em>,                                  their antiwar songs like <em>Venga Jaleo</em>,                                  from the antifascist movement against Franco in                                  Spain, and for their civil rights and pro-peace                                  songs. Worse, they believed and lived what they                                  sang.</p>
<p>&#8220;Songs are dangerous,&#8221; Ronnie                                  Gilbert said, in that 1980 documentary.                                  &#8220;The Weavers sang about unions, civil                                  rights, and friendship of all nations, at a                                  time when the House Un-American Activities                                  Committee tried to censor our beliefs.&#8221;                                  Under the cloud of McCarthyism, the Weavers                                  were hauled up before the committee in 1955 and                                  charged with &#8220;communism,&#8221;                                  anti-Americanism, anti-patriotism, and                                  sedition, the singers of <em>On Top of Old                                  Smoky</em> and <em>When the Saints Go                                  Marchin&#8217; In</em> were blacklisted for nearly                                  25 years.</p>
<p>So when David Bernz (Work o&#8217; the                                  Weavers&#8217;  tenor vocals, banjo and guitar) was                                  first approached by James Durst about doing                                  Weavers&#8217; songs, he hesitated. &#8220;I&#8217;d                                  been thinking about doing Weavers music for a                                  long time,&#8221; he said. &#8220;But I knew I                                  would never feel right just taking the                                  Weavers&#8217;  music and singing it. That would                                  just be pure nostalgia. It wouldn&#8217;t do them                                  justice.&#8221;</p>
<p>Part of Bernz&#8217; concern arose from a                                  long-standing intimacy with the original                                  Weavers group itself. Bernz&#8217; father had been                                  Lee Hays&#8217; best friend and next-door-neighbor                                  when Bernz was growing up. Both Bernz&#8217;                                  parents had been musicians and social                                  activists, and his father had helped organize                                  unions in the garment district. Pete Seeger had                                  become a friend of Bernz when Bernz expanded                                  his own music career as a folksinger. And Bernz                                  remains a friend and neighbor of Seeger&#8217;s                                  today.</p>
<p>So it was understandable that Bernz, who                                  sings some of Fred Hellerman&#8217;s and some of                                  Seeger&#8217;s parts in the Weavers&#8217; songs and                                  plays the instruments Seeger played, would be                                  chary of the possibility of dishonoring the                                  Weavers&#8217; legacy through simple imitation.</p>
<p>&#8220;Anything that drew on the Weavers&#8217;                                  work would have to be done with complete                                  respect for them as people as well as                                  musicians,&#8221; he said.</p>
<p>But in the early part of 2003, &#8220;with                                  the run-up to the Iraq War,&#8221; Bernz said he                                  was beginning to think history might be                                  repeating itself. &#8220;With the resurgence of                                  the words &#8216;anti-American&#8217; and &#8216;unpatriotic&#8217; in                                  the mainstream media used to describe anyone                                  with a dissenting opinion in these troubled                                  times,&#8221; Bernz says, &#8220;it dawned on me                                  that maybe now would be a good time to tell the                                  Weavers&#8217; story. To tell the story, and tell                                  it through music&#8211;that would be something I                                  could really be part of.&#8221;</p>
<p>Bernz contacted Durst and the two agreed to                                  proceed on that basis: While music would form                                  the core of the performance, the story of the                                  Weavers would also be told. Bernz and Durst                                  wrote-and are still refining-that narrative.</p>
<p>At this writing, refinement of the narrative                                  remains the only unfinished piece of the                                  project. On the one hand, Bernz and Durst are                                  committed to honoring the substance of the                                  Weavers&#8217; work and lives in this way, and to                                  letting younger people know about their musical                                  and social heritage. On the other hand, they                                  are aware that too much educational material                                  can sound like speechifying and could deaden                                  the performance.</p>
<p>Original Weaver Fred Hellerman, now in his                                  70s but looking barely older than he did in the                                  1980 documentary, addressed this issue with the                                  new group recently. On hand for the Katonah                                  performance, Hellerman said he favored letting                                  the music speak for itself. But unlike                                  Hellerman, not everyone today knows what the                                  Weavers did and what their music meant.</p>
<p>&#8220;Musically, though,&#8221; Hellerman                                  told me at intermission in Katonah, nodding                                  toward the stage, &#8220;they&#8217;re solid.&#8221;</p>
<p>No one could take issue with that.                                  Hellerman&#8217;s compliment is proved over and                                  over, for instance in <em>Johnny Is Gone for                                  a Soldier (Buttermilk Hill)</em> a                                  beautiful, unsentimental lament sung by Martha                                  Sandefer, whose stunning alto solo takes no                                  back seat to the work of the original                                  Weavers&#8217; powerhouse, Ronnie Gilbert. Or                                  Durst&#8217;s guitar work on <em>Buttermilk                                  Hill</em>, or the vocals on <em>Lonesome                                  Traveler</em> and <em>My Lord, What A                                  Morning (When the Stars Begin to                                  Fall)</em>.</p>
<p>Just as the Weavers sang songs from every                                  aspect of life, Work o&#8217; the Weavers samples a                                  little of everything. There is a dance medley                                  of the polka, hora, and the Bahamian folk song, <em>Hey Li-Lee-Li-Lee-Lo</em>. There is the                                  eternal favorite popular ballad, <em>Kisses                                  Sweeter Than Wine</em>, and the silly old                                  favorite, <em>Go Tell Aunt Rhody</em> (&#8220;the                                  Old Gray Goose Is Dead&#8221;).</p>
<p>(And by the way, anyone who thinks this                                  250-year-old song about a goose is out-of-date                                  should look in the children&#8217;s section of any                                  modern bookstore today: <em>Go Tell Aunt Rhody</em> is featured as a bestselling illustrated                                  children&#8217;s book (Simon &amp; Schuster 1996).                                  Toward the end of the book, in a double-page,                                  full-color spread, the orange webbed feet stick                                  gaily in the air from the middle of the pond.                                  Across the bottom of the page runs the song&#8217;s                                  last line: &#8220;She died in the mill pond,                                  standing on her head.&#8221;)</p>
<p>Work o&#8217; the Weavers sings everything from                                  protest to elegy, from noodling to                                  nonsense&#8211;songs about living, loving, losing,                                  longing, objecting, and standing up for                                  people&#8217;s rights to breathe free. In the same                                  mysterious way that is true of their opening                                  number, all these songs seem fresh, urgent and                                  important.</p>
<p>When Work o&#8217; the Weavers sang <em>So                                  Long, It&#8217;s Been Good to Know Yuh</em>, the                                  audience hummed. When they sang, <em>Kisses                                  Sweeter Than Wine</em>, heads swayed back and                                  forth. When they sang,<em> When the Saints Go                                  Marchin&#8217; In</em>, everything broke loose.</p>
<p>Perhaps one of the reasons the show is so                                  strong is that unlike so much of contemporary                                  popular music, largely created as a commercial                                  venture to be imposed upon a                                  &#8220;market,&#8221; the Weavers chose songs                                  that grew out of people&#8217;s individual and                                  collective experience, songs that arose from,                                  were intrinsic to, the thoughtful, intense                                  lives of their creators.</p>
<p><em>Follow the Drinking Gourd</em> grew                                  out of the antislavery movement and the                                  Underground Railroad. <em>I Never Will                                  Marry</em> may have arisen from slave life                                  too, but it could just as well be an early                                  feminist statement or a song about the                                  experience of being a woman.</p>
<p>Another reason undoubtedly has to do with                                  the way the songs are presented. &#8220;Lee Hays                                  used to say,  &#8220;Every song has a                                  spine, &#8221; David Bernz recalls, &#8220;and                                  that needs to be recognized. Other groups would                                  perform as if they were saying,  &#8220;Look how                                  cute our arrangement is,&#8221; whereas the Weavers                                  kept the song itself out front.&#8221;</p>
<p>Still another reason for the music&#8217;s                                  appeal may lie in what Sandefer describes as                                  the reason folk music has such resonance and                                  staying power in the first place: &#8220;Folk                                  music turns out to be the best kind of music                                  for teaching  &#8220;ear training,&#8221; Sandefer                                  says. Sandefer, a trained singer and lifelong                                  musician, is now completing a master&#8217;s degree                                  in music education. She hopes to design an                                  integrative curriculum for schools using the                                  Work o&#8217; the Weavers music as a central model.</p>
<p>&#8220;Human beings respond to the honesty in                                  folk music,&#8221; Sandefer adds. &#8220;This is                                  one very deep well of reality-along with blues,                                  of course, and gospel.&#8221;</p>
<p>Finally, Work o&#8217; the Weavers relies on the                                  solid musicianship of each of the performers                                  individually and jointly, and the success of                                  their blending. From James Durst&#8217;s strong,                                  higher tenor and accomplished guitar-playing;                                  to Martha Sandefer&#8217;s terrific, lusty alto,                                  which, like Ronnie Gilbert&#8217;s, soars easily                                  over the men&#8217;s voices when she needs it to;                                  to David Bernz&#8217;  gifted banjo-picking,                                  guitar-playing and clear vocals; to Mark                                  Murphy&#8217;s sensuous string bass playing and his                                  dead-on bass voice-all the new Weavers are very                                  strong professional musical performers, both                                  individually and as an ensemble. Onstage,                                  it&#8217;s clear they have a lot of respect for                                  each other, which adds to the easy balance and                                  vitality of their singing.</p>
<p>Work o&#8217; the Weavers have Durst and Bernz                                  to thank for that blending. Durst chose Martha                                  Sandefer, with whom he&#8217;d worked on his own                                  albums before, for her glorious alto voice.                                  Uncannily, the attractive Sandefer, with her                                  lovely smile and natural enthusiasm, does                                  remarkably recall Ronnie Gilbert. &#8220;Martha                                  was the only woman I could think of who could                                  fit this bill,&#8221; Durst said. &#8220;And                                  David and I both knew Mark Murphy and his                                  terrific bass playing. The surprise to us                                  was-Mark could sing! Actually,&#8221; Durst                                  adds, &#8220;this was a group hand-picked. There                                  were no auditions.&#8221;</p>
<p>Durst sings many of Pete Seeger&#8217;s lead                                  tenor parts and plays most of the guitar parts                                  formerly played by Fred Hellerman, but he and                                  Bernz swap roles, depending on the needs of a                                  given piece. With his sweet soft tenor and                                  easy-on-the-ears storytelling voice, Durst                                  gives the musical introduction and                                  storytelling, which he also shares with Bernz,                                  a cozy, engaging tone. His early training in                                  radio and TV communications is evident in the                                  professionalism he brings to this narrative                                  role, and his career as a kind of international                                  balladeer makes him right at home with the                                  multicultural songs. (The Weavers sing some                                  Spanish and Hebrew songs in their original                                  languages.) Durst&#8217;s exuberant tenor riff on <em>Wimoweh (Wi&#8217;Mbube)</em> is one of the high points                                  of the evening.</p>
<p>Durst says the idea for the group came about                                  because of a &#8220;whole melange of                                  things.&#8221; Durst had started out as a                                  folksinger in California, and has sung all over                                  the world, including in India and the Far East.                                  By the time he arrived on the east coast, in                                  the late 1990s, &#8220;some of the things that                                  New York City folks took for granted were new                                  to me  &#8221; such as that you could get to know                                  Pete Seeger. Folks here took it for granted                                  that Pete was  around that he was a                                  flesh-and-blood fellow like the rest of us. I                                  learned he doesn&#8217;t really float three inches                                  off the ground.&#8221;</p>
<p>Singing with Pete Seeger and some of the                                  groups allied with the environmental sailboat                                  Clearwater, a grass-roots organization Seeger                                  launched in 1965 to help clean up the Hudson                                  River, Durst came to know the Weavers&#8217; music                                  and history better. He began to think it should                                  not only be revived but also perhaps should be                                  restated in some way.</p>
<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s one thing to tell the                                  Weavers&#8217; story in the context of their                                  times,&#8221; says Durst. &#8220;It&#8217;s another                                  to tell it in the context of ours.&#8221;</p>
<p>To Durst, it seemed a natural or maybe even                                  inevitable happening. &#8220;We&#8217;d also like to                                  give something back to them,  to the Weavers                                    for what they&#8217;ve given us.&#8221;</p>
<p>Sandefer puts it another way: &#8220;I think                                  in a way this music gives the culture back to                                  itself,&#8221; she says. &#8220;Our interest is                                  not to recreate the Weavers but to shine the                                  light on that time and on that era. The music                                  of the Weavers is a part of the culture that we                                  as a people have lost. This is one way to                                  restore that.&#8221;</p>
<p>As the youngest new  Weaver, Mark                                  Murphy says, &#8220;I came on the scene after                                  the heyday of the Weavers was over. So it&#8217;s                                  been an eye-opener for me, becoming so familiar                                  with their work. Musically, their work is very                                  diverse. It&#8217;s taken from so many sources.                                  Blending it together into an evening of music                                  that is so specific is a challenge, but an                                  exciting one.&#8221;</p>
<p>Murphy adds that he still finds it                                  mind-boggling to see &#8220;how many times this                                  music has been covered by other artists and                                  other styles.&#8221; For instance, Murphy says                                  he recently heard a reggae version of <em>Kisses Sweeter Than Wine</em>. Harold                                  Leventhal, the Weavers&#8217; longtime manager and                                  friend, remarked, on the 1980 reunion                                  documentary, that at that time there were 116                                  recordings of <em>If I Had a Hammer</em> worldwide. Surely in the 20 years since, there                                  have been more.</p>
<p>&#8220;The Weavers&#8217; music has the broadest                                  appeal to large audiences of any of the music                                  I&#8217;ve played,&#8221; adds Murphy.</p>
<p>Even though the Work o&#8217; the Weavers wants                                  to evoke but not imitate the original group,                                  the question inevitably arises: How does the                                  new group compare with the original?</p>
<p>One answer arises in the generous support                                  given the group by the three original Weavers                                  (Lee Hays died in 1981).</p>
<p>Pete Seeger, still performing in his 80s,                                  asked the group if he could join them in their                                  rehearsal at the Beacon Sloop Club near his                                  home. When the group arrived, Seeger had                                  started a fire in the fireplace, arranged the                                  chairs, and made everything ready. He offered                                  to take the entire script home and make                                  corrections and suggestions, assistance for                                  which the group was extremely grateful.</p>
<p>&#8220;Fred Hellerman was also so generous                                  with us,&#8221; says Bernz. &#8220;He spent hours                                  and hours talking to me about the Weavers&#8217;                                  music.&#8221; And in the front row of the                                  Katonah concert, when Hellerman was called up                                  onstage at the end of the show, he took the                                  mike and told the crowd, &#8220;I never had a                                  chance to sit out front and listen to the                                  Weavers. Tonight I did.&#8221;</p>
<p>Ronnie Gilbert met the group after the 2003                                  Carnegie Hall concert and told them, &#8220;You                                  really do sound like the Weavers!&#8221; Like                                  Hellerman, she too generously gave the group                                  interview time to discuss music, technique and                                  life stories.</p>
<p>And Leventhal, who has an office in New York                                  City, has opened the Weavers&#8217; archives to the                                  new group for their research purposes, as has                                  Nora Guthrie, who maintains the Woody Guthrie                                  Foundation archives nearby.</p>
<p>If initial audiences are any indication,                                  people are crazy about Work o&#8217; the Weavers.                                  At every performance from their summer 2003                                  tryouts in Great Barrington, Massachusetts, to                                  their December opening in Katonah, people clap,                                  shout, laugh, shed a few tears, sing along and                                  invariably end up on their feet.</p>
<p>The key to their future, however, may rest                                  on how well the uninitiated respond to this                                  old-new music. So far, audiences have been                                  either oldtimers who knew the Weavers                                  &#8220;when,&#8221; middle-aged people and                                  younger people who follow the folk music scene,                                  and fellow musicians. Whether or not the                                  &#8220;unconverted&#8221; will respond is a big                                  question.</p>
<p>Lee Hays, whom David Bernz calls a                                  modern-day Mark Twain for his sharp tongue and                                  sharper wit, believed the bottom line was the                                  music. In the tag line for the 1980 Weavers&#8217;                                  reunion documentary, Hays says, &#8220;The music                                  is gonna go on  cause it always                                  has.&#8221;</p>
<p>Work o&#8217; the Weavers is proof of that.</p>
<p><em>Michael Carman, who worked for many years as                                  a journalist, editor and publisher in                                  Manhattan, is a writer who lives in Westchester                                  County, New York. She has just completed a                                  chapbook of her poetry and is at work on a                                  novel.</em></p>
<p><em> </em></p>
<p><strong>Performer                                  Bios</strong></p>
<p><strong>David Bernz<br />
(Vocals, banjo &amp; guitar)</strong></p>
<p>David Bernz, who covers some of both Fred                                  Hellerman&#8217;s and Pete Seeger&#8217;s vocals in                                  Work o&#8217; the Weavers, grew up in the New York                                  City area in the Weaver tradition, if not in a                                  kind of Weaver milieu. He is the son of Harold                                  Bernz, himself a musician and Lee Hays&#8217;  best                                  friend. One of seven children in a Jewish                                  family who worked in the tanning cellars of                                  Lower Manhattan, David&#8217;s father became                                  involved in union work early on. Harold Bernz                                  contributed to the People&#8217;s Songs Bulletin, a                                  forerunner of <em>Sing Out!</em> magazine,                                  launched by Lee Hays and Pete Seeger, Woody                                  Guthrie, Burl Ives and others. Bernz senior                                  and Hays shared an apartment before Bernz                                  married. &#8220;My father bought the                                  groceries,&#8221; David says, &#8220;while Lee                                  did the cooking and cleaning.&#8221; Harold                                  Bernz married Ruth Levine, a singer, and by the                                  time David was three or four years old, Lee                                  Hays was the next-door-neighbor of the Bernz                                  family in Croton-on-Hudson, New York, and he                                  was &#8220;Uncle Lee&#8221; to little David.</p>
<p>&#8220;There&#8217;s something about that music                                  that went into my brain early on,&#8221; says                                  Bernz, &#8220;and it never left. That music is                                  deeply, viscerally alive. I&#8217;ve rarely heard                                  it in other music.&#8221;</p>
<p>Like his fellow new &#8220;Weavers,&#8221;                                  Bernz was always a musical person, singing and                                  playing first guitar, then banjo. Like others,                                  too, he went through his Rolling Stones and Led                                  Zeppelin phase, and he spent his high school                                  years pulling blues riffs from B.B. King and                                  Eric Clapton albums and playing in local rock                                  bands. Heavily influenced by the folk music of                                  the  &#8217;50s and  &#8217;60s, as well as by blues,                                  R&amp;B, jazz, and rock, David has been writing                                  and singing songs of many different kinds for                                  almost two decades. By the time he was in                                  college at SUNY Albany, he had joined Charlie                                  Bell at the Campus Coffeehouse. He continued                                  his music after transferring to Boston                                  University, and music remained his first love,                                  even through law school.</p>
<p>In 1980, Bernz attended the now-famous                                  reunion concert of the Weavers at Carnegie                                  Hall, wheeling &#8220;Uncle Lee&#8221; around in                                  his wheelchair. (By that time, Hays had lost                                  both his legs to diabetes.)</p>
<p>&#8220;Uncle Lee enjoyed staying at the                                  Sheraton,&#8221; Bernz says, &#8220;and ordering                                  up  room service  from the Carnegie Deli on                                  7th Avenue. It was one of the most amazing days                                  of my life, as much for the experience of                                  seeing three generations of people in the                                  audience, as for the music. They gave the                                  Weavers a standing ovation for six or seven                                  minutes, non-stop.&#8221;</p>
<p>Bernz has appeared onstage throughout the                                  New York area, New England, and in his native                                  Hudson Valley, sharing the stage with Pete                                  Seeger, Richie Havens, Arlo Guthrie, Tommy                                  Makem, Billy Bragg, Oscar Brand, Noel Paul                                  Stookey, Peter Yarrow and many others. David                                  has also toured Germany with &#8220;Dave, Perry,                                  Rande&#8221; (featuring Rande Harris and Perry                                  Robinson, son of composer Earl Robinson). He is                                  a founding member (with Caryl Towner and Dave                                  Tarlo) of the folk trio Stone Soup.</p>
<p>David produced and released Pete Seeger&#8217;s                                  2003 post-9/11 offering, <em>Take It From Dr.                                  King, </em>and more recently, David produced Pete&#8217;s 2009 Grammy Award-winning <em>At 89 </em>CD.  David&#8217;s solo CDs, <em>Homespun One</em> and <em>Hudson Line</em>, are in the works.</p>
<p><strong>James Durst<br />
(Vocals &amp; guitar)</strong></p>
<p>James Durst, who sings many of Pete                                  Seeger&#8217;s parts and some of Fred Hellerman&#8217;s                                  vocals in Work o&#8217; the Weavers, grew up                                  singing in school and church choirs. Both of                                  his parents had played instruments in their                                  high school orchestras, and his dad continued                                  throughout his life to enjoy playing organ by                                  ear recreationally. James picked up guitar as a                                  teenager and began at an early age to make a                                  life in music. He was &#8220;largely                                  self-taught&#8211;which means,&#8221; he says,                                  &#8220;I&#8217;ve learned from everyone.&#8221;</p>
<p>During high school he became half of the duo                                  The Songsmiths, with banjo and guitar player                                  John Miller, who introduced him to Sing Out!                                  magazine and the work of Pete Seeger, the                                  Weavers and a world of traditional music beyond                                  that folk music popularized by the media at the                                  time. Even before graduating in 1969 from                                  California State University at Long Beach with                                  a degree in Radio/Television/Film                                  Communications, he knew his life was for making                                  music.</p>
<p>Peripatetic by nature, Durst chose an                                  international career, touring extensively as a                                  solo singer/songwriter beginning in the                                  mid-1960s. He has traveled and performed in 49                                  states and 45 countries throughout the                                  Americas, Europe, Scandinavia, the Middle East,                                  Southeast Asia, Russia, Azerbaijan, Japan and,                                  most recently, India and Israel. In addition to singing in                                  more than two dozen languages, he has composed                                  hundreds of songs and recorded many of them.                                  For most of the 1980s he partnered once again,                                  with vocalist Ferne Bork.</p>
<p>Durst invited Martha Sandefer to sing on a                                  couple of his albums and similarly, he asked                                  Mark Murphy to record with him as a bassist.                                  These working relationships became                                  serendipitous ones when he and David Bernz                                  agreed to develop Work o&#8217; the Weavers.</p>
<p>With David Bernz, Durst has been a prime                                  mover in the creation and establishment of Work                                  o&#8217; the Weavers and in his view, the process                                  has all been nothing but positive. &#8220;Our                                  experience from the very first rehearsal has                                  been like a dream,&#8221; he says.</p>
<p>Sandefer agrees, recounting with a chuckle                                  that after the group had sung its first two                                  songs together in rehearsal, &#8220;James just                                  looked at us with this big grin on his                                  face.&#8221; &#8220;It was as if we&#8217;d been                                  rehearsing together for months,&#8221; Durst                                  says.</p>
<p>In addition to performing, singing and                                  writing songs, James has also starred in a pair                                  of award-winning children&#8217;s singalong videos,                                  &#8220;A Great Day for Singing!&#8221; and                                  &#8220;Another Great Day for Singing!,&#8221; and                                  has written an eco-musical play entitled<em> Hue                                  Manatee&#8217;s Quest.</em></p>
<p><em> </em></p>
<p>James&#8217; dozen or so CDs and his                                  children&#8217;s videos are available at <a href="http://www.worldwindcd.com/">worldwindcd.com</a>,                                  as well as <a href="http://www.cdbaby.com/">cdbaby.com</a>,                                  <a href="http://www.efolkmusic.com/">efolkMusic.com</a> and <a href="http://www.amazon.com/">amazon.com</a>.                                  More information about James and his music can                                  be found at <a href="http://www.jamesdurst.com/">jamesdurst.com</a>.</p>
<p><strong>Mark Murphy<br />
(Vocals &amp; upright bass)</strong></p>
<p>Mark Murphy&#8217;s on-target bass-baritone                                  voice was something of a well-kept secret until                                  Work o&#8217; the Weavers called on him. Most of                                  his adult life, he&#8217;s been known as a highly                                  polished bass player, touring and recording                                  stand-up bass with Guy Davis, Walt Michael and                                  others. When David Bernz and James Durst tapped                                  him to play bass for Work o&#8217; the Weavers,                                  they were delighted to find he could cover the                                  vocals for original Weaver Lee Hays&#8217; bass                                  part more than adequately.</p>
<p>&#8220;My father tells the story that I would                                  sing jazz harmony to records as a                                  toddler,&#8221; Murphy says. &#8220;And singing                                  is something I&#8217;ve done off and on throughout                                  my professional career, although I don&#8217;t have                                  a lot of formal training.&#8221;</p>
<p>Mark comes from a highly musical family. His                                  father, a school music educator, was trombonist                                  with the U.S. Army&#8217;s 69th Division Show Band                                  and played in the New York City jazz scene. His                                  parents still perform together in contradance                                  bands. His grandfather and grandmother were                                  church musicians, his aunt a church choir                                  director and organist and his uncle, also named                                  Mark Murphy, is a professional jazz singer                                  voted Best Male Jazz Vocalist by Downbeat                                  Magazine a few years ago.</p>
<p>When Mark was in third grade, his father                                  asked him which musical instrument he wanted to                                  play&#8211;not whether, but which&#8211;and he chose                                  cello, studying with &#8220;a wonderful teacher,                                  Arthur Catricala,&#8221; who was principal                                  cellist of the Schenectady Symphony Orchestra.</p>
<p>In high school he took up the electric bass,                                  but when he got to college at SUNY Fredonia, he                                  found the music program there too narrowly                                  focused for his interests and so majored in his                                  second love which was art.</p>
<p>At college he began playing upright bass,                                  and soon after he graduated in 1981, he was                                  playing professionally with Walt Michael, Tom                                  McCreesh and Company, with whom he&#8217;s appeared                                  on Nashville Network&#8217;s Fire on the Mountain                                  and NPR&#8217;s Prairie Home Companion, the Carter                                  Family Fold and other venues. The group also                                  played for the Pilobolus Dance Company.</p>
<p>With Vanaver Caravan he has performed at                                  Lincoln Center and the United Nations and he                                  was part of the cast filmed for the historic                                  dance reconstruction &#8220;Boston Fancy,&#8221;                                  a work chosen for the National Archives. He has                                  backed up blues artist Guy Davis (a W. C. Handy                                  Award nominee) on four CDs, and has appeared                                  with Davis on <em>Late Night with Conan                                  O&#8217;Brien</em>, and on tour with Davis in                                  Europe. He has toured and recorded in the U.S.,                                  Canada and Europe.</p>
<p>Mark agrees it&#8217;s a lucky coincidence that                                  he both sings and plays the bass parts for Work                                  o&#8217; the Weavers. Although original Weaver Lee                                  Hays didn&#8217;t play an instrument in the group,                                  Mark says the Weavers often played with a                                  pick-up bass on their touring performances,                                  most notably with Percy Heath, bassist for the                                  Modern Jazz Quartet.</p>
<p>&#8220;The Weavers&#8217; music has the broadest                                  appeal to large audiences of any of the music                                  I&#8217;ve played,&#8221; says Murphy. &#8220;It&#8217;s                                  a great challenge to play, and an exciting                                  one.&#8221;</p>
<p><strong>Martha Sandefer<br />
(Vocals)</strong></p>
<p>&#8220;The                                  good musicians of any genre have a really good                                  ear,&#8221; says Martha Sandefer, alto singer                                  with Work o&#8217; the Weavers. &#8220;Ear training                                  and the study of music theory are                                  things I&#8217;ve taken seriously all my                                  life.&#8221;</p>
<p>Martha&#8217;s training and education show in                                  the ease and strength of her singing. In Work                                  o&#8217; the Weavers, she sings the part originally                                  sung by alto Weaver Ronnie Gilbert.</p>
<p>A singer all her life, Martha grew up                                  singing in the Washington DC area, where she                                  began to study music education at the                                  University of Maryland. When she met Jim Scott,                                  a graduate of the Eastman School of Music, she                                  left Maryland to begin performing full time.</p>
<p>Martha&#8217;s parents were both musical. Her                                  mother, a minister, played piano and her father                                  was involved with church music.</p>
<p>&#8220;You could get work anywhere in the                                  1970s,&#8221; she says, &#8220;but the kind of                                  pop music people were singing then wasn&#8217;t                                  fulfilling. We wrote our own charts, though,                                  and worked hard on musicianship skills.&#8221;</p>
<p>In the 1980s, she self-produced her album, <em>The                                  Dream Is Still Alive,</em> a collection of                                  contemporary folk songs written by herself and                                  Scott, who was for a time a member of the Paul                                  Winter Consort, and two other folk composers.                                  In general, she describes her personal singing                                  style as &#8220;more rhythm and blues.&#8221;</p>
<p>In the 1990s she moved to Virginia to join                                  the folk and contemporary musical group                                  Trapezoid, a hammered dulcimer band in which                                  Martha played bass and guitar. She has recorded                                  and sung with Trapezoid, John McCutcheon, R.                                  Carlos Nakai, Peter Kater and others, including                                  some commercial projects. Martha has a keen                                  interest in folk music from around the world                                  and has most recently been studying frame                                  drums, performing in concert with percussionist                                  Glen Velez.</p>
<p>Now living and working in New England,                                  Martha has recently received her                                  Master&#8217;s Degree in Music Education with a                                  focus on pedagogy at Hartt College of Music in                                  Hartford, Connecticut. She is committed to                                  making Work o&#8217; the Weavers the foundation of                                  an educational curriculum so that the work can                                  be taken into the schools.</p>
<p>Martha was thrilled recently to meet Ronnie                                  Gilbert in person at the 2003 Carnegie Hall                                  Thanksgiving folk concert, and to speak briefly                                  with the dynamic alto singer with the original                                  Weavers. &#8220;She told us we really do sound                                  like the Weavers,&#8221; says Martha.</p>
<p>The next day Martha talked at length with                                  Ronnie by telephone about the original                                  Weavers&#8217; music. &#8220;The two musicians who                                  meant most to her in her early days,&#8221;                                  Martha learned, &#8220;were a young girl she                                  heard singing on a farm one summer&#8211;she                                  listened to the girl singing for hours&#8211;and                                  Paul Robeson.&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;I love the Work o&#8217; the Weavers                                  project,&#8221; Martha says. &#8220;I think                                  it&#8217;s wonderful to be bringing these songs                                  back into peoples&#8217; ears.&#8221;</p>
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		<title>2006 Kerrville Folk Festival</title>
		<link>http://workotheweavers.com/2006-kerrville-folk-festival/</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 31 Jul 2006 14:54:36 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[Here are some great photos taken by Merri Lu Park during our performance at the Kerrville Folk Festival. Click on a photo for a larger image. July 2006 Life has seemed a blur since Work o&#8217; the Weavers returned from our 10-day Israel adventure in May. Proof positive once again that timing is indeed everything! [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Here are some great photos taken by <strong> Merri Lu Park</strong> during our performance at the Kerrville Folk Festival.                           Click on a photo for a larger image.</p>
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<td colspan="4" width="100%" align="center"><a class="shutterset" href="http://workotheweavers.com/images/KerrvilleWotWTogether.jpg"><img style="border: 0pt none;" src="http://www.workotheweavers.com/images/KerrvilleWotWTogetherTH.jpg" border="0" alt="" width="250" height="111" /></a></td>
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<p align="center"><a class="shutterset" href="http://workotheweavers.com/images/KerrvilleJames2.jpg"><img style="border: 0pt none;" src="http://www.workotheweavers.com/images/KerrvilleJames2TH.jpg" border="0" alt="" width="115" height="153" /></a></p>
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<p align="center"><a class="shutterset" href="http://workotheweavers.com/images/KerrvilleJames4.jpg"><img style="border: 0pt none;" src="http://www.workotheweavers.com/images/KerrvilleJames4TH.jpg" border="0" alt="" width="115" height="153" /></a></p>
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<td width="34%" align="center"><a class="shutterset" href="http://workotheweavers.com/images/KerrvilleJames11.jpg"><img style="border: 0pt none;" src="http://www.workotheweavers.com/images/KerrvilleJames11TH.jpg" border="0" alt="" width="115" height="153" /></a></td>
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<td colspan="2" width="50%" align="center"><a class="shutterset" href="http://workotheweavers.com/images/KerrvilleDavid2.jpg"><img style="border: 0pt none;" src="http://www.workotheweavers.com/images/KerrvilleDavid2TH.jpg" border="0" alt="" width="115" height="153" /></a></td>
<td colspan="2" width="50%" align="center"><a class="shutterset" href="http://workotheweavers.com/images/KerrvilleDavid4.jpg"><img style="border: 0pt none;" src="http://www.workotheweavers.com/images/KerrvilleDavid4TH.jpg" border="0" alt="" width="115" height="153" /></a></td>
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<td colspan="2" width="50%" align="center"><a class="shutterset" href="http://workotheweavers.com/images/KerrvilleMark2.jpg"><img style="border: 0pt none;" src="http://www.workotheweavers.com/images/KerrvilleMark2TH.jpg" border="0" alt="" width="115" height="153" /></a></td>
<td colspan="2" width="50%" align="center"><a class="shutterset" href="http://workotheweavers.com/images/KerrvilleMark3.jpg"><img style="border: 0pt none;" src="http://www.workotheweavers.com/images/KerrvilleMark3TH.jpg" border="0" alt="" width="115" height="153" /></a></td>
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<td colspan="2" width="50%" align="center"><a class="shutterset" href="http://workotheweavers.com/images/KerrvilleMartha2.jpg"><img style="border: 0pt none;" src="http://www.workotheweavers.com/images/KerrvilleMartha2TH.jpg" border="0" alt="" width="115" height="153" /></a></td>
<td colspan="2" width="50%" align="center"><a class="shutterset" href="http://workotheweavers.com/images/KerrvilleMartha3.jpg"><img style="border: 0pt none;" src="http://www.workotheweavers.com/images/KerrvilleMartha3TH.jpg" border="0" alt="" width="115" height="153" /></a></td>
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<p style="margin-bottom: 0in;"><span style="font-family: Verdana,Arial,MS Sans Serif;"><strong>July                           2006</strong></span></p>
<p>Life has seemed a blur since Work o&#8217; the Weavers returned from our 10-day Israel adventure in May. Proof positive once again that timing is indeed everything! We have a hard time assimilating the fact that some of the places we performed are now directly in the line of fire, recipients of Hezbollah rockets launched from across the Lebanese border.</p>
<p>By way of marked contrast, our experience could not have been more idyllic. In the first week of May, Madhumita and I departed ahead of the pack for a few days of R&amp;R, which we readily found at the Dead Sea. At eight times saltier than any ocean, you float whether you want to or not. That and a massage does the trick! We took a day and explored nearby Masada and En Gedi, then returned to Tel Aviv in time to greet the arrival of David, Mark and Martha.</p>
<p>Work o&#8217; the Weavers sang our first notes together in the northern town of Karmi&#8217;el, giving us a chance to re-group, as it were, and synchronize with one another. From then on it was a different venue every day. We next headlined the 30th Annual <a href="http://www.jlfestival.com/pic.asp?id=256&amp;cqat=99" target="_blank"> Jacob&#8217;s Ladder Festival</a> in the resort community of Nof Ginosar on the Sea of Galilee&#8211;beneath a glorious full moon! Two days of performances kept us hopping from stage to stage, either following or preceding the wonderful Irish singer-songwriter Tommy Sands. <a href="http://www.jlfestival.com/pic.asp?id=231&amp;cat=99"> Madhumita                           Chakrabartti</a>, my partner in life and occasional song, joined me for a solo/duo set on the Lawn Stage.</p>
<p>From there, we spent a couple of days at Neveh Shalom/Wahat al Salaam (Oasis of Peace), an intentional community populated half by Jewish and half by Arab Israelis, living together consciously in peace. We gave them a concert and learned a great deal in our all-too-brief stay among them.</p>
<p>It worked out beautifully that each performance took us to a new and different part of the country, and each offered quite different performance opportunities. In several places we were faced with the challenge of singing without benefit of a sound system, but in each of those instances any trepidations we may have had in advance were soon easily dismissed when either the room acoustics or proximity to the audience proved appropriate to the occasion, and we were easily heard and understood.</p>
<p>We were offered rooms at Kibbutz Tzora to serve as a base of operations for several days. This agricultural and light industrial kibbutz was founded by South African Jews in 1948, and our concert there was embraced by many longtime Weavers fans, each of whom had a personal anecdote to share about how important the Weavers had been to them over the years. Several recalled hearing the Weavers when they made their only Israel trip, in 1959. From Tzora we ventured out to the Jerusalem Folk Club at the Zoo, the American International School in Tel Aviv, and our &#8216;farewell&#8217; house concert in Gedera. Throughout our stay, audiences generously responded with standing ovations at each and every performance, making us feel more than welcome.</p>
<p>The group&#8217;s final day was spent in the company of Sandy Cash, a marvelously funny and creative songwriter and singer originally from Detroit. She gave us a tour of the Jerusalem Old City, then she and her husband Buddy and family hosted us for a Shabbat supper of sustenance and song. As you might expect, each of their 4 children is also exceptionally musically talented. It was the perfect way to crown our Israel visit.</p>
<p>After seeing off my four compatriots home to New York, I remained behind for an additional week and several more solo gigs. Whereas each was a unique and wonderful experience, perhaps none was so special as playing at the Be&#8217;er Sheba Public Library for an audience predominantly made up of Bedouin children of about middle school age. Getting them to sing along in both English and Arabic was a personal highlight of my journey.</p>
<p>- James, 31 July 2006</p>
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