#ThereIsPowerInAUnion, a classic #JoeHill song, was published on #ThisDayInHistory in 1913 in the #IWW's #LittleRedSongBook. It asked if you would "have wings up in heaven to fly" but "starve here with rags on your back". Hill was killed two years later by Utah for his politics.

“Little Boxes” popularized by #PeteSeeger and written by #MalvinReynolds is literally a satirical song about conformity, the middle class, and suburbs.

There is no folk song that you can choose that would ever be appropriate for a commercial. It’s an insult to the entire genre, not just to the memories of these two musicians, to use this song in this way.

Time for a blog post because I’m very upset.

#FolkMusic #PeteSeeger #LittleRedSongbook #IWW #Business #Marketing #BusinessEthics

I don’t know if it’s one of his kids or just a random publishing company, but whoever is controlling the song rights to Pete Seeger’s music has decided to completely defile his memory by letting Dunkin Donuts use a song about the horrors of commercialism and capitalism destroying individuality in a new cutesy coffee commercial.

This is so wrong on so many levels.

#FolkMusic #PeteSeeger #LittleRedSongbook #IWW #Business #Marketing #BusinessEthics (or lack thereof)

Warbling Wobblies! A Singing Union and Its Little Red Songbook

IWW Songs to Fan the Flames of Discontent, IWW, Little Red Songbook, Haywire Mac McClintock, Spokane Washington, Joe Hill, Ralph Chaplin, T-Bone Slim, Utah Phillips, Rebel Voices, Kathleen Taylor,

Remembering the Life and Music of Labor Agitator Joe Hill, Who Was Executed 100 Years Ago Today

Investigative reporting about corporate malfeasance and government wrongdoing, analysis of national and world affairs, and cultural criticism that matters.

In These Times

Today in Labor History November 7, 1912: Ernest Riebe's "Mr. Block," IWW labor comic strip first appeared in print. Mr. Block was one of the best-loved features in the Wobbly press. Joe Hill wrote a song about "Mr. Block," who was a boss-loving, American Dream-believing, self-sabotaging knucklehead. Some call Riebe the first "underground" comic book artist.

Mr. Block (by Joe Hill)

Please give me your attention, I'll introduce to you
A man who is a credit to the ["Our] old Red White and Blue["]
His head is made of lumber and solid as a rock
He is a common worker and his name is Mr. Block
And Block [he] thinks he may be premier [President] some day

Chorus
Oh Mr. Block, you were born by mistake
You take the cake, you make me ache
[Go] tie a rock on your block and then jump in the lake
Kindly do that for Liberty's sake!

2. Yes, Mr. Block is lucky - he got a job, by gee!
The shark got seven dollars for job and fare and fee
They shipped him to a desert and dumped him with his truck
But when he tried to find his job he sure was out of luck
He shouted, "That's too raw! I'll fix them with the law!"

3. Block hiked back to the city but wasn't doing well
He said "I'll join the union, the great AF of L".
He got a job that morning, got fired by the night
He said, "I'll see Sam Gompers and he'll fix that foreman right!"
Sam Gompers said, "You see, you've got our sympathy."

4. Election day he shouted, "A Socialist for Mayor!"
The comrade got elected [and] he happy was for fair
But after the election he got an awful shock
[When] a great big socialistic bull did rap him on the block
And Comrade Block did sob, "I helped him get his job!"

5. Poor Block he died one evening, I'm very glad to state
He climbed the golden ladder up to the pearly gate
He said, "Oh Mister Peter, one thing I'd like to tell
I'd like to meet the Astorbilts and John D Rockerfell!"
Old Pete said, "Is that so? You'll meet them down below!"

Tune: It Looks to me Like a Big Time Tonight. from Al Grierson,
by Joe Hill, in 13th ed. of the Little Red Songbook

#workingclass #LaborHistory #IWW #anarchism #MrBlock #LittleRedSongbook #JoeHill #underground #comics #cartoon #satire #writer #artist @bookstadon

For the Little Red Songbook

1909 IWW Band Postcard. From the IWW Materials Preservation Project. Greetings Fellow Workers, The Little Red Songbook (LRS) Committee has been working for two years on the new 39th Edition of the …

Industrial Worker

Today in Labor History August 19, 1909: The first edition of the IWW’s The Little Red Songbook was published in Spokane, WA. The book’s subtitle is “Songs to Fan the Flames of Discontent.” Between 1909 and 1995, the Wobblies printed 36 editions. The songbook always includes songs by Joe Hill, Ralph Chaplin, T-Bone Slim, and Haywire Mac. Most editions contained many of the best-known labor songs, like "The Internationale," "The Preacher and the Slave," and "Solidarity Forever." Haywire Mac, composer of the “Big Rock Candy Mountain” and “Hallelujah I’m a Bum,” was one of the original members of the IWW band, in Spokane, in 1907. Mac later participated in the anarchist Magonista Revolution in Baja California, helping to capture and occupy Tijuana. He eventually settled down in San Francisco, where he hosted working-class radio and television programs.

You can read my bio of Haywire Mac here: https://michaeldunnauthor.com/2021/03/16/the-haywire-mac-story/

#workingclass #LaborHistory #IWW #littleredsongbook #folkmusic #union #HaywireMac #JoeHill #internationale #wobblies #solidarity

poor working conditions drove increasing numbers of Finns to the Industrial Workers of the World (#IWW). In the 1920s, Finns formed the largest individual ethnic group within the organisation. The IWW’s catch phrases were #directaction, #sabotage and #generalstrike. Music was used in the battle against capitalism by the IWW: “The Singing Union”.

https://www.fmq.fi/articles/there-is-power-in-the-union

#Finland #labormovement #littleRedSongbook #migrantworkers #music #organize #songs #Unions #workingclasshistory

FMQ - There is Power in the Union - Music in the Finnish American immigrant community

The recent immigration wave into Europe has proved that where there is no common language, music and art can provide an important communication avenue between immigrants and locals. Through art, immigrants are able to express their own culture but also to give a voice even to their most harrowing experiences. Likewise, music played a pivotal role for Finnish immigrants in America in the turn of the 20th century. It enabled them to maintain their Finnish identity in the new environment and to integrate into American society.

I sang Bread and Roses at my union online social, and other people sang other brilliant things!

#LittleRedSongbook #JoinAUnion