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Right Column Blog
Now Available: A Tribute to Jack Hardy
Smithsonian Folkways presents A Tribute to Jack Hardy, featuring 26 previously unreleased recordings of Hardy’s songs by an illustrious group of performers, all of whom cited Hardy as a key influence and a personal friend. The album is available now via on-demand double CD and digital downloads via folkways.si.edu as well as all major digital outlets.
BUY NOW Purchase the CD or Digital Download Version
Performers include album producers Mark Dann and David Massengill, joined by contemporary folk standouts Nanci Griffith, Suzanne Vega, Jonathan Byrd, Red Molly, Lucy Kaplansky, and Brian Rose. Jack Hardy himself, known as a welcoming host for weekly songwriting workshops, is also included via two unreleased tracks recorded shortly before he died.
Watch Video for “Ponderosa” from A Tribute to Jack Hardy:
For the album, Dann and Massengill compiled more than 100 pages of liner notes that include Hardy’s “Songwriter’s Manifesto,” complete lyrics, photos, and personal tributes, anecdotes, and essays from the participating singer-songwriters.
More about Jack Hardy:
Picking up the guitar as a teenager in the 1960s in Colorado, Hardy’s early repertoire consisted of The Everly Brothers, The Kingston Trio, Bob Dylan, and The Beatles. But much of his writing style can be attributed to his love for literature. The poetry of William Butler Yeats especially influenced Hardy’s songwriting style, which is characterized by vivid imagery and literary techniques.
After moving to Greenwich Village, New York City, to pursue a career as a singer-songwriter, Hardy created the Songwriters Exchange, where musicians shared a new song weekly. The group, and resulting concert series, attracted established performers, such as Griffith, Vega, John Gorka, and Shawn Colvin, as well as aspiring amateurs. Known both for the constructive songwriting advice and the enormous bowls of pasta he would serve up, Hardy became a sounding board, mentor, and friend for a generation of NYC folksingers. In 1982, Hardy, with the help of Dave Van Ronk and others, founded Fast Folk, a record label and music magazine that featured hundreds of singer-songwriters on 98 albums released during a 15-year run (now part of the Smithsonian Folkways collection).
While he never reached the commercial success that some of his weekly guests achieved, Hardy was a prolific songwriter and released 21 albums in nearly 30 years before he died of lung cancer in 2011 at age 63.
“Everything about writing is a process. It is a process that one must immerse oneself in to be good,” said Hardy. “We have to stop getting hung up on the song itself, as an end in itself, and pursue the process.”
In the liner notes, the performers repeatedly cite his valuable perspective on songwriting and give generous thanks for his passion, bravery, stubbornness, determination, and encouragement.
In addition to this tribute, the 36-track compilation Fast Folk: A Community of Singers and Songwriters is available from Smithsonian Folkways and includes songs by John Gorka, Suzanne Vega, Dave Van Ronk, and many more.
A Tribute to Jack Hardy track list:
101 Tree of Rhyme |
David Massengill |
3:45 |
102 Saint Clare |
Suzanne Vega |
2:23 |
103 Little Dove |
Richard Shindell |
4:07 |
104 Sojourner Truth (Ain't I a Woman?) |
Jack Williams |
3:15 |
105 Murder |
Christine Lavin |
5:55 |
106 You Only Leave Your Heart Once |
Richard Julian |
4:30 |
107 Prisoner |
Red Molly |
4:33 |
108 The Last of the O’Neills |
Nels Andrews |
3:38 |
109 Rye Grass |
Paul Sachs |
4:41 |
110 Houston Street |
Frank Christian |
4:36 |
111 Potter’s Field |
Erik Frandsen |
2:28 |
112 Autumn |
Jonathan Byrd |
3:08 |
113 Gossamer Thread |
Jack Hardy |
3:19 |
201 Resolution |
Rod MacDonald |
3:56 |
202 Forget-Me-Not |
Lucy Kaplansky |
3:49 |
203 Dublin Farewell |
Anthony da Costa |
3:46 |
204 The Tailor |
Terre Roche |
5:25 |
205 Down Where the Rabbits Run |
John Gorka |
3:40 |
206 I Ought to Know |
Ronny Cox |
3:34 |
207 Porto Limon |
Brian Rose |
4:34 |
208 White Shoes |
Andrew Rose Gregory |
3:47 |
209 Go Tell the Savior |
Diana Jones |
4:27 |
210 The Inner Man |
Frank Tedesso |
4:13 |
211 Before You Sing (Instrumental Version) |
Kate MacLeod |
1:08 |
212 Fare Thee Well |
Nanci Griffith |
4:03 |
213 Ponderosa |
Jack Hardy |
4:17 |
Most Popular News
- Smithsonian Folkways remembers folk singer and promoter Jack Hardy (1947-2011) | Tribute
- Rising Sun Melodies: the Influential Life and Music of Ola Belle Reed - Free Download | New Release
- Deep Cuts from Deep Gap: A Doc Watson Playlist | Playlists
- Sneak Preview: A Tribute to Jack Hardy (out 3/11) | Sneak Preview
- Traditional Bahamian Dance Music: Ophie & Da Websites and Bo Hog & Da Rooters Release "Bahamian Rake-n-Scrape" on January 22nd, 2016 | Sneak Preview
- Labor Music in Smithsonian Folkways Magazine | Magazine
- Now Available: Quelbe! | New Release
- Now Available: A Tribute to Jack Hardy | New Release
- Smithsonian Folkways' Dr. Daniel Sheehy Awarded Guggenheim Fellowship | Awards
- Video: Rare 1968 Footage from Macedonia | New Videos