ON THE
WSWS
Donate
to
the WSWS!
News Feed
Contact
the
WSWS
Editorial
Board
New
Today
News
& Analysis
Workers
Struggles
Arts
Review
History
Science
Polemics
Philosophy
Correspondence
Archive
About
WSWS
About
the ICFI
Help
Books
Online
OTHER
LANGUAGES
German
French
Italian
Russian
Polish
Czech
Serbo-Croatian
Spanish
Portuguese
Turkish
Sinhala-
Tamil
Indonesian
LEAFLETS
Download
in
PDF format
|
|
WSWS : Arts
Review : Obituary
Dave Van Ronk, folk and blues artist, dead at 65
By Fred Mazelis
14 February 2002
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email the
author
Dave Van Ronk, the acclaimed blues and folk singer, guitarist,
songwriter and teacher, died February 10 at the age of 65. His
death came three months after surgery for colon cancer.
In a career spanning more than 40 years, Van Ronk won the respect
and affection of countless of his peers as well as fans in the
US and around the world. His first album was recorded for Folkways
Records in 1959, and was followed by more than two dozen others.
He continued performing and teaching until the end of his life.
Van Ronks musical style is not easily categorized. He
called jazz his biggest influence, tracing it back to the days
in the early 1950s when he haunted jazz clubs in New York and
met the likes of Coleman Hawkins and Jimmy Rushing. He was also
heavily influenced by the blues masters, recording his own version
of classics by Blind Lemon Jefferson and other pioneers. His work
was always marked by a reverence and serious study of what has
come to be called American roots music.
He knew and worked with legendary performers like Odetta and
Pete Seeger, as well as his own contemporaries and younger musiciansmost
famously Bob Dylan, along with Jack Elliott, Phil Ochs, Tom Paxton,
Joni Mitchell, Janis Ian, Christine Lavin, Suzanne Vega and many
others. Dylan often stayed with Van Ronk and his wife in the months
after he arrived in New Yorks Greenwich Village at the age
of 20 in 1961. Van Ronk, then 25, influenced the younger musician
both through his technique on the guitar and in other ways, including
urging him to read Bertolt Brecht and the French symbolist poets.
Though he worked with and respected Seeger, Peter, Paul and
Mary and other folksingers, Van Ronks work was somewhat
different, broader and more varied. His repertory spanned the
work of Louis Armstrong, Leonard Cohen, Randy Newman and blues
masters like the Rev. Gary Davis. He drew from jazz, blues, folk
and country.
Though he didnt usually perform political
or protest songs, Van Ronks political and intellectual outlook,
shaped in the mid-twentieth century, informed his entire life
and career.
Jon Pareles, pop music critic of the New York Times,
writes in his obituary of Van Ronks sense of history,
sense of humor and a gift for making fellow musicians feel at
home. This is undoubtedly true, and it would not be an exaggeration
to say that Van Ronk was beloved by thousands of his colleagues,
as demonstrated by the outpouring of support for him when his
illness was disclosed last fall.
The sense of history and where it came from, however, must
be explained. For his whole life Van Ronk identified with the
working class and expressed a hatred of capitalist exploitation
and sympathy for socialism. In his teenage years he was attracted
to the ideas of anarcho-syndicalism, and in the early 1960s he
declared his agreement with the Trotskyist analysis and perspective.
He joined the Workers League, the forerunner of the Socialist
Equality Party, and remained associated with it until the end
of the 1960s. In May 1998, Van Ronk had a long and wide-ranging
conversation with WSWS Arts Editor David Walsh [A
conversation with Dave Van Ronk].
Born in Brooklyn in 1936, Van Ronk moved to Queens as a child
and attended Richmond Hill High School. He dropped out of school
at the age of 15, and was largely self-educated. A voracious reader,
his broad knowledge and interests were communicated, though usually
with typical self-deprecatory humor, both in conversation and
performance.
Van Ronk joined the Merchant Marine as a teenager, and at the
same time began hanging around Washington Square, in Greenwich
Village, just as the folk revival movement that peaked in the
early to mid-1960s was beginning to emerge. He performed at famous
clubs like the Gaslight and Folk City, which have long since left
the scene. With his early recordings and performances it became
clear that he was a major talent. Many of his best known songs
and interpretations date from the 1960s, including Cocaine
Blues, Youre a Good Old Wagon, He
Was a Friend of Mine, Stackerlee and House
of the Rising Sun.
As acoustic music and the folk revival declined in the late
1960s and 1970s, Van Ronk persevered with his work. He had never
been interested in fame for its own sake, or in wealth for any
sake at all. He briefly gave up performing in the mid-1970s but
came back to it within a year, unable to part with that important
part of his lifes work. He continued, adding to and developing
his craft, neither simply discarding his past work nor merely
repeating it. He remained open to new avenues for his whole career,
something that fit completely with his attitude towards teaching
guitar to successive generations of students.
Van Ronks last album, the jazz-influenced Sweet
and Lowdown, was released only a year ago. Until he became
ill, he continued to tour, singing before old and new audiences
in clubs and coffeehouses around the country, as well as in Canada
and Europe.
The admiration and love for Van Ronk was amply demonstrated
when he became ill. A number of benefit concerts were held to
assist him during his illness. Last November Arlo Guthrie, Tom
Paxton and Peter, Paul and Mary performed at New Yorks Bottom
Line to raise funds for their friend.
Earlier, in December 1997, Van Ronk received the Lifetime Achievement
Award of ASCAP, the American Society of Composers, Authors and
Publishers. Nearly 100 fans and fellow musicians posted congratulatory
messages at that time on the web site set up by the host of the
award ceremony, Christine Lavin.
Dave Van Ronks musical legacy will live, not only in
his many recordings, but in the thousands he taught and influenced
in his course of his long career.
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |