Hazel Dickens: It's Hard to Tell the Singer from the Song

Special Guests: Hazel Dickens, Mimi Pickering, and Archie Green

California Premiere

Hazel Dickens may have left the hills of West Virginia for Baltimore, but she carried along the heart of the place. Her old-timey songs, feminist ballads, and union rousers evoke the struggles of working-class people, from the coalfields of Appalachia to the dusky factories of Chesapeake Bay. Though she is considered a pioneer in Bluegrass, Dickens's songs also point the way toward an engaged activist music with topical tunes performed at picket lines and rallies throughout the country. To establish her lineage and influence, It's Hard to Tell the Singer from the Song includes recollections from several generations of tunesmiths, Pete Seeger, Alison Krauss, and Naomi Judd among them. Her piercing, affecting songs are heard throughout: "Working Girl Blues," "My Better Years," "Black Lung," and "Don't Put Her Down, You Helped Put Her There," a startling tribute to fallen women. Singing hearty songs about harsh times, Hazel Dickens is all about the triumph of coal-hard persistence.

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