Arlo Guthrie is an American folk singer best known for his song "Massachusetts."
@Folk Singers, Family and Childhood
Arlo Guthrie is an American folk singer best known for his song "Massachusetts."
Arlo Guthrie born at
Arlo Guthrie and his wife Jackie Hyde were married for 43 years until her death due to liver cancer in 2012. All his children—son Abe Guthrie and daughters Annie, Sarah Lee Guthrie, and Cathy Guthrie—are musicians.
In 1991, he purchased the old Trinity Church. He founded the Guthrie Center at the Trinity Church to honor the legacy of his parents. The Guthrie Foundation aims to promote education, preserve culture, and meet the needs of the community. It also provides a wide range of services including support for people living with HIV/AIDS.
From the 1960s to the 1980s, he had followed a strong leftist approach to American politics. He was anti-war and anti-Nixon, and advocated for making nuclear power illegal. In 1984, he campaigned for George McGovern for his Democratic presidential nomination. Arlo was a registered Republican in 2008.
Arlo Davy Guthrie was born on July 10, 1947, in Brooklyn, New York, to folk singer and composer Woody Guthrie and Marjorie Mazia Guthrie, who was a professional dancer with the Martha Graham Company. Record producer Nora Guthrie is his sister. His maternal grandmother was the famous poet Aliza Greenblatt.
His parents divorced when he was young. Nonetheless, he was close to his father, who gifted him a guitar on his sixth birthday.
He attended Woodward School in Clinton Hill, Brooklyn, till his eighth grade, graduating in 1965 from the Stockbridge School, in Stockbridge, Massachusetts. For some time, he attended Rocky Mountain College, in Billings, Montana.
After his father’s death in 1967, his close friends like Cisco Houston, Leadbelly, and Pete Seeger played an active role in Arlo’s life and career. He regularly performed with Seeger.
On the Thanksgiving Day in 1965, Arlo Guthrie, who was then 18, was arrested on charges of “illegally dumping on private property”. As explained by Arlo, to help his teacher and friend, he took their garbage and dumped it because the local landfill was closed. While he paid a fine for it, the incident became the basis for his song, ‘Alice's Restaurant Massacree’.
He signed a deal with Warner Brothers and released the album, ‘Alice's Restaurant’ in September 1967. The album had the song ‘Alice's Restaurant Massacree’ in addition to others. It became very popular amongst the US college students and counterculture radio stations.
His second album ‘Arlo’ was released in 1968, and the third album ‘Running Down the Road’ in 1969. His version of the traditional folk song ‘Stealin', which is included in the latter album, was featured in the film ‘Two-Lane Blacktop’.
In 1969, he was featured in the film version of ‘Alice's Restaurant’, directed and co-written by Arthur Penn. His performance was acclaimed.
His album ‘Washington County’ was released in 1970. The album ‘Hobo's Lullaby’ was released in 1972 on Reprise Records, and later, it was re-released on his own recording label Rising Son Records in 1997.
Arlo Guthrie’s song ‘Alice's Restaurant Massacree’ which was featured in his debut album ‘Alice’s Restaurant,’ made him famous and a youth icon of the 1960s counterculture scene. It became Guthrie's signature song.
His 1976 album ‘Amigo’, which contained strong folk and folk rock music, earned a 5-star rating from Rolling Stone.
The single ‘City of New Orleans,’ a lyrical poem about a train ride from Chicago to New Orleans, is another one of his successful works. He had embarked on this train trip across the country to raise money for musicians who were hit by Hurricane Katrina and Hurricane Rita.