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Reports

Utah Phillips Has Left the Stage

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Posted on May 28, 2008

By Amy Goodman

  “Utah” Phillips died this week at the age of 73. He was a musician, labor organizer, peace activist and co-founder of his local homeless shelter. He also was an archivist, a historian and a traveler, playing guitar and singing almost forgotten songs of the dispossessed and the downtrodden, and keeping alive the memory of labor heroes like Emma Goldman, Joe Hill and the Industrial Workers of the World, “the Wobblies,” in a society that too soon forgets.

  Born Bruce Duncan Phillips on May 15, 1935, in Cleveland, by his midteens he was riding the rails. He told me of those days in an interview in 2004. By then, he was slowed down by congestive heart failure. His long, white beard flowed over his bow tie, plaid shirt and vest. We sat in a cramped attic of a pirate radio station that was frequently raided by federal authorities. In the early days, he met old-timers, “old, old alcoholics who could only shovel gravel. But they knew songs.”

  In 1956, he joined the Army and got sent to postwar Korea. What he saw there changed him forever: “Life amid the ruins. Children crying—that’s the memory of Korea. Devastation. I saw an elegant and ancient culture in a small Asian country devastated by the impact of cultural and economic imperialism. Well, that’s when I cracked. I said: ‘I can’t do this anymore. You know, this is all wrong. It all has to change. And the change has to begin with me.’”

  After three years in the Army, he went back to the state that earned him his nickname, Utah. There he met Ammon Hennacy, a radical pacifist, who had started the Joe Hill House in Salt Lake City, inspired by the Catholic Worker movement. Hennacy guided Utah Phillips toward pacifism. Utah recalled: “Ammon came to me one day and said, ‘You’ve got to be a pacifist.’ And I said, ‘How’s that?’ He said, ‘Well, you act out a lot. You use a lot of violent behavior.’ And I was. You know, I was very angry. ‘You’re not just going to lay down guns and fists and knives and hard angry words. You’re going to have to lay down the weapons of privilege and go into the world completely disarmed.’ If there’s one struggle that animates my life, it’s probably that one.”

  Utah’s pacifism drove him to run for the U.S. Senate in 1968 on the Peace and Freedom ticket, taking a leave of absence from his civil-service job: “I was a state archivist—and ran a full campaign, 27 counties. We took 6,000 votes in Utah. But when it was over, my job would vanish, and I couldn’t get work anymore in Utah.”

  Thus began his 40 years in “the trade,” a traveling, working musician: “The trade is a fine, elegant, beautiful, very fruitful trade. In that trade, I can make a living and not a killing.” He eschewed the commercial music industry, once telling Johnny Cash, who wanted to record a number of Utah’s songs: “I don’t want to contribute anything to that industry. I can’t fault you for what you’re doing. I admire what you do. But I can’t feed that dragon ... think about dollars as bullets.” He eventually partnered with one of the most successful independent musicians in the U.S., Ani DiFranco, who created her own label, Righteous Babe Records. Their collaborative work was nominated for a Grammy Award.

  Utah Phillips was a living bridge, keeping the rich history of labor struggles alive. He told me: “The long memory is the most radical idea in America. That long memory has been taken away from us. You haven’t gotten it in your schools. You’re not getting it on your television. You’re being leapfrogged from one crisis to the next. Mass media contributed to that by taking the great movements that we’ve been through and trivializing important events. No, our people’s history is like one long river. It flows down from way over there. And everything that those people did and everything they lived flows down to me, and I can reach down and take out what I need, if I have the courage to go out and ask questions.” On his radio show “Loafer’s Glory,” he once said, work on this planet has been to remember.”

  A week before he died, Utah Phillips wrote in a public letter to his family and friends: “The future? I don’t know. Through all of it, up and down, it’s the song. It’s always been the song.”

  Amy Goodman is the host of “Democracy Now!,” a daily international TV/radio news hour airing on 650 stations in North America. Her third book, “Standing Up to the Madness: Ordinary Heroes in Extraordinary Times,” was published in April 2008.

  © 2008 Amy Goodman

  Distributed by King Features Syndicate

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By LAM-08, May 30, 2008 at 3:04 pm #
(Unregistered commenter)

A GOOD OLD MAN HAS UP AND GONE.
HE LIVED IN THE PRESENT MOMENT AND
MADE IT BETTER AND MORE BEAUTIFUL
WITH HIS SONGS AND STORIES.
HE WAS A GOOD EXAMPLE FOR US ALL.
HE HAS ADDED HIS DROP TO THE RIVER
AND HE TRAVELS ON THE BOAT OF A MILLION YEARS.

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By bluewombat, May 30, 2008 at 1:23 pm #
(Unregistered commenter)

“Moose Turd Pie?”

I realize that’s not a very political question, but I seem to recall hearing it on Dr. Demento, and I was just wondering…

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By Buddy Maupin, May 29, 2008 at 11:12 am #
(Unregistered commenter)

I met Utah in Juneau Alaska in 1989.  He performed in the basement of an elementary school and wore our Union’s “Ready to Strike” pin when he was invited to meet the Governor at the Governor’s mansion.  A good friend to workers has been lost.

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By C Quil, May 29, 2008 at 10:17 am #

The interview with Amy Goodman was done before the last presidential election, in January 2004. If you listen to it, it sounds like nothing much has changed.

One bit sounds like the slugfest that’s going on between Clinton and Obama. If you didn’t know that this was said four years ago, it could have been said yesterday.

From the transcript:

”...but for right now, all the difference has got to be pushed aside. I am absolutely appalled at these Democratic candidates hammering on each other, you know, not recognizing the direness of our situation.

It is long since, since those people should have sat down in a room together and decided which one could be elected and put everything they had into that person. Time has long since passed. They’ve got to do it. And otherwise, we’re in for very much serious, more serious times we’ve got now. It’s not that time has run out. It’s going to make it a lot harder on everybody else to try to make it better.”

http://www.democracynow.org/2008/5/27/utah_phillips _1935_2008_legendary_folk

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By millsm, May 29, 2008 at 8:40 am #
(Unregistered commenter)

I was a friend of Bruce and spent many times with him and friends in the Joe Hill House singing along with them the songs Bruce brought to us. Some of us joined with Ammon Hennacy in his weekly anti-capital punishment demonstration at the State capitol in SLC. One day Ammon did not show up for the picketing. We found out later that he had died of a heart attack on his way to the protest he had faithfully carried out for years. It was a wonderful time being in the presence of such outstanding and dedicated people. The SLC police were very nervous about this little group of pacifists: they kept a police squad parked in front of the Joe Hill House and took notes on all of the visitors…

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By Expat, May 29, 2008 at 5:32 am #

^ hear Utah’s gone.  Before I left the states; I listened to his program every week on NPR.  He was not a tame two legged, as Tao Walker calls us bought people.  Utah was a free two legged, wild, savage, and a man.  He was a most civilized one, who earned the right to be called human.  Too soon gone.

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