%s1 / %s2

Playlist: LABOR DAY MUSIC/TALK SHOWS

Compiled By: Paul Ingles

 Credit:

Music mixes on "working". Cesar Chavez special honors farm workers' story.

10,000 GOOD SONGS - #313 - "Working" (Part 1)

From Paul Ingles | Part of the 10,000 Good Songs series | 59:00

Award-winning music documentarian Paul Ingles hosts a mix of tunes from his eclectic personal collection. Today music celebrating the "working life" (Good for Labor Day or anytime). Performances by James Taylor, Jerry Lee Lewis, Emmylou Harris, Koko Taylor, Brandi Carlile, Sam Cooke, Bruce Springsteen, Lynyrd Skynyrd and more.

Labordaydownload_small

PLAYLIST

Don't Bug Me When I'm Working 3:56 - Little Village - Little Village
Brother Trucker 4:02 James Taylor - Flag
Working Man Blues 2:56 Jerry Lee Lewis - Killer Country
Big Boss Man 5:00 Koko Taylor - Chicago Blues Tour
Millworker 4:09 Emmylou Harris - Evangeline
Just a Housewife 3:24 Susan Bigelow - Working (Original Broadway Cast Recording)
The Mother 3:17 Brandi Carlile - By The Way, I Forgive You
Cleanin' Women 3:35 Lynne Thigpen - Working (Original Broadway Cast Recording)
Nice Work If You Can Get It 2:31 Benny Goodman - The King Of Swing
Ten Men Workin' 6:29 Neil Young - This Note's For You
I Just Can't Work No Longer 3:41 David Lindley - Very Greasy
Chain Gang 2:34 Sam Cooke - The Man And His Music
Let It Rock 3:26 Bob Seger - Smokin' O.P.'s
Working On The Highway 3:15 Bruce Springsteen Born In The U.S.A.
Workin' For MCA 4:45 Lynyrd Skynyrd - Skynyrd's Innyrds: Greatest Hits
Tip That Waitress 4:15 Loudon Wainwright III - Career Moves

10,000 GOOD SONGS - #314 - "Working" (Part 2)

From Paul Ingles | Part of the 10,000 Good Songs series | 59:00

Award-winning music documentarian Paul Ingles hosts a mix of tunes from his eclectic personal collection. Today a second hour of music celebrating the "working life" (Good for Labor Day or anytime). Performances by The Isley Brothers, The Kinks, Bob Dylan, Nitty Gritty Dirt Band, Steve Earle, John Mellencamp, Todd Rundgren, and more.

Labordaydownload_small

Award-winning music documentarian Paul Ingles hosts a mix of tunes from his eclectic personal collection. Today a second hour of music celebrating the "working life" (Good for Labor Day or anytime). Performances by The Isley Brothers, The Kinks, Bob Dylan, Nitty Gritty Dirt Band, Steve Earle, John Mellencamp, Todd Rundgren, and more.

Work To Do 3:09 The Isley Brothers - The Ultimate Isley Brothers
9 to 5 - Love Raptor 3:12
Working At The Factory 3:01 The Kinks - Lost And Found (1986-89)
Factory 2:20 Martyn Joseph - Tires Rushing by in the Rain
Wichita Lineman 4:15 Jimmy Webb - Ten Easy Pieces
Workingman's Blues #2 6:07 Bob Dylan - Modern Times
Hard Hat and a Hammer 3:41 Josh Rister - Blood, Meth, And Tears
Workin' Man (Nowhere to Go) 3:52 Nitty Gritty Dirt Band  - More Great Dirt: The Best of ...Vol. 2
Work Song 7:56 The Paul Butterfield Blues Band - East-West
Working for You 2:51 Patrick Sweany - Close to the Floor
You're Workin' For The Man 3:55 Joe Ely - Twistin' In The Wind
The Mine 2:49 Steve Earle & The Dukes - Ghosts Of West Virginia
Working In the Coal Mine 2:50 Lee Dorsey - Radio Hits of the '60s
American Farmer 3:34 The Charlie Daniels Band - The Essential Charlie Daniels Band
Rain On The Scarecrow 3:46 John Mellencamp - Scarecrow
Worker's Song 3:32 Dropkick Murphys - Blackout
Bang The Drum All Day 3:37 Todd Rundgren - 80's Greatest Rock Hits, Vol. 4: Party On
Take This Job (feat. David Allan Coe) 3:18 Moonshine Bandits - Baptized in Bourbon

The Nonviolent Path of Cesar Chavez

From Good Radio Shows, Inc. | Part of the Peace Talks Radio: Weekly Hour Long Episodes series | 58:45

A conversational profile of Cesar Chavez featuring his United Farm Workers co-founder Dolores Huerta, Chavez scholar Jose-Antonio Orosco and Texas community organizer Juanita Valdez Cox. Together they tell Chavez' story and assess his influence to the causes of labor rights, civil rights and nonviolent conflict resolution.

Cesar-chavez_full_600_small

Known for his co-leadership of the United Farm Workers movement, Cesar Chavez is remembered for his commitment to nonviolent resistance in his campaigns for social, racial, and labor justice.  This program will trace the influences on Chavez, as a child, young man and adult, that led him on a path to nonviolence.  We'll also recall the major moments during his campaigns when his dedication to nonviolence and social justice were put to the test.

We'll talk with Dolores Huerta, his colleague, friend and co-founder of the UFW.  Also Jose-Antonio Orosco, whose book "Cesar Chavez and the Common Sense of Nonviolence" seeks to elevate Chavez as an original thinker, who added significantly to the peacemaking toolkits of more celebrated nonviolence heroes like Gandhi and Martin Luther King, Jr. Finally, we hear from Texas community organizer Juanita Valdez-Cox, who worked the fields there with her family in the 1950's and 60's and recalls Chavez and Huerta leading the organization of farm workers in her state.  Our guests will discuss what Chavez' own actions and theories about nonviolence have to offer to our daily lives as well as how they can be used to address today's social and political issues.  Archival comments from Cesar Chavez are included, along with comments made by President Barack Obama at the dedication of the Cesar Chavez National Monument in 2012.

Carol Boss host with Paul Ingles.

 

 

The Nonviolent Path of Cesar Chavez

From Good Radio Shows, Inc. | Part of the Peace Talks Radio: Weekly Half Hour Episodes series | 29:00

A conversational profile of Cesar Chavez featuring his United Farm Workers co-founder Dolores Huerta and Chavez scholar Jose-Antonio Orosco. Together they tell Chavez' story and assess his influence to the causes of labor rights, civil rights and nonviolent conflict solution. Archival clips from Chavez himself and President Barack Obama are heard as well.

Cesar-chavez_full_600_small

Known for his co-leadership of the United Farm Workers movement, Cesar Chavez is remembered for his commitment to nonviolent resistance in his campaigns for social, racial, and labor justice.  This program will trace the influences on Chavez, as a child, young man and adult, that led him on a path to nonviolence.  We'll also recall the major moments during his campaigns when his dedication to nonviolence and social justice were put to the test. 

 

We'll talk with Dolores Huerta, his colleague, friend and co-founder of the UFW.  Also Jose-Antonio Orosco, whose book "Cesar Chavez and the Common Sense of Nonviolence" seeks to elevate Chavez as an original thinker, who added significantly to the peacemaking toolkits of more celebrated nonviolence heroes like Gandhi and Martin Luther King, Jr.  Our guests will discuss what Chavez' own actions and theories about nonviolence have to offer to our daily lives as well as how they can be used to address today's social and political issues.  Archival clips from Chavez himself are heard as well.

 

A major motion picture on Chavez' life is being released to theatres, March 28, 2014.  Carol Boss host with Paul Ingles.