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Florida
by Rob B. - 06/06/26 01:22 PM
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Lamb.wavv
by Gary E. Andrews - 06/05/26 04:07 PM
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Highwomen
by Gary E. Andrews - 06/02/26 08:15 PM
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Joined: Dec 2006
Posts: 7,683 Likes: 67
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"Scatter My Ashes" Copyright August 10, 2005 by Gary E. Andrews All Rights Reserved For The Globe D XXO232 C/G 332O1O G 32OOO3
(Verse I) Once upon a time, you could ask anyone. They all knew my name; the comfort of my guns. We stood against corruption, and the evil ones, who set out to steal our creed, and enslave our sons! If you'd been where I've gone, and seen what I saw, (Chorus Refrain) you'd Scatter My Ashes, everywhere, anywhere but Utah! Scatter My Ashes everywhere, but Utah!
(Verse II) No; I'm not a ghost, just a memory of one. It's been so long ago, it's almost forgotten, how with bullets dipped in greed, they shot into the sun, to leave us all down here to bleed, in darkness, on the run! I'm not, askin', you to go and break the law! Just Scatter My Ashes everywhere, anywhere but Utah! Scatter My Ashes everywhere, but Utah!
(Bridge) Carry me through Wyoming, into the Great White North! Spill me out into the wind! Let me issue forth! Let the lightning storm, nature raging, raw! Scatter My Ashes everywhere, anywhere but Utah! Scatter My Ashes everywhere, but Utah!
(Verse III) Utah is hallowed ground, good earth for to grow! A place to raise your children, so long as you don't go, against the grain of greed, of those who run it all! They got their grubby hands on the powers of the Law! If my son grows up, tell him of his Pa! 'n Scatter My Ashes everywhere, anywhere but Utah! Scatter My Ashes everywhere, but Utah!
Last edited by Gary E. Andrews; Yesterday at 10:28 PM.
There will always be another song to be written. Someone will write it. Why not you? www.garyeandrews.com
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Joined: Dec 2006
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More Info... Scatter My Ashes Copyright August 10, 2005 by Gary E. Andrews All Rights Reserved For The Globe
In his book, "Bob Dylan Chronicles, Volume I", he tells of intending to write a song about union organizer and troubadour Joe Hill. Dylan said he thought he might research it and write a Song about it. I thought I might research Hill's story so I might write an informed Song. But the muse arrived before I got around to research. She's so fine I always drop what I'm doing and let her in. Hope Bob doesn't mind. She may have been on the way to his house. Songs don't have to be about the people they're about anyway; just fictions that get "a" story told, not necessarily "the" story. She gave me the Rhyme Lines for the quote, which Dylan said he would use as a Refrain, a Refrain-Type Chorus to end each Verse.
I played them on my Martin ONY16, then typed it out, writing new Lines as I typed, not my usual guitar-in-hand, ad lib Lyric, usual creative style.
I had an idea a choir could ask, "Anywhere?," after the lead sings "Scatter My Ashes anywhere," and the lead could come back to specify, "Anywhere but Utah!"
I later asked the internet about Joe Hill. I got a lot of 2005 Joe Hills' news. Then I entered "Scatter My Ashes..." A website said the quote was from a letter Joe Hillstrom (b. 1877-79? - d. 1915) wrote "to a pal" from jail before they hanged him November 19, 1915. He wrote something like, "After they hang me, get my body and have it cremated. Then scatter my ashes everywhere, anywhere but Utah. I wouldn't wanna be caught dead in Utah." Joe Hill advised, "Don't mourn! Organize!"
One source says he was born in Sweden, in 1879, named Joel Emmanuel Haaglung. He came to America in 1902. He worked the kinds of jobs that make calloused hands. Men worked twelve-hour days, six and seven days a week, long hours, in dangerous conditions. Hell's afire! In those days they worked children, small baby boys, crawling back in little holes to place explosives, worked 'em twelve-hour days.
Joe Hill came to think of the 'wage' system loggers and miners, textile worker, and immigrants worked under as unreasonable, not a 'living wage', 'adequate' to pay for the 'living' a man did between the time he left work one day, and came back the next.
He saw all the other assets of corporations just sit there, idle, inert, until Human Resources came and supplied the demanded Human Competence to 'make' all those other assets 'work' to Take Profit. Why begrudge those Human beings an adequate share of the Profit they earned the corporation? They're sole-source suppliers of the demanded Human Competence to turn raw materials into finished commodities.
Somewhere he found the Industrial Workers of the World Union, the 'Wobblies'. But how do you 'reach' and organize men who are illiterate in English, who don't speak it, can't read it, can't write it? Hill began setting pointed words to common tunes, words that satirized the situations men were living in, set to melodies people already knew, Hymns, anthems, popular songs. You might just whistle the tune to a feller you wanted to talk to outside, and he knew what that meant, and met ya out there.
The International Workers of the World Union published The Little Red Songbook, pocketsized, so a man could carry it with him.
The consensus seems to be that Hill was framed by Law Enforcement and Judicial authorities in league with mine owners where he was trying to organize a union for safety's sake. They got lead mines there, co-occurring with copper, gold, and silver, all the metals that make men crazy. In a Union Songbook, March 6, 1913, sold for a few cents to miners, dockworkers, factory hands, there was a Song, "There is power in a Union," credited to one Joe Hill.
In the cold Utah January of 1914, at State Street 800 South, in Salt Lake City, it seems a man named John G. Morrisson and his son Arling Morrisson were killed in the robbery of Morrisson's grocery store. Two men were arrested in the train yards.
But Joe Hill had the importunity to get himself shot that same night and went to a doctor for help. The doctor reported it to authorities. They latched onto him. Joe said a man shot him in a 'dispute' over a woman. But he refused to name the woman or the shooter.
Joe tried to fire his lawyer for pleading him guilty. The judge wouldn't allow it. I can see how that would piss a man off. So Utah is hallowed ground, and it's no fault of anyone alive today that such an injustice took place then; but such injustices continue to be perpetrated and that may be our fault for not knowing Joe's story and preventing it from being repeated.
The prosecution's whole case seems to be the coincidental fact Joe was in that city that night, and got shot. They tried him. They convicted him. They sentenced Joe Hill to death. Helen Keller heard about the case, and wrote, in Joe's defense. The Swedish Government made formal representations. Labor Organizations from Europe and Latin America sent petitions. Woodrow Wilson reached out to the Governor, more than once, asking to delay the Execution.
All came to nought. On November 18, 1915, Joe Hill sent a message to International Workers of the World Leader Big Bill Haywood. "Don't waste any time mourning," Joe said. "Organize."
On November 19, 1915, a Firing Squad put Joe Hill to death at Utah State Prison.
In 1925, Alfred Hayes was at an International Workers of the World Union meeting, and it was raining outside, and he wrote a Lyric; "I dreamed I saw Joe Hill last night, alive as you or me! Says I, 'But Joe, you're ten years dead!' I never died, said he. I never died, said he."
One rendition has the line, "The copper bosses killed you Joe!" and Joe replies, "I never died," said he."
In 1936, Earl Robinson set that Lyric to music. Paul Robeson and Joan Baez and Pete Seeger and a thousand others sang and recorded it and told what they knew of Joe Hill. In the late 1930's Billy Bragg recorded it.
"There is power in a Union" was sung on pickett lines during the Great Depression years of the early 20th century, and at Labor Rallies in countries that didn't exist when Joe Hill wrote that Song.
Word on the street is they put little portions of Joe Hills ashes in envelopes and distributed them to Wobblies Locals across the country, and sent them to Labor Organizations in other countries. One state was not on the distribution list; Utah.
Last edited by Gary E. Andrews; 06/03/26 10:57 PM.
There will always be another song to be written. Someone will write it. Why not you? www.garyeandrews.com
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Joined: Oct 2017
Posts: 8,859 Likes: 86
Top 20 Poster
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Top 20 Poster
Joined: Oct 2017
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"Scatter My Ashes" Copyright August 10, 2005 by Gary E. Andrews All Rights Reserved For The Globe D XXO232 C/G 332O1O G 32OOO3
(Verse I) Once upon a time, you could ask anyone. They all knew my name; the comfort of my guns. We stood against corruption, and the evil ones, who set out to steal our creed, and enslave our sons! If you'd been where I've gone, and seen what I saw, (Chorus Refrain) you'd Scatter My Ashes, everywhere, anywhere but Utah! Scatter My Ashes everywhere, but Utah!
(Verse II) No; I'm not a ghost, just a memory of one. It's been so long ago, it's almost forgotten, how with bullets dipped in greed, they shot into the sun, to leave us all down here to bleed, in darkness, on the run! I'm not, askin', you to go and break the law! Just Scatter My Ashes everywhere, anywhere but Utah! Scatter My Ashes everywhere, but Utah!
(Bridge) Carry me through Wyoming, into the Great White North! Spill me out into the wind! Let me issue forth! Let the lightning storm, nature raging, raw! Scatter My Ashes everywhere, anywhere but Utah! Scatter My Ashes everywhere, but Utah!
(Verse III) Utah is hallowed ground, good earth for to grow! A place to raise your children, so long as you don't go, against the grain of greed, of those who run it all! They got their grubby hands on the powers of the Law! If my son grows up, tell him of his Pa! 'n Scatter My Ashes everywhere, anywhere but Utah! Scatter My Ashes everywhere, but Utah! Gary this is really good. Not quite sure what it's about but it keeps ones interest and is interesting. Only thing I'd change is the hook, scatter my ashes is boring... Everywhere but Utah, draws immediate curiosity. Where's your musuc?
Last edited by Fdemetrio; 06/03/26 11:10 AM.
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