Arlo Guthrie
b. 10 July 1947, Coney Island, New York, USA. The eldest son of folksinger Woody Guthrie, Arlo was raised in the genre's thriving environment. His lengthy ballad, Alice's Restaurant Massacre, part humorous song, part narrative, achieved popularity following the artist's appearance at the 1967 Newport Folk Festival. The composition became the cornerstone of Arlo's debut album, and inspired a feature film, but the attendant publicity obscured the performer's gifts for melody. An early song, Highway In The Wind, was successfully covered by Hearts And Flowers as Arlo emerged from under the shadow of his father. RUNNING DOWN THE ROAD, produced by Van Dyke Parks, indicated a newfound maturity, but his talent truly flourished on a series of excellent '70s recordings, notably HOBO'S LULLABY, LAST OF THE BROOKLYN COWBOYS, and AMIGO. Although offering a distillation of traditional music—wedding folk and country to ragtime, blues and Latin—such recordings nonetheless addressed contemporary concerns. Presidential Rag was a vitriolic commentary on Watergate and Children Of Abraham addressed the Arab/Israeli conflict. The singer enjoyed a US Top 20 hit with a reading of Steve Goodman's City Of New Orleans (1972) and, if now less prolific, Arlo Guthrie remains a popular figure on the folk circuit.








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