Tom Paxton Songs for every age 
http://www.advertiser.ie/galway/article/43889/tom-paxton-songs-for-every-age 


September 15, 2011 


By Charlie Mcbride 





TOM PAXTON, one of the enduring legends of American folk music, is coming to 
the Town Hall at the end of this month for what promises to be a real treat for 
concert-goers. 

Paxton has been an integral part of the songwriting and folk music community 
since the early 1960s Greenwich Village scene, and continues to be a primary 
influence on today’s ‘New Folk’ performers. Many of his songs have become 
much-loved standards, such as ‘The Last Thing On My Mind’, ‘Ramblin’ Boy’, 
‘Bottle Of Wine’, ‘Goin’ To The Zoo’, and ‘The Marvellous Toy’. 

Paxton’s songs have addressed issues of injustice and inhumanity, laying bare 
the absurdities of modern culture and celebrating the tenderest bonds of 
family, friends, and community. Myriad artists have covered his songs, 
including Willie Nelson, Dolly Parton, Placido Domingo, Simon & Garfunkel, 
Harry Belafonte, and Gram Parsons. 

In describing Paxton’s influence on his fellow musicians, Pete Seeger said: 
“Tom’s songs have a way of sneaking up on you. You find yourself humming them, 
whistling them, and singing a verse to a friend. Like the songs of Woody 
Guthrie, they’re becoming part of America. In a small village near Calcutta, in 
1998, a villager who could not speak English sang me ‘What Did You Learn In 
School Today?’ in Bengali! Tom Paxton’s songs are reaching around the world 
more than he, or any of us could have realised.” 



Folkies and protests 

Over a morning phone call from his Virginia home, Paxton reflected on his long, 
and still-flourishing, career. It was the morning after the 10th anniversary of 
9/11 so it seemed apt to begin by asking Paxton for his thoughts on America’s 
current wars and whether he sees similarities to the era of the Vietnam War 
which prompted a number of his protest songs. 

“There are certainly parallels,” he observes. “The thing that got me about 9/11 
is that Bush and Cheney launched the wrong war. It would be like as if after 
Pearl Harbor, America had attacked Italy instead of Japan. 

“Iraq had nothing to do with 9/11 and the war there is one we didn’t belong in. 
The Iraq War is even more illogical than Vietnam was. I think the US is still 
traumatised by 9/11 to an extent. Whenever I find myself driving through New 
Jersey and see the New York skyline I am still astounded by the absence of the 
Towers.” 

The US’s ongoing wars may not be popular at home but they have not provoked the 
large scale protests that marked the sixties. 

“There are protests allright but they’re not as organised or as widespread,” 
Paxton explains. “The thing is that we still had the draft for Vietnam. We were 
largely sending these lower-income conscripts, many of them black, out there to 
die for us. It was the draft that most people were protesting against at the 
time. Today we have a 100 per cent volunteer army so that makes a difference.” 

Paxton first fell in love with folk music as a young boy in Oklahoma. It was a 
passion that deepened as he grew older and he began writing and singing his own 
songs. In 1960, aged 22, he moved to New York and became a leading figure on 
the burgeoning Greenwich Village folk scene alongside Bob Dylan, Phil Ochs and 
Joan Baez. 

It is an era that has acquired semi-mythical status in music lore; I ask Paxton 
to what extent all these rising young singers were marked by rivalry or 
fellowship. 

“You said it!” he responds. “We were comrades and we were rivals, we all 
supported each other and we all competed with each other. But as I look back on 
those times now what I remember most are the friendships.” 

Among his friends at the time were The Clancy Brothers and Paxton was a huge 
admirer of their music. 

“I idolised The Clancy Brothers,” he declares. “I remember one of the first 
times I saw them and hearing Liam sing the Scottish ballad ‘Lang A Growing’. I 
was mesmerised, I scarcely drew a breath during the song; I listened so 
intently to it that I had memorised it straightaway. 

“I felt that the Clancys ‘hung the moon’ as we used to say in Oklahoma, meaning 
they were wonderful, and I never changed that opinion. I remember taking my 
daughter to see their reunion concert in Carnegie Hall. They hadn’t performed 
together in 25 years but they were as sharp as ever. I told my daughter that 
would have been Tom Clancy’s work, he was the drill sergeant of the group!” 



Children and partners 

As a young man Paxton set himself a regime of writing at least one song every 
day. Does he still follow this schedule? “No, I don’t,” he admits. “Though 
perhaps I should! Of course just because I was writing a song every day doesn’t 
mean they were all good. But I do believe that one of the best ways of writing 
a lot of good songs is to write lots of songs. It keeps the machinery working 
in the engine room so to speak.” 

Paxton has produced a substantial body of work geared towards children through 
individual songs, albums, and books. I ask how important this aspect of his 
work is for him. 

“I ascribe that initially to the album The Weavers at Carnegie Hall which was 
released in 1957,” he reveals. “It had a tremendous effect on me. It’s what 
made me want to be a performer. There were a couple of kids’ songs on that 
album, such as ‘Hush, Little Baby’ and ‘Go Where I Send Thee’. 

“Folk artists regularly included children’s songs in their sets at the time and 
they were chosen because of their intrinsic musical value. I learned from 
people like The Weavers and Woody Guthrie that children’s songs are every bit 
as deserving of respect as any other. And the very first song of mine that 
proved to be a ‘keeper’ was ‘The Marvellous Toy.’ 

Paxton has now entered his sixth decade as a performer and his talent remains 
undimmed. In the past 10 years four of his albums have been nominated for 
Grammy Awards, most recently 2008’s Comedians and Angels, a deep and affecting 
collection of songs on the themes of marriage, family, friendship, and ageing. 
Nine of that album’s songs are devoted to Paxton’s wife of 48 years, Midge, 
and, as our interview draws to a close, he reflects warmly on the durability of 
their marriage. 

“I give all the credit for that to Midge,” he modestly declares. “It’s not 
always easy putting up with a folk singer but she is an extraordinary woman, 
every bit as remarkable today as when we first met. She is my muse. She listens 
to my songs after I’ve written them and is able to make helpful suggestions as 
to how they can be improved. And she also puts up with my nonsense!” 

To conclude; Judy Collins, another singer who has covered Paxton’s songs, has 
paid this tribute to his work; “Tom Paxton's songs are so powerful and lyrical, 
written from the heart and the conscience, and they reach their mark, our most 
inner being…they are beautiful and timeless, and meant for every age.” 



Tom Paxton plays the Town Hall on Friday September 30 at 8pm. Tickets are €25 
and are available from the Town Hall on 091 - 569777 and www.tht.ie 
. 

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