Tag Archives: book

A Jewish communist, labour activism and protest songs: a glimpse into a new book by Dave Schechter

“What propelled the daughter of a renowned Jewish scholar to join a movement on the fringe of American society that rejected religion, capitalism, and other mainstream ideals?”

The answer is found in Dave Schechter’s fascinating book, A Life of the Party, about his great-aunt, Amy Schechter, a woman born in England and educated in the United States, and who devoted more than four decades to the Communist Party in a quest to improve the lives of working men and women.

Her work brought her all across the United States, and on her journey, among other things, she was acquainted with the power of song. Of particular interest to Shouts’ readers, this book includes sections with labor and protest music from 1920s-50s.

Among many others, there are such songs as ‘Red Flag’, a Socialist and Communist movements’ anthem, originally written in 1889, or ‘Mill Mother’s Lament’, a powerful protest song whose lyrics resonate just as hard today as they did in 1929 when Ella May Wiggins, a legendary protest singer and union activist, was murdered by corporate thugs ordered to silence her revolutionary voice and music.

Dave told me via email, that it felt important to him to include “the music that applied to the labor actions in which [his] great-aunt took part, whether it actually happened or history says it could have happened.”

‘A Life of the Party’, available through Fulton Books, which blends historical records with narrative fiction, is definitely a worthwhile read for anyone interested in the power of unity, labour unions, protest music and the strength of normal people standing up to their opressors.

New Book Highlights The Work Of Women In Music

Rewriting or editing written history is a daunting task. Unfortunately though, it is a necessary one. What children learn about the world today, is more often than not based on information put together by men. And so the information tenda to be one-sided, lacking and sometimes literally false.

See also: New Interview Series Shines A Light On Women In The Music Business

A new book intends to help a new narrative find ground. This Woman’s Work: Essays on Music is edited by Kim Gordon and Sinéad Gleeson and it features essays by musicians and music journalists about the genre-breakers, the experimentalists and the women who mixed music and activism.

This Woman’s Work seeks to confront the male dominance and sexism that have been hard-coded in the canons of music, literature, and film and has forced women to fight pigeon-holing or being side-lined by carving out their own space.”

According to the book’s press release these women seek to shatter the dominating narrative and one can only imagine how that can empower and motivate young women of the future to venture fearlessly into the creative arts.

“Women have to speak up, to shout louder to tell their story – like the auteurs and ground-breakers featured in this collection, including: Anne Enright on Laurie Anderson; Megan Jasper on her ground-breaking work with Sub Pop; Margo Jefferson on Bud Powell and Ella Fitzgerald; and Fatima Bhutto on music and dictatorship.”

This Woman’s Work: Essays on Music is released on April 7 by White Rabbit.