Now 85, Tom Paxton is what you might call an OG folk musician, having made his name as a songwriter in Greenwich Village before Bob Dylan even arrived from Minnesota. And so thereโs a certain historical spark in speaking with him about our common love for Woody Guthrie. He surely had that same conversation with countless compatriots at the Gaslight Cafe, back in the day, especially since heโd landed there by way of his native Oklahoma. โI played football against a team from [Guthrieโs hometown of] Okemah, about 26 miles from my hometown,โ Paxton remembers today. โBut I actually never heard of Woody Guthrie until I went to the University of Oklahoma and started hearing his records, and he quickly became one of my heroes. I think heโs one of my biggest influences.โ
Of course, part of Guthrieโs legacy is the tradition of the political or protest song, something that Paxtonโs always had at the core of his craft. Itโs also at the core of the annual series known as Acoustic Sunday Live, the latest version of which will feature Paxton, Crys Matthews, Susan Werner, The Accidentals, and Terry โHarmonicaโ Bean on Sunday, December 4th, at the First Congregational Church.
Woody Guthrieโs spirit has been with the concert series from the very beginning, when Bruce and Barbara Newman organized a tribute to Guthrie 28 years ago, featuring Paxton, Richie Havens, Odetta, and Ramblinโ Jack Elliott. Since then, each show has been a fundraiser for a local cause, and in recent years thatโs been Protect Our Aquifer.
Paxton, reflecting on the cause of ensuring the purity of the Sparta or Memphis Sand Aquifer, quips, โTalk about a no-brainer! It makes you want to get a bumper sticker: โLike Drinking Water? Duh?!โโ Heโs seen innumerable citizen movements to protect sources of fresh water and feels one of his songs still rings true in that context. โThe one I mainly still sing after 50 years is โWhose Garden Was This?โโ he says. โEverything about ecology is in that song. If you want to enjoy it, youโve got to preserve it.โ
Itโs yet another echo of Guthrieโs approach to folk music. โYou had no trouble understanding the lyrics when he sang,โ Paxton says. โAnd thatโs always been a really important part to me. The way I feel is, I busted my butt writing these lyrics, I want to make sure people understand them.โ Thatโs especially crucial to topical songs, he says. โYou know, political and protest songs are as old as America. Now and then youโll turn up songs that were current before or during our revolution, that were just flat-out protest songs against England and King George. Lots of them! Back during the Vietnam days, we took a lot of heat for writing songs opposing the war, but itโs a very old tradition.โ
Old traditions appeal to Paxton, and his appreciation of the late Jean Ritchie spoke to that. โI visited with her in Kentucky two weeks before she passed [in 2015],โ he says. โThere was a song that was current back in the โ60s called โPassing Throughโ. So I wrote a verse for her: โJean Ritchie of the Cumberlands, her dulcimer in hand/Came singing songs both old and new. โฆ And she sang โem all while she was passing through.โ She was a good, good person.โ
Always generous in his praise of fellow artists, Paxton has leaned into the joys of collaboration of late. โI went for years basically just writing for myself, but the pandemic shut everything down, and if I was going to stay in touch with people, [co-writing on] Zoom was a way to do it. So I really went for it. Iโve been writing with The Accidentals, with Jackson Emmer, with my friend Cathy Fink. And itโs so satisfying that I want to keep doing it. Since the pandemic, so far Iโve co-written over 200 songs.โ
Heโs looking forward to the songwriters-in-the-round style of Acoustic Sunday Live, he says. โItโs great to be coming back to Memphis, and it stacks up to be a hell of a concert. Youโve got some really good people on there, like Crys Matthews and The Accidentals, and Susan Werner is absolutely dynamite on stage. And Iโm bringing a colleague of mine from Colorado to be part of this, named Jackson Emmer. Weโve co-written several songs now. Itโs a real kick for me, to hear young people singing a song Iโve helped to write.โ
Acoustic Sunday Live, the 4th concert to Protect Our Aquifer, takes place at the First Congregational Church on Sunday, December 4th at 7 p.m. Tax deductible tickets are available at acousticsundaylive.com

