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| Judy Collins & Friends: 85 Years of Music & Protest |
Judy
Collins & Friends: 85 Years of Music & Protest celebrated the legacy of folk singer
and social activist Judy Collins. The program at New York City’s Town Hall,
held on International Women’s Day, March 8, was much like a live memoir. The
three-hour program was rich with anecdotal memories from the 1960s and
performances both by her peers and by several younger artists whom she
inspired. Stephen Stills, Richard Thompson, Rickie Lee Jones, Paula Cole, Ari
Hest, Justin Vivian Bond and Sophie B. Hawkins were among the many musicians who
paid tribute to Collins’ 85 years of music and protest.
Best
known in the 1960s for her role as a folk singer and an activist during the
anti-war and civil rights eras, Collins recorded her debut album in 1961 and ultimately
released 55 albums, including studio, live, compilation and holiday collections.
Collins is also a published author, with the publication of Sometimes
It’s Heaven: Poems of Love, Loss and Redemption coming on March 25. In
addition, Collins is a filmmaker, an advocate for mental health, and a podcast
host.
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| Judy Collins & Friends: 85 Years of Music & Protest |
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| Judy Collins & Friends: 85 Years of Music & Protest |
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| Judy Collins (left) with Sophie B. Hawkins, host of Judy Collins & Friends: 85 Years of Music & Protest |
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| Judy Collins (left) with Sophie B. Hawkins, host of Judy Collins & Friends: 85 Years of Music & Protest |
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Judy
Collins first performed at The Town Hall in 1964, which resulted in her first
live recording, Judy Collins in Concert. Over the past six decades
Judy Collins has performed numerous times at the Town Hall, both at her own
concerts and at social justice events. These events included various civil
rights and anti-war rallies.
Grammy-winning
songwriter and producer Russ Titelman produced Judy Collins & Friends:
85 Years of Music & Protest. Collins’ longtime pianist Russell Walden, guitarist
Thad Debrock, bassist Zev Katz, and drummer Doug Yowell accompanied Collins for
most of the concert. Though promoted as an 85th birthday concert, the date was
closer to her 86th birthday this coming May 1.
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| Oakland Rain sang Judy Collins' "When I Was a Girl in Colorado" |
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| Rickie Lee Jones sang a sparse and haunting interpretation of Bob Dylan's "Mr. Tambourine Man"; Collins was the first person to hear Dylan sing that song. |
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| Grammy- and Oscar-winning composer Stephen Schwartz, who wrote the scores of Godspell and Wicked, performed a duet with Collins on Harold Arlen and Yip Harburg’s “Over the Rainbow” from The Wizard of Oz. |
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| Justin Vivian Bond, also known as Kiki DuRane in the cabaret duo Kiki and Herb, performed Richard Peaslee’s “Marat/Sade,” which Collins recorded on her In My Life album. |
In
scattered snippets, Collins shared insights into the earliest days of her own sojourn.
Collins started in music as a piano prodigy at age 13. At that age, she played
piano with the Denver Symphony Orchestra. At 16, she was inspired to pursue
singing when she heard Jo Stafford sing “Barbara Allen.” In 1961, she relocated
to New York City and became friends with Peter, Paul and Mary and Pete Seeger.
In 1962 she opened for Theodore Bikel at Carnegie Hall.
In
tracing her unique history, Collins off-handedly shared engaging anecdotes. Sober
since 1978, Collins said that in her youth she was not experimenting with
recreational drugs because “I was afraid they would interfere with my
drinking.” Her friend Al Kooper (Blood, Sweat and Tears) connected her on the
telephone at 3 a.m. with a “hot girl he met in a bar” who wrote great songs; after
hearing Joni Mitchell sing “Both Sides Now” over the telephone, Collins
recorded the song the next day. Collins was present when Bob Dylan was writing “Mr.
Tambourine Man” in 1965, and so was the first person to hear the song. Collins met
Leonard Cohen when he was a poet and novelist; she encouraged him to become a
singer-songwriter when he sang “Suzanne” for her - “That’s a song,” she reportedly
said to him.
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| Writer and political analyst Molly Jong-Fast introduced Martha Redbone; Jong-Fast and Judy Collins built a friendship through Molly's mother, Erica Jong |
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| Martha Redbone sang a capella on “Dreamers,” a social commentary which Collins composed after President Donald Trump’s first election. |
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| Paula Cole performed Collins’ “My Father” |
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| Sophie B. Hawkins performed Joan Baez's "Diamonds & Rust" |
Accompanied
by her 12-string acoustic guitar and her band, Collins opened the evening with “Mountain
Girl,” Bob Dylan’s “Masters of War”, “John Riley” and Joni Mitchell’s “Both
Sides Now.” Collins and the musicians then exited the stage so that the guests
could perform their tributes. Collins later came back to perform more songs
from her recording history. She performed “The Blizzard” solo on piano, “Strangers
Again” with Ari Hest, Sandy Denny’s “Who Knows Where the Time Goes” with
Richard Thompson, Leonard Cohen’s “Bird on a Wire,” Stephen Sondheim’s “Send in
the Clowns,” and Crosby, Stills & Nash’s “Helplessly Hoping” with a barely
audible Stephen Stills. The entire cast returned to the stage for what seemed
to be an under-rehearsed “Suite: Judy Blue Eyes,” which Stills wrote about Collins,
yet when she coaxed him to sing lead, he declined. Awkwardly, the musicians
played, and members of the audience sang in the void.
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| Richard Thompson joined Collins for Sandy Denny's “Who Knows Where the Time Goes?” which Collins recorded in 1968; Thompson also recorded the song with Denny in 1969 when they were together in Fairport Convention |
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| Stephen Stills, once Judy Collins' lover, who composed Crosby, Stills & Nash's "Suite: Judy Blue Eyes" about her, praised her late husband, Louis Nelson, who passed away in December 2024 |
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| Stephen Stills and Judy Collins sang a duet on Crosby, Stills & Nash's "Helplessly Hoping," although his vocals were barely audible |
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| Stephen Stills and Judy Collins |
For
more than 60 years, Judy Collins has inspired audiences with sublime vocals,
boldly vulnerable songwriting, personal life triumphs, and a firm commitment to
social justice. Now approaching her 86th birthday, she remains as vibrant as
ever, with her vocals and her showmanship holding steadfastly at the top of her
game. Judy Collins & Friends: 85 Years of Music & Protest proved
to be a fitting tribute to Judy Collins’ legacy as a musician and social
activist.
All photographs by Sachyn Mital
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| Finale: "Suite: Judy Blue Eyes" |
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Finale: "Suite: Judy Blue Eyes"
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***
The Manhattan Beat reports on New York City's
live music circuit. All articles are written by Everynight Charley Crespo. All
photographs are taken by Everynight Charley Crespo, except when noted
otherwise.
For a list of Manhattan
venues that are presenting live music regularly, swing the desktop cursor to
the right of the The Manhattan Beat home page and click on the
pop-up tab "Where to Find Live Music."
For a more complete listing of upcoming
performances in the New York City area, visit The Manhattan Beat's
March
calendar.
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