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Barbara Dane just can't recall any good fascist songs

PRI's The World

To hear Barbara Dane interviewed by Marco Werman click here.

Some feel that protest music today isn't what it used to be. For Dane, the genre hasn't really gone anywhere — it's just a matter of a good search.

In 1969, Barbara Dane founded Paredon Records with her late husband, Irwin Silber. The label produced 50 titles capturing the various 20th century struggles for racial, economic and social justice.

From music to speeches, Paredon Records spanned the globe bringing voices from people in Cuba, Puerto Rico, Ireland, Palestine, Italy, Thailand and many other places. Dane introduced songs of struggle, which sparked more than lingering emotions. She said that Paredon Records produces the “music of the people” and, contrary to what some may think, it's “not just some poetic device.”

Both Silbuer and Dane were committed to social change and were able to find voices that were out of the reach of large audiences or silenced by their own governments. They were radicals for the time and were committed to using music to connect larger audiences in the United States to different groups' struggles.

“My thought was, This will get these terrific songs from all these different languages, all these different movements, and in a form that people in the US could understand,” she said. She went on to say, “the main impulse was that people were striving for various kinds of liberation and making songs about it.”

Dane was fascinated by cultures outside of her own, and she worked to educate others about them, as well

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Each record was accompanied by a booklet of information about the relevant political movement and other struggles being described in the music and speeches. Dane called them “a little graduate study,” to provide context for American audiences that may have been apathetic or isolated from global news. Dane’s earlier involvement in anti-war demonstrations, a childhood wrapped in Detroit segregation and a desire to give voice and rhythm to stories about people inspired her to begin the label — and even to end it.

When it started to become "a real business," she explains, it was time to transition back to production and activism.

Future Folk shares the stories of communities through the music that they make. It is a co-production of PRI’s The World and the Smithsonian Folklife Festival.

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