Tag Archives: Folk Music

Matt Baldwin – Passing Through

Event host & organizer as well as author of a Leonard Cohen biography, Sylvie Simmons, introduces solo guitarist Matt Baldwin who performs a classic progressive folk tune from the late 40’s. apparently “PASSING THROUGH” is the only published tune by a Chicago folk musician named Richard (Dick) Cleveland Blakeslee. Inspired to send it to the People’s Songs organization in New York, his home-cut acetate disc arrived at the offices of the loose knit non-profit predecessor to “Sing-Out’ whose members included Mo Asch, Anges “Sis” Cunningham, Tom Glazer, Woody Guthrie, Lee Hays. They regularly published a newsletter to share new folk songs for the progressive labor movement to shareand in turn, the tune was soon introduced via the newsletter to sympathetic subscribers around the same time as We Shall Overcome. Blakeslee’s song was recorded and popularized by Pete Seeger, and sung by him regularly throughout the  1948 Presidential election campaign when Seeger was backing Progressive Party candidate Henry Wallace. Other renditions of the song have been recorded by The HighwaymenCisco HoustonEarl Scruggs, & on a 1970 live album by Leonard Cohen.

I saw jesus on the cross on a hill called calvary
“do you hate mankind for what they done to you? “
He said, “talk of love not hate, things to do – it’s getting late.
I’ve so little time and I’m only passing through.”Passing through, passing through.


Sometimes happy, sometimes blue,
Glad that I ran into you.
Tell the people that you saw me passing through.

I saw adam leave the garden with an apple in his hand,
I said “now you’re out, what are you going to do? “
“plant some crops and pray for rain, maybe raise a little cane.
I’m an orphan now, and I’m only passing through.”Passing through, passing through

…I was with Washington at valley ford, shivering in the snow.

I said, “how come the men here suffer like they do? “
“men will suffer, men will fight, even die for what is right
Even though they know they’re only passing through”Passing through, passing through

…I was with Franklin Roosevelt’s side on the night before he died.
He said, “one world must come out of world war two” (ah, the fool)
“yankee, russian, white or tan, ” he said, “a man is still a man.


We’re all on one road, and we’re only passing through.”Passing through, passing through …Passing through, passing through …

-Dick Blakeslee

This was recorded at a post-humous Cohen tribute and benefit for the San Francisco Community Music Center held at The Chapel at 777 Valencia St in San Francisco. The San Francisco Community Music Center ( http://SFCMC.org) is a non-profit school founded in 1921 with the mission of making music accessible to all people, regardless of their financial means. They offer classes for people of all ages, abilities and interests and financial aid to all who need it.

Buffy Sainte Marie vs Jane Pauley

A 1978 interview featuring Buffy St Marie (born Beverly Jean Santamaria into an Italo-American family in Massachusetts), who has long portrayed herself as a native american musician and activist, seen here performing with an indigenous tribal mouthbow on a network program with the daytime TV talk show hostess & newscaster Jane Pauley

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Buffy Sainte-Marie, introduced many Americans to the plight of the Native American Indians with the song, “Now that the Buffalo’s Gone”. Ever since her folk songs found an audience from her start in the Greenwich Village folk scene, Buffy Sainte-Marie has been publicizing the cause of Native People’s cultural recognition, and for autonomy and jurisdiction over their own Indian reservations. Buffy’s 60 year career as a performer became intertwined with the cause of indigenous people, as she wore Native American garb and beadwork, even becoming a regular on the TV show “Sesame Street” where she taught children about Indian customs songs and language, especially her supposedly native Cree.

While rumors long existed, with newspaper accounts dating back to 1964 calling into question her truthfulness, her passionate performances were rarely called into question. It wasn’t until decades later her ruse was definitively exposed by a detailed 2023 Canadian Broadcasting investigation of her origin story, with unearthed birth certificate, home movies, and accounts of family members’, including her niece, that exposed the media myth that Buffy St Marie was born on a reservation in Saskatchewan. Now 82, a few years after she was honored on a Canadian Postage Stamp, and through a PBS American Masters doc film called “Carry It On” that has since won an International Emmy, the Stoneham Massachusetts born singer/activist, and what some call one of “Pretendians” (pretend Indians), has retired from the public eye.

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