Joseph Glazer (June 19, 1918 – September 19, 2006) was an American folk musician who recorded more than thirty albums over the course of his career. He was closely associated with labor unions and often referred to as "labor's troubadour".
Some of his more acclaimed songs include "The Mill Was Made of Marble," "Too Old To Work" and "Automaton." He recorded "In Old Moscow" ("My Darling Party Line"), a song which ridiculed the Communist Party USA's Stalinist reversal following the 1939 Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact.[5] In 1954 Glazer released two albums of music from the Industrial Workers of the World, including one entirely of songs by Wobbly songwriter Joe Hill, released by Folkways Records.
In 1960 Glazer collaborated with Edith Fowke to publish Songs of Work and Freedom, which included 10 of his original compositions. He went on to dedicate numerous albums to specific trades, including coal mining, newspaper printing, steelwork, textile mills, and woodworking.
In 1970 Glazer founded Collector Records, originally to issue his own recordings, and, later, recordings by other performers. Collector's first release was Glazer's 1971 album Garbage and Other Songs of Our Times backed by jazz guitarist Charlie Byrd and his trio. The title track became one of Glazer's most well-known songs after Pete Seeger performed it on Sesame Street and recorded versions of it both for the children's music and environmentalism markets.
In 1979, Glazer invited 14 other labor musicians to the George Meany Center for Labor Studies in Silver Spring, Maryland, to share musical and written compositions, and to discuss the effective use of music, song, poetry and chants in labor activism. The three-day event became an annual one, becoming known as the Great Labor Arts Exchange (GLAE). Over the next five years, the concept of "labor culture" and how the labor movement and the arts interacted, which Glazer and others promoted, expanded. In 1984, Glazer incorporated the Labor Heritage Foundation as a parent body for GLAE as well as to curate and promote the culture of the American labor movement.[6]
Songs of the Wobblies. Labor Arts, 1954, reissued on LP 1977 and cassette in 1988 by Collector Records.
Joe Glazer and the PAC Bucks. CIO Education and Research Department, 1955.
Image of History: Twenty Years of the CIO. UAW Education Department, 1956.
A Douglas for Me and Other Songs of the New Democratic Party of Canada. Woodworth Book Club of Canada, 1956.
Ballads for Ballots. Sound Studios, 1956, reissued by Labor's Committee for Kennedy and Johnson, 1960.
Union Songs. UAW Education Department, 1958.
1960s
Songs of Work and Freedom. Washington Records WR-4601, 1960.
Democratic Music. Democratic Committee for John F. Kennedy for President, 1960.
Songs of Coal. Sound Studios, 1964.
The Golden Presses – That Heavenly Newspaper Plant. The American Newspaper Guild, 1966.
My Darling Party Line. Sound Studios, 1968. Reissued as cassette, 1988.
AFSCME Sings with Joe Glazer, 1968. Reissued in 1971 as Joe Glazer Sings Labor Songs, Collector Records #1918.
Singing about Our Union. AFSCME, 1969.
1970s
Joe Glazer Sings Garbage – and Other Songs of Our Times with the Charlie Byrd Trio. Collector Records #1919, 1971. Reissued in 1980 with 2 extra tracks, and in 1993 as a cassette.
Joe Glazer Live at Vail. Central Pension Fund of the OEIU, 1973.
Songs of Steel and Struggle – the Story of the Steelworkers of America. Collector Records, 1975.
Down in a Coal Mine. Collector Records #1923, 1974. Reissued in 1997 as a cassette.
Textile Voices – Songs and Stories of the Mills. Collector Records #1922, 1975. Reissued 1985 as a cassette.
Singing BRAC with Joe Glazer. Collector Records #1924, 1975.
Union Train. Collector Records #1925, 1975.
Songs for Woodworkers. Collector Records #1929, 1997.
1980s
Service Employees International Sings with Joe Glazer. SEIU, 1980.
Joe Glazer Sings Labor Songs. Collector Records, 1980. Reissued 1988 as a cassette; reissued 1994 as a CD.
A Century of Labor Songs. Collector Records #1934, 1981.
Jellybean Blues—Songs of Reaganomics. Collector Records #1935, 1982. Also issued 1982 as a cassette.
Jellybean Blues, Vol. II. Collector Records #1935, 1984. Also issued 1984 as a cassette.
Songs for USIA. Collector Records, 1985, cassette.
Fifty Years of the UAW. Collector Records #1934. 1985, cassette.
Bricklayin' Union Man. Collector Records #1991, 1987, cassette.
Old Folks Ain't All the Same. Collector Records # 1942, 1987. Also issued 1987 as a cassette.
Joe Glazer Sings Labor Songs, II. Collector Records #1944, 1989, cassette, reissued on CD in 2001
The Jewish Immigrant Experience in America. Collector Records #1945, 1989, cassette.
1990s
Sing and Build – Songs for Architects, Builders and Planners. Collector Records #1950, 1991, cassette.
Welcome to America – Songs of the American Immigrants. Collector Records #1952, 1990, cassette.
Folk Songs of the American Dream. Collector Records #1954, 1995, cassette and CD.
The Music of American Politics. Collector Records #1955, 1996, cassette and CD.[9]