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Artist:Arlo Guthrie [ more ]
Song:Alice's Restaurant
Album:Alice's Restaurant [ info ]
Released:1967
Last Played:Nov 22, 2012 - 15:00
Avg. Rating:6.5  (Total Ratings: 434)
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Ratings Dist:
1 votes: 96 (22%)2 votes: 10 (2.3%)3 votes: 12 (2.8%)4 votes: 8 (1.8%)5 votes: 8 (1.8%)6 votes: 12 (2.8%)7 votes: 39 (9%)8 votes: 82 (19%)9 votes: 86 (20%)10 votes: 81 (19%)
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296 comments for this song:spacerLog in above to post your comment

funkyalfonso
(Vancouver Island)
Posted: Nov 22, 2012 - 15:55 

I just heard the Massacree and that's why I listen to RP.. Who else would play it? Outstanding.
GawgaBoy
(State of Confusion)
Posted: Nov 22, 2012 - 15:41 

 Pedro1874 wrote:
Happy Thanksgiving to all those of you "across the pond".  hadn't heard this for so long.  It reminded me of an oldie from 1968 - and I still have the album.  Jaime Brockett and the " Ballad of the USS Titanic" which comes in at 13m 28s and VERY funny.
 
thank you, thank you, thank you....   I have wondered and asked for years trying to find out the name of this song and artist.  I used to hear it on WPLO FM in Atlanta back in the late 60's or early 70's but had no idea who the performer was.  It's been 40 years, I'm about to go see if it lives up to the memory.
impediguy
Posted: Nov 22, 2012 - 15:31 

I learned how to play this on guitar when I was about 11 years old, before ever hearing the actual song. And so, before I knew it, I became part of a movement (as explained in the song) at a very early age. And as it turned out, it was truly a very moving song. Thanks for playing it Bill.
haresfur
(Bendigo Australia)
Posted: Nov 22, 2012 - 15:23 

 reijkman wrote:
When I heard this this afternoon (CET) for the first time I was pleasantly surprised, however 2 times Alice's Restaurant within 12 hours is just a little bit too much...
 
Perhaps but I'm glad I didn't have to get up in the middle of the night to listen.  World-wide audience and all that, eh?  Thanks for the tradition, Bill.
Krispian
(Vancouver, BC)
Posted: Nov 22, 2012 - 15:19 

 Hogard wrote:
And there you have it... 18+ minutes of amelodical ear raping...  {#Eek}  ...I'm still stunned... 
 
{#Lol}
reijkman
(The Netherlands)
Posted: Nov 22, 2012 - 15:17 

When I heard this this afternoon (CET) for the first time I was pleasantly surprised, however 2 times Alice's Restaurant within 12 hours is just a little bit too much...
pirhan
Posted: Nov 22, 2012 - 15:12 

I've been listening to RP for years and somehow have missed this. Heard it this morning and right now. Fantastic rambling humorous song. Thanks Bill & Rebecca, enjoy your Turkey Day.
westslope
(BC coast)
Posted: Nov 22, 2012 - 15:04 

This has to be the most subversive Thanksgiving song ever.  LOL!

 

Happy Thanksgiving to the American brothers and sisters.

 

P.S.  Who ever helped write the TV film series Sons of Anarchy must have listened to this song.


Kaiser
(Connecticut)
Posted: Nov 22, 2012 - 15:01 

Been a few years since I've listened to it all the way through.  Thanks Bill! :)  Happy Thanksgiving.
Pedro1874
(Newton-le-Willows, England)
Posted: Nov 22, 2012 - 09:42 

Happy Thanksgiving to all those of you "across the pond".  hadn't heard this for so long.  It reminded me of an oldie from 1968 - and I still have the album.  Jaime Brockett and the " Ballad of the USS Titanic" which comes in at 13m 28s and VERY funny.
msymmes
(Toronto, CA)
Posted: Nov 22, 2012 - 09:41 

Neat info...  I saw Ian touring the memorial in Oklahoma city (among other things).  A very good episode.
 

Boy_Wonder wrote:

Well spotted Fred... missed it the first time around.... will try and find time to listen again.... the joys of proper Public Service broadcasting, God bless the BBC and all who broadcast on her!!

Image for Alice's Restaurant
Availability: over a year left to listen
Duration: 30 minutes
First broadcast: Saturday 17 November 2012

Ian McMillan goes in search of the people and places described in Arlo Guthrie's 1960's ballad, Alice's Restaurant and discovers how this eighteen minute song inspired a generation and still plays a unique part in American life today.

It's a piece that's had a profound effect on Ian ever since he first heard it as a twelve year old in Barnsley; his first introduction to small town America and the anti-war movement.On Thursday it'll be played on radio stations across the States, as America celebrates Thanksgiving. This song, that starts with a visit to the town dump and ends lampooning the Vietnam draft, was based on a true Thanksgiving day incident in Guthrie's life.

In the late 60's and 70's no student, either side of the Atlantic, would be thought to have a respectable record collection without the inclusion of the bright yellow LP with a photograph of the bare-chested, bowler-hatted, cutlery-brandishing singer, on the front.
Ian visits Stockbridge,the setting for the song and is taken to the scene of the crime, by the town's current police chief, Rick Wilcox and he goes to Great Barrington to visit the church where it all began.

He meets others for whom the song has been hugely important, including teacher, George Dunn who remembers being at the Rockport Folk Festival in 1968 when Arlo first performed the song for a live audience. And in Maine Ian sings along with generations of children who've attended The Children's Garden Pre-school, for whom Alice's Restaurant has always been a key part of their curriculum.

Finally Ian's forty year old dream comes true when he meets Alice, now an artist with a gallery in Provincetown on Cape Cod, they talk about what the song has meant to her over the years.

 


k1j2cat
Posted: Nov 22, 2012 - 09:41 

 Really? "Destroys"? What happened to "eclectic" and variety?

caramori wrote:

Please, this song is ... no comment! Don't play again. Never... It destroys Radioparadise.
 


Huey
(Netherlands)
Posted: Nov 22, 2012 - 09:41 

What are we giving thanks for??{#Silenced}
jimbaca
(The Space-Time Continuum)
Posted: Nov 22, 2012 - 09:40 

Love this, although this is another "you had to be there" in order to get it.  Thanks for playing this!
Hogard
Posted: Nov 22, 2012 - 09:39 

And there you have it... 18+ minutes of amelodical ear raping...  {#Eek}  ...I'm still stunned... 
dewinter
(Providence, RI)
Posted: Nov 22, 2012 - 09:38 

I love the late 1960s "bizzarity"!  Thanks, Bill!
caramori
(Brazil)
Posted: Nov 22, 2012 - 09:38 

Please, this song is ... no comment! Don't play again. Never... It destroys Radioparadise.
ploba
(the other coast and hang a left)
Posted: Nov 22, 2012 - 09:37 

gosh has another year passed already!
Bocephus
(Boulder, CO)
Posted: Nov 22, 2012 - 09:37 

This has been a tradition for me to listen to RP when they play this for many years now. Thanks Bill! Now it can be Thanksgiving.
k1j2cat
Posted: Nov 22, 2012 - 09:37 

Still love hearing this song every year. Awesome!

Must be hard for those listeners who don't remember the draft. Ah, youth!
Axelito
(France)
Posted: Nov 22, 2012 - 09:37 

 oliverhaug1 wrote:
Where is the Fast Forward Button......
 



Im so lucky, i connect just at the end!!
JrzyTmata
Posted: Nov 22, 2012 - 09:36 

 MANIAK_dobrii wrote:

Please never repeat this again. This totally sucks, that thing annoys me soooooooooo much!!! (and everybody around me, true story)

So please, don't do that again that's too long. I just want that *^$#%& to shut up!!! (listening via stream url, so no PSD)

Please, please, please, never again.

 
it's going to happen again 6 hours from now, so get ready.
You can press that button up there labeled PSD and listen to something else.
oliverhaug1
Posted: Nov 22, 2012 - 09:36 

Where is the Fast Forward Button......
KristianGregory
Posted: Nov 22, 2012 - 09:35 

That was....surreal....
hanssachs
(Hawaii)
Posted: Nov 22, 2012 - 09:33 

Traveling back in time - haven't hears this for years.  As someone who was himself inducted into the Armed Forces, long ago, I always remember the Group W bench, and wonder about the vagaries of fate and rehabilitation.  It's still a great recording, even if it isn't everyday fare ... love it!  
Hogard
Posted: Nov 22, 2012 - 09:33 

This song made me want to change chanel... Can imagine it being fun when you really want to listen to it... but for me now... too long and way too annoying...

Please... Please... Don't annoy me with this stuff. 
Boy_Wonder
(Bath, back in the UK)
Posted: Nov 22, 2012 - 09:32 


Well spotted Fred... missed it the first time around.... will try and find time to listen again.... the joys of proper Public Service broadcasting, God bless the BBC and all who broadcast on her!!

Image for Alice's Restaurant
Availability: over a year left to listen
Duration: 30 minutes
First broadcast: Saturday 17 November 2012

Ian McMillan goes in search of the people and places described in Arlo Guthrie's 1960's ballad, Alice's Restaurant and discovers how this eighteen minute song inspired a generation and still plays a unique part in American life today.

It's a piece that's had a profound effect on Ian ever since he first heard it as a twelve year old in Barnsley; his first introduction to small town America and the anti-war movement.On Thursday it'll be played on radio stations across the States, as America celebrates Thanksgiving. This song, that starts with a visit to the town dump and ends lampooning the Vietnam draft, was based on a true Thanksgiving day incident in Guthrie's life.

In the late 60's and 70's no student, either side of the Atlantic, would be thought to have a respectable record collection without the inclusion of the bright yellow LP with a photograph of the bare-chested, bowler-hatted, cutlery-brandishing singer, on the front.
Ian visits Stockbridge,the setting for the song and is taken to the scene of the crime, by the town's current police chief, Rick Wilcox and he goes to Great Barrington to visit the church where it all began.

He meets others for whom the song has been hugely important, including teacher, George Dunn who remembers being at the Rockport Folk Festival in 1968 when Arlo first performed the song for a live audience. And in Maine Ian sings along with generations of children who've attended The Children's Garden Pre-school, for whom Alice's Restaurant has always been a key part of their curriculum.

Finally Ian's forty year old dream comes true when he meets Alice, now an artist with a gallery in Provincetown on Cape Cod, they talk about what the song has meant to her over the years.


Doogie
(Somewhere I am not supposed to be)
Posted: Nov 22, 2012 - 09:31 

Can't beleive it is another year!
I have been listening to classical lately but this morning for some reason, I put on RP.
Good Karma to all
Happy Thanksgiving!

Thanks RP!
MANIAK_dobrii
Posted: Nov 22, 2012 - 09:30 

Please never repeat this again. This totally sucks, that thing annoys me soooooooooo much!!! (and everybody around me, true story)

So please, don't do that again that's too long. I just want that *^$#%& to shut up!!! (listening via stream url, so no PSD)

Please, please, please, never again.


coloradojohn
(A Mile High and then some, Cherry Creek, Denver)
Posted: Nov 22, 2012 - 09:28 

All through the '70s, quotes from this were popular cultural touchstones, and our junior high Science teacher was quite fond of them, to the benefit of our Merriment and Education.  A worthy, valuable American slice from the Preserved Time-Core of the continuum of Comedy, Literature, and Art!  Arlo nailed it!  Thanks, RP!
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