Ron Radosh

May 7th, 2009 5:23 pm

Roy Berkeley, R.I.P.

A short while ago, my old friend Roy Berkeley passed away, after a lengthy battle with cancer.  Some from the folk music world may have known him. He was a mainstay in the late 1950’s and early 1960’s of the New York City folk scene, along with people like Dave Van Ronk, The New Lost City Ramblers, Ramblin’ Jack Elliott and others. Roy played flatpick country/folk guitar, and sounded like a cross between Jimmie Rodgers and Woody Guthrie. During these years, along with Van Ronk and others, he wrote a parody of the well known leftist songbook, The People’s Songbook, that he called The Bosses’ Songbook.

Roy was also a political activist—a man who moved from the Trotskyist movement (like Van Ronk, he was always an anti-Stalinist)  to social democracy and then to Republican Party conservatism. A member of the NRA, he was devoted to the safe use of guns, and eventually became deputy sheriff in his town of Shaftsbury, Vermont.

To honor Roy, I wrote the following letter to him, to be read in early June at a memorial service to be held in the Vermont he loved so much:

Dear Roy,

            Boy, you and I go way back, all the way to those heady youthful times at Washington Square in the 1950’s. And you were always a step ahead of me. When someone first saw me talking to you, I think it was the Communist writer Mike Gold’s son Carl Granich, he warned me: “Don’t you know Roy’s a Trotskyite?” Somehow, I took his warning in vain, and became your friend anyway. Of course, back then I was a diehard unreconstructed Commie. Then, I eventually moved a bit and became a democratic socialist. Too late: you informed me you had become a dreaded Shachtmanite-a third camp socialist who saw the US and the USSR as the same. Then you moved along with your group to believing that freedom and democracy was alone supported by the United States, just as I was moving to the position that the US was not as bad as the Soviet Union and its satellites, just a little better.  Finally, in the past few years, I called myself a neo-conservative. You still beat me. You became both a deputy sheriff, a gun toting NRA member, and a rock-ribbed Republican.  Just proves I couldn’t keep up with you!

            Anyway, I was so saddened that you chose this month to leave us all. I think I have a sneaking suspicion of why you did this. You were seeking the perfect excuse to miss going to Pete Seeger’s 90th birthday bash at Madison Square Garden. I know what you were planning. You were going to bring a guitar, leap up onto the stage, and sing that wonderful song you penned for The Bosses’ Songbook, “The Ballad of a Party Folksinger,” which you originally titled “The Ballad of Pete Seeger,” but which I recall, your fellow editor Dave Van Ronk thought might be libelous. I could see security rushing the stage, as you belted out that verse:

He went for his orders at Party headquarters,
Saying Pete, you’re way behind time,
It’s not ‘38 but ‘2009′
and there’s been a change in the Party line
.

I guess you knew they wouldn’t allow you to do that,  and you avoided the stress that would have caused you.  Well, anyone who wants to can still buy your record of the old Almanac Singers anti-FDR songs, believe it or not, at the FDR Library in Hyde Park. At least you’re not censored down there. Better than the guy who made the documentary film on Seeger, and cut out of it every piece of footage he filmed of you. Unlike me, who said a few nice things about Pete (giving him credit for reviving interest in American roots music) you simply blasted him, leaving no way he could edit it as he did to me. You were just too tough!

So, old friend. I have wonderful memories of the time we spent at your beautiful home, where you tried to instruct me how to shoot a pistol at a target, as I failed each time. “You’ve got to be prepared for the Revolution,” you admonished me, “what are you going to do when the capitalists come at you with their guns?” Guess I’ll have to talk them down, Roy.

Anyway, when I eventually join you, I know where to find you. You’ll be part of that great band picking and singing with Jimmie Rodgers, Hank Williams and Woody Guthrie, and having a blast. Yeah, I know I could never really play well (you suck, Ron) you told me a couple of years ago, just let me sit in on one song, ok?  

We’ll then pick up where we left off. As Woody said, “take it easy, but take it.” Be seeing you, Roy. 

Your good friend,

Ron Radosh

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5 Comments

1. David Thomson:

May God Bless him. I’m sure he was a good man.

May 8, 2009 - 4:52 am 2. vb:

That is a beautiful tribute to one who sounds like a fine man.

May 9, 2009 - 6:58 am 3. In the Mexican suitcase « Poumista:

[...] Ron Radosh on Roy Berkeley, ex-Trotskyist folk guitarist Possibly related posts: (automatically generated)PoumaramaStephen Suleyman Schwartz on POUM historiographyBad uses of the Spanish Civil War continued“This is war”, the legacy of Gerda Taro Published in: [...]

May 12, 2009 - 1:20 am 4. Henry:

I learned a lot about music and folksong from Roy and a lot less about politics. Remember talking music at the New School over the course of several years and multiple classes Very good listener and along with Erik Darling he shaped my musical identity. But talking about the Communist Party USA, The Soviet Union and the Iron Curtain is the mark of someone who doesn’t have a much to think about that is happening today. Seems like all you want to say is “I told you so”. Time to get off the Good Old Days. The Days that made you successful and prominent. It’s the 21st century. The 20th century is dead and gone. All that’s left is some fine songs. Roy had lots more to say than the same repeated political rhetoric and that’s what I’ll remember. And I do miss him. He played a mean guitar too.

By the way in the book,”Wasn’t That A Time Firsthand accounts of the folk revival ” by Ronald D.Cohen
printed in 1995, there is a nice piece on the New York Scene written by Roy Berkeley and another by fierce anti-communist Izzy Young who despite his beliefs can share a stage with Irwin Silber whose past views I had trouble understanding but who I don’t have to rant and rave against every time his name is mentioned. You should read the book even if it is dedicated to Pete Seeger. Also with your bucks, you might think about getting the Bear Family $300 anthology of Songs for Political Action. Not a White wash but it really expanded borders.

Jun 3, 2009 - 7:11 pm 5. joan Marie:

Amazing obituary, of sorts. It saddened me, all he moreso since I lie in Vermont now an had no idea Roy Berkeley did too.
I had haphazardly googled Roy, a guy I dated when I was on a co-op job from Antioch, from whom I learned all those crazy lefty songs and more. I think I met you, Ron, back in 1956, and Dave I knew well, since at the time he was omni- present in the life of a dear friend of mine with whom I shared a place that folks nicknamed the Nunnery, on Cooper Square (building now demolished, like so much in NYC)
But to imagine Roy as a Republican is nearly impossible.

Oct 21, 2009 - 10:37 pm

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