The early-to-mid 1960s was a great time to be a folk singer, whether or not you were the protesting type. And Arlo Guthrie, son of Woody Guthrie, had the decade pretty much fall into his lap. It didn't hurt that he was actually kind of good at it. And when, as a freewheeling 17-year-old, he and a friend took a fateful trip to the town of Stockbridge, Massachusetts to visit a couple of friends for the Thanksgiving weekend. It turned out to be an adventure that he later immortalized in a song. Between airplay on a single radio station in New York City and its inclusion on the Newport Folk Festival's main stage, Arlo was able to get a record contract and the song became the entire first side of his debut album.
Arlo Guthrie in a still fromthe 1969 film Alice's Restaurant
And despite the song's 18-1/2 minute length, and its subject matter (much of which was taboo then), and some of the language used (some of which is taboo now), the song continues to get radio airplay, in full, and unedited.
Although the restaurant and the microbus are long gone, Guthrie continues to perform the song from time to time, though he'll update the lyrics so that they're either more topical or less offensive. Or both.
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