Fred Hellerman, a
founding member of the influential folk music quartet the Weavers, has died. He
was 89.
Hellerman died
Thursday at his home in Weston, Connecticut, after a lengthy illness, his son,
Caleb Hellerman, said Friday.
The Weavers were
formed in the late 1940s by Hellerman along with Pete Seeger, Lee Hays and
Ronnie Gilbert. They helped to popularize folk music in the United States with
recordings including "Goodnight Irene" and "On Top of Old
Smoky." The group disbanded after they were black-listed by
anti-Communists in the early 1950s, but performed again into the 1960s and then
at a reunion concert at Carnegie Hall in 1980.
Hellerman also
produced Arlo Guthire's 1967 record, "Alice's Restaurant," and worked
with several artists over his career as a composer, arranger and songwriter.
Hellerman was born
in Brooklyn, New York, and his first displayed his love for music by
collaborating on stage plays in the Yiddish theater, his son said. He learned
to play guitar while serving in the U.S. Coast Guard and teamed up with the
other musicians while living in New York City's Greenwich Village.
He moved to Weston
in 1969, installing a recording studio in the home that would often be visited
by Seeger and other artists.
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