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Singer Utah Phillips left a colorful legacy

If your wages were low and your hands calloused, his songs – and his heart – were all yours.

By Stephen Magagnini - smagagnini@sacbee.com

Published 12:00 am PDT Sunday, May 25, 2008
Story appeared in METRO section, Page B1

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Folk singer, anarchist, social reformer and man of the people Bruce "Utah" Phillips died in his Nevada City home Friday night of congestive heart failure.

Phillips, 73, was beloved on two continents for his big heart, along with his wit, wisdom, wild, white beard and willingness to stand tall for his beliefs.

He ran for president but never voted. Emmylou Harris, Waylon Jennings, Joan Baez, Tom Waits and his friend Arlo Guthrie all sing Utah Phillips songs, but he refused to let Johnny Cash make an album of his standards, his eldest son said, because he didn't trust the record industry.

Phillips, a onetime hobo and railroad tramp, reached out to the homeless in Nevada County in 2005, when he and his wife, Joanna Robinson, created a rotating homeless shelter at area churches.

"They're housing 25 to 30 people every night," said longtime friend Jordan Fisher Smith. "Instead of asking the government to do it, they solicited the help of their friends and neighbors and local churches and just created services for these people that weren't there.

"Bruce at his core was an anarchist," said Smith, who befriended him 20 years ago when he moved to Nevada City. "The name 'Utah' stuck because he'd lived in Utah, riding freights in the West."

In "All Used Up," Phillips sings of a boss who "used up my labor, he used up my time, he plundered my body and squandered my mind. Then he gave me a pension, some handouts and wine,

And told me I'm all used up...

"They use up the oil, they use up the trees

They use up the air and they use up the seas

But as long as I'm breathing they won't use up me

Don't tell me I'm all used up."

The son of labor organizers, Phillips was a lifelong member of the Industrial Workers of the World, known as the Wobblies, Smith said.

He served in the Korean War, then came home devastated by the misery he'd seen and began drinking and drifting.

In the late '50s, broke and broken-hearted, Phillips rolled into Salt Lake City on a freight train and ended up at the Joe Hill House, a homeless shelter run by anarchist Ammon Hennacy.

He helped out at Joe Hill House and became a pacifist and a performer influenced by folk legends Woody Guthrie and Pete Seeger, country stars Hank Williams, T. Texas Tyler, comic Myron Cohen and novelist Thomas Wolfe, Smith said.

Phillips ran for U.S. Senate on the Peace and Freedom Ticket in 1968 and lost, then left Utah for Saratoga Springs and became a fixture at the Caffe Lena.

After his first record, "Moose Turd Pie," about laying track for the Sante Fe railroad, hit the airwaves in 1973, Phillips hit the road.

He toured North America and Europe, and was the first – and last – performer at the iconic barn and roadhouse in Davis, the Palms Playhouse, which closed in 2002 and was reborn in Winters.

About that time, Phillips began his struggle with chronic heart disease but never lost his wit or passion for social justice.

At the Strawberry Music Festival last spring, Phillips mesmerized the crowd using "a guitar handed down by my grandfather – unfortunately he was still on the ladder when the cops came."

His oldest son, Duncan Phillips of Salt Lake City, who reunited with him 15 years ago, said, "He was truly a man of the people – he represented the working class, the working poor, the homeless, he was part of them.

"He spoke for them in many ways, through song and activism. He's probably the most principled person I'd ever met – he would stick to what he believed in no matter what, and he'd sacrifice for it."

Duncan Phillips recalled the day Johnny Cash called "and wanted to record his songs, and my dad wouldn't let Johnny do it because he didn't like what the record industry stood for."

Mr. Phillips' own label was called "No Guff."

He ran for president in 1976 as an anarchist with a do-nothing platform, and told Bee reporter Blair Anthony Robertson, "I guarantee that if I took over the White House I would not do anything. I would scratch my butt and shoot pool."

Mr. Phillips, for all his activism, "never voted," his son said. "He said he cast a vote every day he went out in the world and did something. If you want to make change, go out and actually do it yourself. He didn't need to hand over any responsibility to politicians who aren't beholden to the working class."

Duncan Phillips said he'll never forget all the people who would come up to his dad in the lobby before the shows "and say he'd changed their lives."

Phillips, who declined a heart transplant earlier this year, died in bed with his wife around 11:30 p.m.

"You would never know his problems by talking to him," he son said.

"He was a very engaging, very upbeat, very happy person. He was like that when I last talked to him."

About the writer:

  • Call The Bee's Stephen Magagnini, (916) 321-1072.
Recommend this story at Yahoo! Buzz:

Folk singer Utah Phillips, left, chats with a man who identified himself as Ziggy Agalugus during a food giveaway for Nevada City's homeless. Phillips was a fighter for those who needed help, a friend recalled. Carl Costas / Sacramento Bee file, 2005


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BRUCE "UTAH" PHILLIPS

Born: May 15, 1935

Died: May 23, 2008

Remembered for: A singer of songs, teller of tales, one-time tramp and hobo turned anarchist and fighter for social justice, he became an widely popular performer and recording artist, started a homeless shelter in Nevada City and launched a nationally syndicated folk-music radio show, "Loafer's Glory," produced at KVMR-FM.

Survived by: His wife, Joanna Robinson; his sons, Duncan of Salt Lake City, and Brendan of Olympia, Wash.; daughter Morrigan Belle of Washington, D.C.; two stepsons, Nicholas Tomb of Monterey and Ian Durfee of Davis; three brothers, David Phillips of Fairfield, Ed Phillips of Cleveland and Stuart Cohen of Los Angeles; sister Deborah Cohen of Lisbon, Portugal; and a grandchild.

Remembrances: Services have not been set. The family requests memorial donations to the homeless shelter Phillips helped create, Hospitality House, P.O. Box 3223, Grass Valley, CA 95945, (530) 271-7144.


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