GLAZER, TOM: Singer,
instrumentalist (guitar, tuba, bass) , author,
songwriter, m.c. Born
Like many modern folk artists, Tom Glazer's creative efforts go far beyond
ballad singing. His compositions have become staple items in both folk and
popular domains....
Glazer was first introduced to folk music at home, where his
mother often sang traditional ballads to him. While attending grade and high
school in
After three years of college [
He did not abandon adult audiences during these years. In
1945, he began his own program on ABC radio, "Tom Glazer's Ballad
Box," that remained a highly popular show for the two years of its
existence. His radio activities expanded, as well, to acting and/or singing on
such programs as "We The People,'' "Listening Post,'' "True
Story,'' and "Theatre Guild on the Air''....
His creative contributions during the 1950s and '60s
included acting, singing, and writing for both movies and TV. His movie work
included the job of balladeer-narrator for an RKO film, ''Sweet Land of Liberty''
and composer of the score for the Andy Griffith vehicle "A Face in the
Crowd''....
Glazer's voice was featured on many records in the years
after World War II..... His records for children were produced for Young
People's Records, Inc. Through the 1960s, total sales ran to more than a
million.
Glazer's songwriting activities included so diverse numbers
as the comic parody "On Top of Spaghetti'' and the strident "Skokiaan.'' His other compositions include "A Dollar Ain't a Dollar Anymore,'' "More,'' "Till We
Two Are One,'' ''Ballad for the Babe,'' "Worried Man," "Old
Soldiers Never Die,'' "Mama Guitar," ''Melody of Love,''
"Care,'' and "Don't Weep, Don't Mourn, Don't Worry.''
Irwin Stambler & Grelun
Landon, Encyclopedia of Folk, Country and Western Music, New York, NY,
1969, pp. 107-108.