New York City: 1962–1966 Ochs arrived in New York City in 1962 and began performing in numerous small folk nightclubs, eventually becoming an integral part of the
Greenwich Village folk music scene. He emerged as an unpolished but passionate vocalist who wrote pointed songs about current events: war,
civil rights,
labor struggles and other topics. While others described his music as "protest songs", Ochs preferred the term "topical songs". However, in order to get by, in November 1962, Ochs accepted $50 to record a children's album, a collection of traditional popular
campfire songs, titled
Camp Favorites (1963). In 1963,
Cameo Records released this budget LP. Ochs requested his name not be used and it wasn't until well after his death that its existence became known. The Campers consists of Ochs (who is not credited on the record), an unknown female vocalist and a group of children. Ochs described himself as a "singing journalist", saying he built his songs from stories he read in
Newsweek. By the summer of 1963, he was sufficiently well known in folk circles to be invited to sing at the
Newport Folk Festival, where he performed "Too Many Martyrs" (co-written with Bob Gibson), "Talking Birmingham Jam", and "
Power and the Glory"—his patriotic Guthrie-esque anthem that brought the audience to its feet. Other performers at the 1963 folk festival included
Peter, Paul and Mary,
Joan Baez,
Bob Dylan, and
Tom Paxton. Ochs' return appearance at Newport in 1964, where he performed "Draft Dodger Rag", "Talking Vietnam Blues", and other songs, was widely praised. However, he was not invited to appear in 1965, the festival when Dylan famously performed "
Maggie's Farm" with an electric guitar. Although many in the folk world decried Dylan's choice, Ochs admired Dylan's courage in defying the folk establishment, and publicly defended him. In 1963, Ochs performed at New York's
Carnegie Hall and
Town Hall in
hootenannies. He made his first solo appearance at Carnegie Hall in 1966. Throughout his career, Ochs would perform at a wide range of venues, including civil rights rallies, anti-war demonstrations, and concert halls. Ochs contributed many songs and articles to the influential
Broadside Magazine. He recorded his first three albums for
Elektra Records: ''
All the News That's Fit to Sing (1964), I Ain't Marching Anymore (1965), and Phil Ochs in Concert'' (1966). Critics wrote that each album was better than its predecessors, and fans seemed to agree; record sales increased with each new release. On these records, Ochs was accompanied only by an acoustic guitar. The albums contain many of Ochs's topical songs, such as "Too Many Martyrs", "
I Ain't Marching Anymore", and "Draft Dodger Rag"; and some musical reinterpretation of older poetry, such as "
The Highwayman" (poem by
Alfred Noyes) and "
The Bells" (poem by
Edgar Allan Poe).
Phil Ochs in Concert includes some more introspective songs, such as "Changes" and "When I'm Gone". During the early period of his career, Ochs and Bob Dylan had a friendly rivalry. Dylan said of Ochs, "I just can't keep up with Phil—and he's gettin' better and better". On another occasion, when Ochs criticized either "
One of Us Must Know (Sooner or Later)" or "
Can You Please Crawl Out Your Window?" (sources differ), Dylan threw him out of his limousine, saying, "You're not a folk singer. You're a journalist." In 1963, Ochs married Alice Skinner, who was pregnant with their daughter Meegan, in a
ceremony at City Hall with
Jim Glover as best man and
Jean Ray as bridesmaid, and witnessed by Dylan's girlfriend at the time,
Suze Rotolo. Phil and Alice separated in 1965, but they never divorced. Like many people of his generation, Ochs deeply admired
President John F. Kennedy, even though he disagreed with him on issues such as the
Bay of Pigs Invasion, the
Cuban Missile Crisis, and the growing
involvement of the United States in the Vietnamese civil war. When Kennedy
was assassinated on November 22, 1963, Ochs wept. He told his wife that he thought he was going to die that night. It was the only time she ever saw Ochs cry. Ochs's managers during this part of his career were
Albert Grossman (who also managed Bob Dylan, Peter, Paul, and Mary and Gordon Lightfoot) followed by
Arthur Gorson. Gorson had close ties with such groups as
Americans For Democratic Action, the
Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, and
Students for a Democratic Society. Ochs was writing songs at a fast pace. Some of the songs he wrote during this period were held back and recorded on his later albums.
California: 1967–1969 In 1967, Ochs—now managed by his brother Michael—left
Elektra Records for
A&M Records and moved to Los Angeles, California. He recorded four studio albums for A&M:
Pleasures of the Harbor (1967),
Tape from California (1968),
Rehearsals for Retirement (1969), and the ironically titled
Greatest Hits (1970; which actually consisted of all new material). For his A&M albums, Ochs moved away from simply produced solo acoustic guitar performances and experimented with ensemble and even orchestral instrumentation, "baroque-folk", in the hopes of producing a pop-folk hybrid that would be a
hit. Critic
Robert Christgau, writing in
Esquire of
Pleasures of the Harbor in May 1968, did not consider this new direction a good turn. While describing Ochs as "unquestionably a nice guy", he went on to say, "too bad his voice shows an effective range of about half an octave [and] his guitar playing would not suffer much if his right hand were webbed." "
Pleasures of the Harbor", Christgau continued, "epitomizes the decadence that has infected pop since
Sgt. Pepper. [The] gaudy musical settings ... inspire nostalgia for the three-chord strum." With an ironic sense of humor, Ochs included Christgau's "webbed hand" comment in his 1968 songbook
The War is Over on a page titled "The Critics Raved", opposite a full-page picture of Ochs standing in a large metal garbage can. Despite his sense of humor, Ochs was unhappy that his work was not receiving the critical acclaim and popular success he had hoped to achieve. Still, Ochs would joke on the back cover of
Greatest Hits that there were 50 Phil Ochs fans ("50 fans can't be wrong!"), a sarcastic reference to an Elvis Presley album that bragged of
50 million Elvis fans. None of Ochs's songs became hits, although "Outside of a Small Circle of Friends" received a good deal of
airplay. It reached No. 119 on
Billboards national "Hot Prospect" listing before being pulled from some radio stations because of its lyrics, which included "smoking marijuana is more fun than drinking beer". It was the closest Ochs ever came to the Top 40.
Joan Baez, however, did have a Top Ten hit in the U.K. in August 1965, reaching No. 8 with her recording of Ochs's song "There but for Fortune", which was also nominated for a
Grammy Award for "Best Folk Recording". In the U.S. it peaked at No. 50 on the
Billboard charts—a good showing, but not a hit. Although he was trying new things musically, Ochs did not abandon his protest roots. He was profoundly concerned with the escalation of the Vietnam War, performing tirelessly at anti-war rallies across the country. In 1967, he organized two rallies to declare that "The War Is Over"—"Is everybody sick of this stinking war? In that case, friends, do what I and thousands of other Americans have done—declare the war over."—one in Los Angeles in June, the other in New York in November. He continued to write and record anti-war songs, such as "The War Is Over" and "White Boots Marching in a Yellow Land". Other topical songs of this period include "Outside of a Small Circle of Friends", inspired by the
murder of Kitty Genovese, who was stabbed to death outside of her New York City apartment building while dozens of her neighbors reportedly ignored her cries for help, and "William Butler Yeats Visits Lincoln Park and Escapes Unscathed", about the despair he felt in the aftermath of the Chicago
1968 Democratic National Convention police riot. Ochs was writing more personal songs as well, such as "Crucifixion", in which he compared the deaths of Jesus Christ and assassinated President
John F. Kennedy as part of a "cycle of sacrifice" in which people build up heroes and then celebrate their destruction; "Chords of Fame", a warning against the dangers and corruption of fame; "Pleasures of the Harbor", a lyrical portrait of a lonely sailor seeking human connection far from home; and "Boy in Ohio", a plaintive look back at Ochs's childhood in Columbus. A lifelong movie fan, Ochs worked the narratives of justice and rebellion that he had seen in films into his music, describing some of his songs as "cinematic". He was disappointed and bitter when his onetime hero
John Wayne embraced the
Vietnam War with what Ochs saw as the blind patriotism of Wayne's 1968 film,
The Green Berets: [H]ere we have John Wayne, who was a major artistic and psychological figure on the American scene, ... who at one point used to make movies of soldiers who had a certain validity, ... a certain sense of honor [about] what the soldier was doing. ... Even if it was a cavalry movie doing a historically dishonorable thing to the Indians, even as there was a feeling of what it meant to be a man, what it meant to have some sense of duty. ... Now today we have the same actor making his new war movie in a war so hopelessly corrupt that, without seeing the movie, I'm sure it is perfectly safe to say that it will be an almost robot-view of soldiery, just by definition of how the whole country has deteriorated. And I think it would make a very interesting double feature to show a good old Wayne movie like, say,
She Wore a Yellow Ribbon with
The Green Berets. Because that would make a very striking comment on what has happened to America in general. Ochs was involved in the creation of the
Youth International Party, known as the Yippies, along with
Jerry Rubin,
Abbie Hoffman,
Stew Albert, and
Paul Krassner. At the same time, Ochs actively supported
Eugene McCarthy's more mainstream bid for the
1968 Democratic nomination for President, a position at odds with the more radical Yippie point of view. Still, Ochs helped plan the Yippies' "
Festival of Life" which was to take place at the 1968 Democratic National Convention along with demonstrations by other anti-war groups including the
National Mobilization Committee to End the War in Vietnam. Despite warnings that there might be trouble, Ochs went to Chicago both as a guest of the McCarthy campaign and to participate in the demonstrations. He performed in
Lincoln Park,
Grant Park, and at the
Chicago Coliseum, witnessed the violence perpetrated by the Chicago police against the protesters, and was arrested at one point. Ochs also purchased the young boar who became known as the Yippie 1968 Presidential candidate "
Pigasus the Immortal" from a farm in Illinois. '' The events of 1968the
assassination of Martin Luther King Jr. and
of Robert F. Kennedy weeks later, the
Chicago police riot, and the election of
Richard Nixonleft Ochs feeling disillusioned and depressed. The cover of his 1969 album
Rehearsals for Retirement portrayed a tombstone with the words: PHIL OCHS(AMERICAN)BORN: EL PASO, TEXAS, 1940DIED: CHICAGO, ILLINOIS, 1968 At the trial of the
Chicago Seven in December 1969, Ochs testified for the defense. His testimony included his recitation of the lyrics to his song "I Ain't Marching Anymore". On his way out of the courthouse, Ochs sang the song for the press corps; to Ochs's amusement, his singing was broadcast that evening by
Walter Cronkite on the
CBS Evening News.
Greatest Hits: 1970 After the riot in Chicago and the subsequent trial, Ochs changed direction again. The events of 1968 convinced him that the average American was not listening to topical songs or responding to Yippie tactics. Ochs thought that by playing the sort of music that had moved him as a teenager he could speak more directly to the American public. Ochs turned to his musical roots in country music and early rock and roll. He decided he needed to be "part Elvis Presley and part
Che Guevara", so he commissioned a
gold lamé suit from Elvis Presley's costumer
Nudie Cohn. Ochs wore the gold suit on the cover of his 1970 album,
Greatest Hits, which consisted of new songs largely in rock and country styles. The show was recorded and released as
Gunfight at Carnegie Hall. During this period, Ochs was taking drugs to get through performances. He had been taking
Valium for years to help control his nerves, and he was also drinking heavily. Pianist
Lincoln Mayorga said of that period, "He was physically abusing himself very badly on that tour. He was drinking a lot of wine and taking uppers. The wine was pulling him one way and the uppers were pulling him another way, and he was kind of a mess. There were so many pharmaceuticals around – so many pills. I'd never seen anything like that." Ochs tried to cut back on the pills, but alcohol remained his drug of choice for the rest of his life. Depressed by his lack of widespread appreciation and suffering from
writer's block, Ochs did not record any further albums. He slipped deeper into depression and alcoholism. Ifshin had previously been warned by Argentinian leftist friends that when the authorities sent dissidents to Bolivia, they would disappear forever. When the airliner arrived in Bolivia, the American captain of the
Braniff International Airways aircraft allowed Ochs and Ifshin to stay on the aircraft and barred Bolivian authorities from entering. The aircraft then flew to
Peru where the two disembarked and they were not detained. Fearful that Peruvian authorities might arrest him, Ochs returned to the United States a few days later. Ochs was personally invited by
John Lennon to sing at a large benefit at the University of Michigan in December 1971 on behalf of
John Sinclair, an activist poet who had been arrested on minor drug charges and given a severe sentence. Ochs performed at the
John Sinclair Freedom Rally along with
Stevie Wonder,
Allen Ginsberg,
David Peel,
Abbie Hoffman, and many others. The rally culminated with Lennon and
Yoko Ono, who were making their first public performance in the United States since the breakup of
the Beatles. Although the 1968 election had left him deeply disillusioned, Ochs continued to work for the election campaigns of anti-war candidates, such as
George McGovern's unsuccessful
Presidential bid in 1972. In 1972, Ochs was asked to write the theme song for the film
Kansas City Bomber. The task proved difficult, as he struggled to overcome his writer's block. Although
his song was not used in the soundtrack, it was released as a single. , May 1973 In mid-1972, Ochs traveled to Australia and New Zealand and then to Africa the following year, where he visited Ethiopia, Kenya, Malawi, and South Africa. While visiting Tanzania one night, he was attacked and choked by robbers in
Dar es Salaam, which damaged his vocal cords, causing a loss of the top three notes in his vocal range. The attack also exacerbated his growing mental problems, and he became increasingly paranoid. Ochs believed the attack may have been arranged by US government agents, perhaps the CIA. Still, he continued his trip, even recording a single in Kenya, "
Bwatue". On September 11, 1973, the Allende government of Chile was
overthrown in a ''coup d'état''. The court set up by the Chilean military claimed that Allende committed suicide during the bombing of the presidential palace, and singer Victor Jara was rounded up with other professors and students, tortured and murdered. When Ochs heard about the manner in which his friend had been killed, he was outraged and decided to organize a benefit concert to bring to public attention the situation in Chile, and raise funds for the people of Chile. The concert, "An Evening with Salvador Allende", was held on May 9, 1974, at New York City's
Felt Forum, included films of Allende; singers such as
Pete Seeger,
Arlo Guthrie,
Dave Van Ronk, and Bob Dylan; actor
Dennis Hopper, filmmaker
Melvin Van Peebles and political activists such as former
U.S. Attorney General Ramsey Clark. Dylan had agreed to perform at the last minute when he heard that the concert had sold so few tickets that it was in danger of being canceled. Once his participation was announced, the event quickly sold out. After the Chile benefit, Ochs and Dylan discussed the possibility of a joint concert tour, playing small nightclubs. Nothing came of the Dylan-Ochs plans, but the idea eventually evolved into Dylan's
Rolling Thunder Revue. The Vietnam War ended on April 30, 1975. Ochs planned a final "War Is Over" rally, which was held in New York's
Central Park on May 11. More than 100,000 people came to hear Ochs, joined by
Harry Belafonte,
Odetta, Pete Seeger,
Paul Simon and others. Ochs and Joan Baez sang a duet of "There but for Fortune" and he closed with his song "
The War Is Over". == Decline and death ==