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Chuck Brodsky

Chuck Brodsky
Background information Born May 20, 1960(1960-05-20) (age 48); Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S.Genre(s)Folk musicOccupation(s) Songwriter, musician Years active 1995–present Label(s)Waterbug Records, Red House RecordsWebsite Chuck Brodsky

Chuck Brodsky (born on May 20, 1960 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania) is an American musician currently living in North Carolina. He is particularly known for his often humorous and political lyrics, and for his songs about baseball, such as "The Ballad of Eddie Klepp" and "Moe Berg: The Song". On his 2004 album Color Came One Day, he took on pollution in "Seven Miles Upwind", the destruction of independent business and regional culture by multinational corporations in "Trees Falling", and the abridgement of civil liberties associated with Bush administration policies in Dangerous Times.

His song "Radio" was featured in the movie Radio.[1]

Discography

  • A Fingerpainter's Murals (1995)
  • Letters in the Dirt (1996)
  • Radio (1998)
  • Last of the Old Time (2000)
  • The Baseball Ballads (2002)
  • Color Came One Day (2004)
  • Tulips For Lunch (2006)

Notes and references

  1. ^ Chuck Brodsky's entry on IMDB. Internet Movie Database. Retrieved on 2006-09-06.

External links

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Categories: 1960 births | American male singers | American songwriters | Fast Folk artists | Folk musicians | Living people | People from Philadelphia | American Jews | Jewish American musicians | American singers | United States singer-songwriter stubs

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