UPC · Release
American Radical Patriot
Woody Guthrie
Last verified:
011661913820 is the Universal Product Code (UPC barcode) for the release “American Radical Patriot” by Woody Guthrie, released 2013-01-01 on Rounder Records. UPCs are unique numeric identifiers assigned by distributors to identify a music release — album, EP, or single — across every digital and physical retail platform. This release contains 132 tracks, each with its own ISRC.
Format
- Number system:
- Identifies the product category (0/1/6/7/8 = general retail, 2 = variable measure, etc.).
- Manufacturer:
- 5-digit code identifying the label or distributor that owns the release.
- Product:
- 5-digit code identifying this specific release within the manufacturer's catalog.
- Check digit:
- Modulo-10 check digit that validates the rest of the barcode.
Credit Chain
Track List (132)
| # | Track Title | Artist(s) | ISWC | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Lost Train Blues | — | ||
| 2 | Growing Up in Oklahoma | — | ||
| 3 | The Railroad Blues | — | ||
| 4 | More Talk of Growing Up in Okemah | — | ||
| 5 | The Gang of Kids Woody Hung Around With | — | ||
| 6 | Rye Whiskey | — | ||
| 7 | Some Old-Time Square Dance Tunes | — | ||
| 8 | Old Joe Clark | — | ||
| 9 | Alan Lomax Asks for a Tune | — | ||
| 10 | Beaumont Rag | — | ||
| 11 | Alan Asks for Another One | — | ||
| 12 | Green Valley Waltz (a.k.a. Who’s Gonna Shoe Your Pretty Feet?) | — | ||
| 13 | The Troubles and Tragedies That Fractured Woody’s Family in Okemah | — | ||
| 14 | Greenback Dollar | — | ||
| 15 | Lomax Asks About the Boll Weevil | — | ||
| 16 | Boll Weevil | — | ||
| 17 | Jailhouse Songs | — | ||
| 18 | The Midnight Special | — | ||
| 19 | When the Great Dust Storm Struck | — | ||
| 2-1 | The End of the World | — | ||
| 2-2 | So Long, It's Been Good to Know Yuh | — | ||
| 2-3 | Dust Storms Devastate the Farmland | — | ||
| 2-4 | Talking Dust Bowl | — | ||
| 2-5 | Migrants Arrive in California | — | ||
| 2-6 | Do Re Mi | — | ||
| 2-7 | Hard Times | — | ||
| 2-8 | Songs About Hard Times | — | ||
| 2-9 | Bring Back to Me My Blue-Eyed Boy | — | ||
| 2-10 | Songs About Outlaws | — | ||
| 2-11 | Billy the Kid | — | ||
| 2-12 | Billy the Kid and Pretty Boy Floyd | — | ||
| 2-13 | Pretty Boy Floyd | — | ||
| 2-14 | Jesse James | — | ||
| 2-15 | Jesse James and His Boys | — | ||
| 2-16 | Takin’ It From the Rich and Givin’ It to the Poor | — | ||
| 2-17 | Jesus Christ | — | ||
| 2-18 | Songs About Bankers | — | ||
| 2-19 | The Jolly Banker | — | ||
| 2-20 | Another Song About the Depradations of the Bankers | — | ||
| 2-21 | I Ain't Got No Home | — | ||
| 2-22 | Hundreds of Thousands Made Homeless | — | ||
| 2-23 | Dirty Overhauls | — | ||
| 2-24 | The Story of Mary Fagan | — | ||
| 2-25 | Mary Fagan | — | ||
| 2-26 | The Origins of the Song | — | ||
| 3-1 | Origins of the Song, Continued | — | ||
| 3-2 | Chain Around My Leg | — | ||
| 3-3 | Let’s Sing Some Blues | — | ||
| 3-4 | Nine Hundred Miles | — | ||
| 3-5 | Worried Man Blues | — | ||
| 3-6 | About the "Worried Man Blues" | — | ||
| 3-7 | Lonesome Valley | — | ||
| 3-8 | Railroad Blueses | — | ||
| 3-9 | Walkin’ Down That Railroad Line | — | ||
| 3-10 | Interlude | — | ||
| 3-11 | Goin’ Down the Frisco Line | — | ||
| 3-12 | Riding the Rails | — | ||
| 3-13 | Going Down the Road | — | ||
| 3-15 | Seven Cent Cotton | — | ||
| 3-16 | Wish I’d Stayed in the Wagon Yard | — | ||
| 3-18 | Dust Bowl Refugee | — | ||
| 3-19 | Contractors Duping the Desperate | — | ||
| 3-20 | The Dust Storm of April 14, 1935 | — | ||
| 3-21 | Dust Storm Disaster / Foggy Mountain Top | — | ||
| 4-1 | Breathing in Dust | — | ||
| 4-2 | Dust Pneumonia Blues | — | ||
| 4-3 | Leaving the Dust Bowl | — | ||
| 4-4 | California Blues | — | ||
| 4-5 | Jimmie Rodgers | — | ||
| 4-6 | Migrants Arriving in California | — | ||
| 4-8 | Refugees Pouring Into California | — | ||
| 4-10 | California as One of the 48 States | — | ||
| 4-11 | Will Rogers Highway | — | ||
| 4-12 | The Flood That Took Over 100 Lives | — | ||
| 4-13 | Los Angeles New Year's Flood | — | ||
| 4-14 | A Good Horse | — | ||
| 4-15 | Stewball | — | ||
| 4-17 | Stagger Lee | — | ||
| 4-19 | One Dime Blues | — | ||
| 4-21 | Git Along Little Dogies | — | ||
| 4-23 | The Trail to Mexico | — | ||
| 4-24 | Gypsy Davy | — | ||
| 4-25 | Introducing an Old Song | — | ||
| 4-26 | Hard Ain't It Hard | — | ||
| 5-1 | Introduction | — | ||
| 5-2 | Pastures of Plenty | — | ||
| 5-3 | Oregon Trail | — | ||
| 5-4 | Roll on Columbia | — | ||
| 5-5 | New Found Land | — | ||
| 5-6 | Talking Columbia | — | ||
| 5-7 | Roll, Columbia, Roll | — | ||
| 5-8 | Columbia’s Waters | — | ||
| 5-9 | Ramblin’ Blues | — | ||
| 5-10 | It Takes a Married Man to Sing a Worried Song | — | ||
| 5-11 | Hard Travelin’ | — | ||
| 5-12 | The Biggest Thing That Man Has Ever Done (a.k.a. the Great Historical Bum) | — | ||
| 5-13 | Jackhammer Blues | — | ||
| 5-14 | Song of the Grand Coulee Dam | — | ||
| 5-15 | Grand Coulee Dam | — | ||
| 5-16 | Washington Talkin’ Blues | — | ||
| 5-17 | Ramblin’ Round | — | ||
| 5-19 | End of My Line | — | ||
| 5-20 | Sinking of the Reuben James | — | ||
| 5-21 | Takin' It Easy | — | ||
| 5-22 | Reckless Talk | — | ||
| 6-1 | The Girl in the Red, White, and Blue | — | ||
| 6-2 | Labor for Victory | — | ||
| 6-3 | Farmer-Labor Train | — | ||
| 6-4 | Jazz in America, No. 93 | — | ||
| 6-5 | Whoopy Ti-Yi, Get Along, Mr. Hitler | — | ||
| 6-6 | Jazz in America, No. 116 | — | ||
| 6-7 | Sally, Don't You Grieve | — | ||
| 6-8 | Narrator | — | ||
| 6-9 | Dig a Hole | — | ||
| 6-10 | VD Avenue | — | ||
| 6-11 | Intro | — | ||
| 6-12 | The Veedee Blues | — | ||
| 6-14 | Blessed and Curst | — | ||
| 6-15 | A Case of VD | — | ||
| 6-16 | VD Seaman’s Letter | — | ||
| 6-17 | VD City | — | ||
| 6-18 | VD Day | — | ||
| 6-19 | A Child of VD | — | ||
| 6-20 | V.D. Gunner’s Blues | — | ||
| 6-21 | Brooklyne Towne | — | ||
| 6-24 | The Old Cracked Looking Glass | — | ||
| 6-25 | Hard Times in the Durant Jail | — | ||
| 6-26 | Empty Boxcar, My Home | — | ||
| 6-27 | The Biggest Thing That Man Has Ever Done | — | ||
| 7-5 | Roll On, Columbia | — | ||
| 7-10 | Ramblin' Round | — | ||
| 7-11 | Washington Talkin' Blues | — |
What other identifiers does this connect to?
Musical Works (ISWC)
Songwriters/Publishers (IPI)
Creative Contributors (ISNI)
Credits Graph
People also ask
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What is UPC 011661913820?
011661913820 is a Universal Product Code (UPC) assigned to American Radical Patriot by Woody Guthrie. UPCs (also called EAN barcodes) are unique numeric identifiers assigned by distributors to identify music releases — albums, EPs, and singles — across all digital and physical retail platforms.
This release contains 132 tracks. Each track has its own ISRC (International Standard Recording Code) that identifies the specific sound recording, while the UPC identifies the release as a whole. Knowing your release's UPC is essential for neighboring rights collection societies like SoundExchange and for transferring music between distributors.
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