Phil Ochs, Brilliant Yet Widely Obscure Troubadour

What do Robert Allen Zimmerman and Philip David Ochs have in common? Both wrote brilliant protest songs in the ’60s. The difference? Robert changed his name to Bob Dylan and became one of the most famous music artists of our time. Philip chose to perform as Phil Ochs and remained largely obscure outside singer-songwriter circles.

Until recently, I had never heard of Phil Ochs myself. Then I saw somebody ranting on Facebook that Bob Dylan undeservedly gets all the credit for being this brilliant protest singer when the recognition should really go to Ochs. The truth is while both artists at some point were important protest singer-songwriters, none of them invented the genre. According to Wikipedia, the tradition of protest songs in the U.S. long predates the births of Dylan and Ochs – in fact going all the way back to the 18th century.

One of the important forerunners to the 1950s and 1960s protest singer-singwriters were the Hutchinson Family Singers, who starting from 1839 became well known for singing about social issues, such as abolition, war and women’s suffrage. And let’s not forget Woody Guthrie, who was born in 1912 and started learning folk and blues songs during his early teens. Over a 26-year-period as an active music artist, Guthrie wrote hundreds of political, folk and children’s songs. He was a major influence on numerous other songwriters who in addition to Dylan and Ochs included Johnny Cash, Pete Seeger, Harry Chapin, Bruce Springsteen, John Mellencamp and many other former and contemporary artists.

Hutchinson Family Singers
Hutchinson Family Singers in 1845 painting by an unkown artist

‘I get it,’ you might think, ‘but who the hell is Phil Ochs?’ Sadly, it’s a pretty rough story, and it doesn’t have a Hollywood happy ending.

Ochs was born on December 19, 1940 in El Paso, Texas. His dad Jakob “Jack” Ochs was a physician from New York, and his mom Gertrude Finn Ochs hailed from Scotland. The two met there and got married in Edinburgh where Jack was attending medical school at the time. After their wedding, they moved to the U.S. Jack joined the army as a doctor and was sent overseas close to the end of World War II. He returned as a sick man with bipolar disorder and depression.

Jack’s health conditions prevented him from establishing a successful medical practice. Instead, he ended up working at a series of hospitals around the country and frequently moving his family. As a result, Phil Ochs grew up in different places, along with an older sister (Sonia, known as Sonny) and a younger brother (Michael). His father was distant from the family, eventually got hospitalized for depression, and passed away from a brain bleeding in April 1963. Phil’s mother died in March 1994.

Phil Ochs as teen with clarinet
Phil Ochs as a teenager playing the clarinet

During his teenage years, Ochs became a talented clarinet player. Prior to the age of 16, he was principal soloist with the orchestra at the Capital University Conservatory of Music in Columbus, Ohio. Although Ochs had become an accomplished classical instrumentalist, he soon discovered the radio and started listening to the likes of Buddy Holly, Elvis Presley, Hank Williams and Johnny Cash.

Initially, Ochs wanted to become a journalist. Well, he of sort did, combining his interest in writing about politics with music. During his journalism studies at Ohio State University, he met fellow student, activist and future folk singer Jim Glover in the fall of 1960, who introduced him to the music of Pete Seeger, Woody Guthrie and The Weavers, and taught him how to play guitar. It wouldn’t take long before Ochs merged his interest of politics and music and started writing his own songs. He preferred to characterize himself as a topical rather than a protest singer.

Glover and Ochs started performing as a duo called The Singing Socialists and later The Sundowners but broke up before their first professional gig. Glover went to New York, while Ochs started performing professionally at a local fok club in Cleveland. In 1962, he went to the Big Apple as well and soon established himself in the Greenwich Village folk music scence. Ochs described himself as a “singing journalist,” explaining his songs were inspired by stories he saw in Newsweek. By the summer of 1963, he had developed a sufficiently high profile and was invited to perform at the Newport Folk Festival, along the likes of Dylan, Joan Baez and Peter, Paul & Mary.

Ochs’ debut album All The News That’s Fit To Sing, an allusion to The New York Times‘ slogan “All the news that’s fit to print,” appeared in 1964. Here is Ballad of William Worthy. The tune tells the story about an American journalist who traveled to Cuba despite the U.S. embargo and was forbidden to return to the U.S. Check out the brilliant lyrics of this tune – safe to assume Ochs’ words didn’t endear him to the Johnson Administration.

In 1965, Ochs’ sophomore album I Ain’t Marching Anymore came out. Here’s the excellent satirical anti-war tune Draft Dodger Rag, which quickly became an anthem of the anti-Vietnam war movement.

After Ochs’ first three albums with Electra Records had gone nowhere commercially speaking, he signed with A&M Records and in October 1967 released his fourth studio record Pleasures Of The Harbor. Unlike his first three folk music-oriented records, the album went beyond folk, featuring elements of classical, rock & roll, Dixieland and even experiental synthesized music. Apparently, the idea was to produce a folk-pop crossover. While the album included great tunes, it’s safe to say it didn’t bring Ochs commercial success. Here is Outside Of A Small Circle Of Friends, which became one of Ochs’ most popular songs. The tune was inspired by the case of a 28-old woman who was stabbed to death in front of her home in Queens, New York, while dozens of her neighbors reportedly ignored her cries for help.

Tape From California is Ochs’ fifth album. Released in July 1968 on A&M Records, it continued his shift away from straight folk-oriented protest songwriting, though he was far from abandoning topical songs. The War Is Over is a tune that was inspired by poet Allen Ginsberg who in 1966 declared the Vietnam war was over. Ochs decided to adopt the idea and organize an anti-war rally in Los Angeles, for which he wrote the song.

Phil Ochs’ final studio album came out in February 1970. Weirdly, it was called Greatest Hits, even though it was not a compilation but a collection of 10 new tracks. Most of the record was produced by Van Dyke Parks, who previously had appeared on Tape From California, contributing piano and keyboards to the title track. Greatest Hits featured an impressive array of guest artists, including Clarence White and Gene Parsons, both from The Byrds; Ry Cooder; Jim Glover; and members of Elvis Presley’s backing band, among others. The album cover was an homage to Elvis, showing Ochs in a gold lamé suit reminiscent of the outfit Elvis wore for the cover of his 50,000,000 Elvis Fans Can’t Be Wrong greatest hits compilation. Here is Jim Dean Of Indiana, a tune about the actor James Dean, who like Elvis was one of Ochs’ idols.

Greatest Hits was Ochs’ final attempt to connect with average Americans, who he was convinced weren’t listening to topical songs. Disillusioned by key events of 1968, including the assassinations of Martin Luther King, Jr. and Robert F. Kennedy, the police riot in Chicago around the Democratic National Convention and the election of Richard Nixon, Ochs felt he needed to be “part Elvis Presley and part Che Guevara,” as Wikipedia puts it. Ochs supported the album with a tour, performing in the Elivs-like suit and being backed by a rock band, singing his own songs, along with tunes by Buddy Holly, Elvis Presley and Merle Haggard. But his fans weren’t sure what to make of the “new Phil Ochs.”

Pretty much from there, things went downhill for Ochs. He developed writer’s block and slipped into depression and alcoholism. He did not release any additional records. On April 9, 1976, Ochs committed suicide by hanging himself in the home of his sister Sonny. He was only 35 years old.

I’d like to conclude this post with a few quotes I found on Life of a Rebel, a blog dedicated to Ochs. “As a lyricist, there was nobody like Phil before and there has not been anybody since,” said fellow folk singer Dave Van Ronk. “He had a touch that was so distinctive that it just could not be anybody else. He had been a journalism student before he became a singer, and he would never sacrifice what he felt to be the truth for a good line.” In a note to Ochs in 1963, Pete Seeger wrote, “I wish I had one tenth your talent as a songwriter.” And what did the mighty Bob Dylan tell Broadside magazine in 1964? “I just can’t keep up with Phil. And he’s getting better and better and better.”

Sources: Wikipedia; Life of a Rebel; YouTube

10 thoughts on “Phil Ochs, Brilliant Yet Widely Obscure Troubadour”

  1. Phil Ochs war ein interessanter Songwriter der 60er Jahre, der allerdings immer im Schatten von Bob Dylan stand. Zwar hat auch er einige gute Lieder geschrieben, wie z.B. “There But For Fortune” (das u.a. auch von Joan Baez und Francoise Hardy gecovert wurde), aber an die Klasse eines Bob Dylan kam er nie ganz heran.

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    1. Natuerlich hast Du da Recht. Und im Gegensatz zu Ochs, ist Dylan sicherlich auch mehr als ein Songwriter von Protest Songs.

      Ochs wurde nicht zu unrecht als schreibender Journalist bezeichnet. Was mich an seiner Geschichte besonders fasziniert ist, dass Ochs ausserhalb von Singer-Songwriter-Kreisen weitgehend unbekannt ist. Bis vor ein paar Tagen, hatte ich selber noch nie von ihm gehoert.

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      1. Mit ihm ist ein wertvoller Kritiker unserer Zeit verlorengegangen. Und wenn ich eine Zeitmaschine hätte, würde ich gerne mal in die frühen 60er Jahre reisen, an ein Konzert von Phil Ochs im Gaslight Café in Greenwich Village.

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  2. Great post, Christian. I’m glad you chose to shine a light on an overlooked musical great. I started listening to Ochs about 30 years ago after reading his name multiple times in stories about Bob Dylan, of whom I was already a fan. During the “protest era” I think Ochs was Dylan’s equal but then Mr. Zimmerman developed & became a legend (rightly so) while Ochs struggled to move in new directions…although “Pleasures Of The Harbor” has long been a favorite. There’s a wonderful 3-CD box set that came out about 20-25 years ago which is worth seeking out for anyone who wants an overview of Ochs career. Even on his lesser songs his voice shines through. I hope your post inspires others to check him out.

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  3. Thanks. You’re definitely right that while Ochs didn’t develop much from where he started, Dylan evolved into one of the most important music artists of our time – and I say this as somebody who generally likes his music but wouldn’t call himself a big Dylan fan.

    What amazes me is that Ochs remained largely obscure, even though he was highly respected among protest singer-songwriters.

    Life can be cruel when you’re a music artist. Sadly, it ended up breaking Ochs and led him to take his own life at such a young age.

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  4. Interesting choice but I must tell you that Ochs is not as obscure as you might think. Is he a household name or as widely known as Dylan? No, but in the folk world he is pretty big and to add to what Rich said, it is not at all surprising to me that he has been listening to Ochs for thirty years. I cannot call myself a major Ochs fan but your post brought back memories of me visiting my hippie wannabe cousin in Connecticut about that long ago and her playing me some of Ochs’ stuff. I think if you asked around in the boomer generation he’d be reasonably well-known. Tragic, tragic ending though.

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    1. Based on what I read, you’re definitely right Ochs was well known in folk music circles. Outside of that, I’m less sure. But perhaps you’re right about baby boomers.

      Or maybe I was simply ignorant, which is entirely possible! 🙂

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      1. Given that there was a strong folkie component at Woodstock and that he was involved in all the protest stuff, it kinda surprises me he wasn’t invited to that event.

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  5. I share the view of Neil Young that Ochs is also one of the all time greats and basically on a level with Dylan. Phil Ochs was also a much better singer/songwriter than Bob Dylan. You can argue about instrumentation but on the level of melody and compositional technique don’t see how anyone can seriously disagree. His lyrics were better crafted and more emotional. The talk here about him not evolving is ridiculous. He had 6 years compared to Dylan’s 60 but anyone that goes from Talking Cuban Missile Crisis to Changes in two years has developed as a musician.

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