978-793-1553 fitz@johnfitz.com

 A Word-Slinging, Song-Singing, Ballad-Mongering Folksinger

An absolute treasure of folksongs, stories, and contagious charm 

~Doris Kearns-Goodwin, American Historian

A Master of Folk

~Scott Alaric, The Boston Globe

 Fires in The Belly

A masterful weaver of songs whose deep, resonant voice
rivals the best of his genre. 

~Spirit of Change Magazine

Foreward

When I first met John Fitzsimmons in 1989, I thought the Old Man of the Mountains had shaved off his beard, picked up a guitar, and was trying his luck as a folksinger. He was a bit late, covered with small pieces of dirt, and apologized tersely for his condition, saying he’d just finished building a stone wall for a neighbor. He shook my hand and I knew he wasn’t lying, but I wondered what kind of a man prepared for a recording session by handling rough boulders. Several hours, and now several years later, Fitzy still makes me wonder, but I find I’m more often amazed than amused.His songs seem to come from deep within the New England earth. Sometimes burning with fire and rage, sometimes warm and gentle, but always honest and clear. In a voice that’s equal parts granite and brandy, John etches unsentimental portraits of real people facing life’s struggles and joys the only way they know how. Sometimes the characters manage to find some distant light, but it’s the journey, not the journey’s end, that’s important to John.

What makes this disparate collection believable is the road traveled by the writer. Over the past twenty years John has worked as a sailor, farmhand, logger, woodcarver, musician, storyteller, teacher, wrestling coach, and other jobs he refuses to talk about. For the past twelve years he’s held forth every Thursday night in the back tavern of the Colonial Inn in Concord, (once home to Henry David Thoreau’s family) and the place to go if you want to meet some real swamp Yankees, people who lived in these towns before the yuppie exodus made them suburbs. You’re sure to find these folks there: listening to the music, singing along, sucking down brews, and giving Fitzy a playfully hard time.

The other “voice” on this recording is the inspired production and musicianship of Seth Connelly, who plays far too many instruments far too well for a mere mortal. Seth has worked with John Gorka, Catie Curtis, Ellis Paul, Geoff Bartley and others: and when John hooked up with him a couple of years ago, these songs took on new colors and dimensions. they both share a complete trust in each others vision, as well as a friendship as strong as the songs they’ve created.

So I want you to listen to this friend of mine, John Fitzsimmons. His songs give voice to things we all can hear. Put this on, sit back, and hear for yourself…

Eric Kilburn
12/28/95

Campfire

The Greatest Camp Songs of All Time

2003: Best Childrens Album of the Year
~Boston Parents Paper

The Salty Dawgs

Dawghouse: A Salty Dawgs Hootenanny 

The New England Laureate of Pub Music

~Globe Magazine

Livestream Concerts

Beneath the friendly charisma is the heart of a purist 
gently leading us from the songs of our lives 
to the timeless traditional songs he knows so well. 

~Globe Magazine

Beneath the friendly charisma is the heart of a purist 
gently leading us from the songs of our lives 
to the timeless traditional songs he knows so well. 

~Globe Magazine

American Folksongs & Ballads

History, Lyrics & Recordings

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