Larry Long

Larry Long singing in New Orleans with a group of people

Larry Long recording a song collectively written with residents from the 9th Ward of New Orleans through his Elders’ Wisdom, Children’s Song program in partnership with the Southern Poverty Law Center.

Author Studs Terkel called Long “a true American Troubadour.” When Pete Seeger was told that Larry is often referred to as the Pete Seeger of Minnesota, Pete replied, “I would be honored to be called the Larry Long of New York.”

“Out of muteness, silence, and pain there comes a song. It rises from the earth, the exploitation, work, and sorrow of the people. It rises from struggle kept alive in our wonderful multiplicity and sounds the tenderness of our solidarity. Bird song, people’s songs, from struggle and death, from the lost and gone and mute, out of the corpse of our death we sing.

Then our joyous singer like Larry Long begins to come where we are working, where we are living, and listens, repeats like a mockingbird, or notes of nightingales or meadowlarks, makes songs out of the first and last breath. He sings where we are, about what is happening. He takes the real sound, the real words and gives us back our songs and we hear what singers we all are and how beautiful, and how strong.”  —Meridel Le Sueur, American Author & Poet

American Roots Revue Live at the Dakota on Saturday, May 9th

The original American Roots Revue crew from 2011 is back for two shows! Tonight, experience Gospel, R&B, blues, folk, rock ‘n roll, and Indigenous music, featuring Anishinaabe Ojibwe artist Dorene Day Waubanewquay. The scintillating foursome of Larry Long, Robert Robinson, Tonia Hughes Kendrick and JD Steele will be backed by…

Dorene Day Waubanewquay will be joining Larry Long & American Roots Revue on Saturday, May 9th at the Dakota.

Dorene Day Waubanewquay is Ojibwe-Anishinabe Kwe of the Waubizayshi O’dodem – Marten Clan, from Asabikone zaaga I’ gunning – Bois Forte Reservation in northern Minnesota. There, she carries the responsibility of song keeper for her Midewiwin lodge. Moreover, her name means “Daybreak Woman,” someone who…

The five most magical music moments from the Twin Cities ‘No Kings’ rally: Local artists held their own on a bill that included Bruce Springsteen and Joan Baez. By Neal Justin | The Minnesota Star Tribune | MARCH 28, 2026 AT 7:03PM

Joan Baez dances with the Twin Cities Singing Resistance choir and the Brass Solidarity band at the “No Kings” rally at the State Capitol on Saturday, March 28, in St. Paul. Politicians and activists may have dominated the stage at the “No Kings” rally in…