Anthony (Tony) Saletan
He was not on the list.
Anthony "Tony" David Saletan died peacefully in Tacoma, Washington, on August 26, 2025, at the age of 94. He was a loving husband and devoted father, cherished friend to many in the American folk song and dance communities, and an engaging performer who brought music, song, and cultural fellowship to people throughout the world.
Tony was born on June 29, 1931 in New York City to Rose (Heller) Saletan and David Saletan. He was the second of two children, with an older sister, Rhoda. He attended the Walden School in New York's Upper West Side and earned degrees from Harvard University in social relations and music education. Tony initially settled in Greater Boston, later moving to the Tacoma area.
He is survived by his wife Jill Rosenthal, MD, children Nina, Jesse, Charlie, and Emily, grandchildren Kevin, Sean, and Steven, nephew Peter, niece Tonia, and first wife Irene.
A memorial will be planned for a later date, to be determined. In lieu of flowers, donations in his memory may be made to WGBH TV Boston or the public television or public radio station of your choice.
Born and raised in New York City, Saletan attended the Walden School. For a brief period during his childhood, his piano teacher was a young Leonard Bernstein. While a teen, he was involved in the Henry Wallace presidential campaign of 1948, in which original music in the folk style was important. After receiving his undergraduate and master's degrees in music education at Harvard University Saletan settled in the Boston area, where for several years he appeared on educational television (WGBH), taught music in the Newton, Massachusetts public schools, and gave private guitar lessons. During this time he married and raised a son and a daughter. He also became involved in folk dancing and calling of contra dances. Saletan frequently taught at Pinewoods Dance Camp in Plymouth, Massachusetts.
Saletan spent the summer of 1953 at Buck’s Rock Work Camp leading the campers in regular folk song sessions.
In 1954, Tony Saletan was preparing to work as folksong
leader at the Shaker Village Work Camp. He searched the Widener Library of
Harvard University for material to teach the villagers that summer. Out of that
research, he adapted the song "Michael Row the Boat Ashore" from the
1867 songbook Slave Songs of the United States to create the version that is
well-known today. "I judged that the tune was very singable, added some
harmony (a guitar accompaniment) and thought the one-word chorus would be an
easy hit with the teens (it was). But a typical original verse consisted of one
line repeated once, and I thought a rhyme would be more interesting to the
teenagers at Shaker Village Work Camp, where I introduced it. So I adapted
traditional African-American couplets in place of the original verses."
Saletan's adaptation was included in the Village's 1954 songbook, Songs of
Work.
During the summer of 1954, Saletan attended a performance by Pete Seeger, where Seeger invited audience members to come on stage and teach him a song. Saletan volunteered, borrowed Seeger's banjo, and sang "Michael Row the Boat Ashore," as he had recently reconstructed it. Seeger said he liked the song and asked to learn it. Seeger was soon singing it with The Weavers, one of the most important vocal groups leading the American folk music revival of the 1950s to mid-1960s. Saletan shared a 1958 copyright in his adaptation with the members of the Weavers. A single based on Saletan's version was released in 1960 by the American folk quintet the Highwaymen under the abbreviated title, "Michael", and reached number one on the U.S. and British hit parades in September 1961.
Joe Hickerson, co-founder of the Folksmiths, credits Saletan
for introducing him to the song "Kumbaya" in 1957 (Saletan had
learned it from Lynn Rohrbough, co-proprietor with his wife Katherine of the
camp songbook publisher Cooperative Recreation Service). The first LP recording
of "Kumbaya" was released in 1958 by the Folksmiths. Folksinger Peggy
Seeger was also taught several songs by Saletan, which she later recorded.
Saletan was the first person to appear on WGBH, Channel 2, when Boston's public educational television station made its on-air debut on May 2, 1955. He sang the theme song for Come and See, a program aimed at preschoolers. In those years, he also presented live children's concerts, organized by his manager, Manuel ("Manny") Greenhill (1916–1996). Following a 1959-1960 world tour sponsored by the U.S. State Department, Saletan released the album I'm a Stranger Here on Prestige Records (1962). On his return from abroad, he created Sing, Children, Sing for national distribution on educational television, based on an earlier WGBH project, Music Grade II. In the 1960s, Saletan also hosted several episodes of What's New, broadcast "field trips" to historic locations with associated songs.
In 1964, a year after their marriage, Saletan and Irene Kossoy (formerly and subsequently of the Kossoy Sisters) joined with Jackie Washington Landrón to form the Boston Folk Trio, which presented school concerts through the non-profit Young Audiences Arts for Learning. In the mid-1960s, the Saletans similarly performed school concerts in the New York City area along with Happy Traum. The couple also performed as Tony and Irene Saletan. In 1970, they released an album on Folk-Legacy Records, Tony and Irene Saletan: Folk Songs & Ballads. They also made a 7" vinyl recording of four songs for the Boston Mutual Life Insurance Company, titled The Ballad of Boston and Other New England Folk Tunes. Tony and Irene performed together at the Fox Hollow Folk Festival in 1971, as well as with Irene's sister, Ellen, and Ellen's then husband, Robin Christenson. None of Saletan's recordings include either "Michael" or "Kumbaya," but he can be heard singing and discussing both during a 2017 podcast interview.
On December 16, 1969, Saletan made a guest appearance during the first season (episode 27) of Sesame Street, the iconic children's television program. In the first of four segments on which he appeared, Saletan leads the show's children and adult regulars (including Big Bird and Oscar) in an adaptation of the traditional workers' alphabet song, "So Merry, So Merry Are We", as well as a traditional counting song, "Ten Little Angels". In the second, he sings and takes ideas from the children to invent new verses for "I Wish I Was a Mole in the Ground", and then plays "Cripple Creek" on banjo as Gordon demonstrates the limberjack. In the third segment, he sings Woody Guthrie's "Pick it Up" and then "Mi Chacra" ("my farm"), teaching animal names in Spanish. (This was the first time Sesame Street featured content in Spanish.) Saletan concludes the show with Guthrie's "Gonna Take Everybody (All Work Together)".
In the early 1970s, Tony Saletan hosted three public television series for children, produced by Western Instructional Television (Hollywood, California): The Song Bag, Let's All Sing with Tony Saletan, and Singing Down the Road. Two record albums were issued from these shows mostly drawn from American folksongs, including those discovered and developed for teaching young Shaker Villagers. The first album to emerge from the WIT shows, Song Bag with Tony Saletan, likewise had an associated teacher's guide and songbook. Saletan also recorded Songs and Sounds of the Sea (National Geographic Society 1973), Revolutionary Tea (with the Yankee Tunesmiths, Old North Bridge Records 1975), and George & Ruth (songs of the Spanish Civil War, Educational Alternatives 2004).

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