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Inside the center, video touch screens and interactive exhibits await visitors at almost every turn, bringing Guthrie into the digital age. One exhibit is a multimedia tour of the Dust Bowl with pictures, artifacts and a video featuring black and white clips of the environmental disaster that wreaked havoc on the Plains in the 1930s and served as the inspiration for many Guthrie songs. Another exhibit, called the Music Bar, lets visitors choose a Guthrie song on a computer screen and listen to the selection with headphones. The center also features objects from some musicians who were influenced by Guthrie, including Bob Dylan and Pete Seeger. The displays show Guthrie's many sides, not just his folk singer image, archivist Tiffany Colannino said. "There are the previously unknown sides," she said. "There was Woody the stay-at-home father who documented fatherhood. There was Woody in the military service and the story of the second World War. There was Woody the visual artist. "We're pushing at different sides of Woody that maybe have escaped the myth." Santelli said Guthrie's contribution to American music is profound because the topics he wrote and sang about
-- immigration, banks, the poor, the environment -- are still relevant. "That's why his music lives and breathes today," the Grammy Museum executive director said. "He was a very, very simple person ... who had his finger on the pulse of America." Admission to the Woody Guthrie Center is $8 for adults and $6 for youth. Children younger than 5 get in free. ___ Online: Woody Guthrie Center:
http://woodyguthriecenter.org/
[Associated
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