Songwriter: Bob Dylan

Producer: Sis Cunningham

Who killed Davey Moore?
How come he died
And what's the reason for it?

"Not I," says the referee
"Don't point your little finger at me!
Sure, I could have stopped it in the eight
And saved him from his terrible fate
But the crowd would've booed, I'm sure
Not getting their money's worth
Too bad he had to go
But there's pressure on me, you know
No, it wasn't me that made him fall
You can't blame me at all!"

Who killed Davey Moore?
How come he died
And what's the reason for it?

"Not I," says the angry crowd
Whose screams filled the ring aloud
Says, "too bad he died that night
But we just like to see a good fight
You can't blame us for his death
We just like to see some sweat
There ain't nothin' wrong in that
No, it wasn't us that made him fall
You can't blame us at all!"

Who killed Davey Moore?
How come he died
And what's the reason for it?

"Not I," says his manager
Puffing on his big cigar
"It's hard to say, it's hard to tell
I always thought that he was well
Too bad for his wife and kids he's dead
But if he was sick he should've said
No, you can't blame me at all
It wasn't me that made him fall!"

Who killed Davey Moore?
How come he died
And what's the reason for it?

"Not I," says the boxing writer
Pounding his print on his old typewriter
Says, "Boxing ain't to blame
There's just as much danger in a football game"
Says, "Boxing is here to stay
It's just the old American way
No, it wasn't me that made him fall
You can't blame me at all!"

Who killed Davey Moore?
How come he died
And what's the reason for it?

"Not I," says the man whose fists
Laid him low in a cloud of mist
Who came here from Cuba's shore
Where boxing ain't allowed no more
"I hit him, yes it's true
But that's what I was paid to do
Don't say murder, don't say kill
It was destiny, it was God's will!

Who killed Davey Moore?
How come he died
And what's the reason for it?

Pete Seeger

Peter Seeger (3 May 1919 – 27 January 2014) was born in New York, New York and was destined for a life in folk music. He became a protege of Woody Guthrie and in time he became one of the most famous American folk singers. His father was Charles Seeger, a musicologist and prothselitizer of decidedly leftist political views. Seeger’s father and mother were faculty members at the Julliard School of Music. Seeger founded The Almanac Singers in 1940 and later joined The Weavers in the 1949, but that group ran into the buzzsaw of the Red Scare in 1955. The members were blacklisted by Sen. Joe McCarthy’s Senate sub-committee on un-American Activities as Communist sympathizers. Seeger made a comeback in the 60s with several folk songs supporting international disarmament, the U.S. Civil Rights Movement and environmental causes.

Seeger was a thin man, almost painfully so, but he had a strong tenor voice and a gregarious stage presence. He played the 12-string guitar and (his own modified, longneck) 5-string banjo. He sang topical songs, children’s songs, humorous tunes and earnest anthems, and was always encouraging his audience to sing along. His social views were always to the He sang for the labor movement in the 40s and 50s, for civil rights and for an end to the Vietnam War in the 60s, and for environmental and international human rights from the 70s until his death.

Seeger was a mentor to Bob Dylan, Joan Baez and Don McClean. He eschewed stardom, seeing himself as part of a continuing folk music tradition, constantly recycling and revising music that had been honed by time.