Comments for The Vietnam Tapes of Michael A. Baronowski

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Produced by Christina Egloff and Jay Allison

Other pieces by Jay Allison

Summary: Award-winning documentary from Lost & Found Sound, produced by Christina Egloff with Jay Allison
 

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thank you

its been a long time. i still don't understand what it was all for.

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Stunning.

As an applied oral historian specializing in veterans' experiences, I’ve heard many combat stories. But this is one of the most emotionally moving accounts of the Vietnam War I've heard in a long time. The sounds, imagery, and narration are powerful. Haunting.

I came across this radio story shortly before I interviewed a Vietnam veteran who was in the vicinity of Mike Baronowski. As a young US Marine, John was at the “Rock Pile,” in the endless rain and rotting mud, walking patrols, enduring mortar fire—and worse. I shared this story with John. His reaction was reserved, only to say that he could identify with it. Having heard John’s own story, I knew it hit him hard.

The ending is especially meaningful for me, given the work that I do—capturing, preserving, and sharing the stories of veterans of all eras and branches of service—in their own words. These voices—indeed, our voices—matter. They are precious, and they deserve to be saved. Yet, for so many reasons, we often fail to record them. Then it is too late. Unless . . .

I encourage everyone to give this a close listen. Find your meaning in it. Let it sink in. I believe this will affect the way you think about the next Vietnam veteran you meet. At least it should.

--Kevin Farkas, Veteran Voices of Pittsburgh

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Review of The Vietnam Tapes of Michael A. Baronowski

‘These Baronowski-tapes are a real find ’…any radio producer would agree… ‘Having these tapes as raw material to work with: what a treasure! You just can’t go wrong with them’.
But that’s exactly the pitfall: ‘cause you could go very easily very wrong with them, turning them into a sentimental melodrama. Thank god, this didn’t happen with these tapes!!! And there lies the real treasure of this radio piece: in the sincere processing of the tapes and in Duffie’s unpretentious, down-to-earth recounting of ‘how it was’ and ‘what happened’. No manipulation of sentiments and emotions, no frills. It’s presented raw, sober, very realistically, very ‘simple’: here we were, two ordinary guys in an unordinary setting: fighting holes in a war zone.
Duffie and Baronowski are in tune with each other: Baronowski’s taped voice describing impressions, surroundings, thoughts, longings and Duffie looking back, reflecting, remembering their shared experiences in the Vietnam war. Two voices in symbioses, sometimes profound, sometimes wondering, sometimes even funny, but always real. Two voices connected, confronting the listener with a touching story.

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Review of The Vietnam Tapes of Michael A. Baronowski

This piece hit me so hard I had to listen to it twice in a row, just sitting there at my desk. For someone of my generation (I'm 22), whose knowledge of the Vietnam War was little more than a series of cliches about protests and government mistakes, this documentary brought the war to life. Airing this piece at any time would make a vast impression on listeners, but especially now, as our country struggles with another controversial war in Iraq, we need radio like this to help us experience what war is really like,

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Review of The Vietnam Tapes of Michael A. Baronowski

What can I say? There is a reason why so many people love this piece, it's amazing. It's not the sound quality which isn't that great (but come on, 35 year-old magnetic tapes gathered in the wet jungles of Vietnam... it's amazing for that). But, there is no sound so personal as this piece. I am the foxhole with him. He's whispering in my ear.

Amazing. I've never accidentally used a hang grenade as a microphone.