Biography
Works Progress Administration, named after a Franklin Roosevelt program to put people to work during the Great Depression, is something of a sideman supergroup that developed out of the interactions of musicians at the Los Angeles club Largo. Its founding members were former Toad the Wet Sprocket singer/guitarist Glen Phillips, singer/guitarist Sean Watkins of Nickel Creek, and champion fiddle player Luke Bulla. They added pedal steel guitarist Greg Leisz; Watkins' sister Sara Watkins, also of Nickel Creek; keyboard player Benmont Tench of Tom Petty the Heartbreakers; and the rhythm section from Elvis Costello's backing band the Imposters, bassist Davey Faragher and drummer Pete Thomas. This septet then went into a recording studio and made an album, before having signed a record contract or even settled on a group name. Ultimately, the album was self-titled and issued by WPA Records/Umami Music when it appeared on September 15, 2009. (Bassist Sebastian Steinberg of Soul Coughing joined the band as a touring member when they hit the road to promote the album.) ~ William Ruhlmann, Rovi



 
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WPA (Works Progress Administration) - 1937
History Brief: The Works Progress Administration (WPA)
What few people know about the program that "saved" America - Meg Jacobs
WORKS PROGRESS ADMINISTRATION PROMOTIONAL FILM W.P.A. GREAT DEPRESSION 42214
Largest WPA Projects During the Great Depression
Works Progress Administration - Great Depression
What Was It Like to Work For The WPA In The Midwest? | Encyclopaedia Britannica
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