<Table> <Tr> <Td> Interviews with Phil Ochs (1976) Interviews with Phil Ochs 1976 </Td> <Td> A Toast to Those Who Are Gone (1986) </Td> <Td> The War Is Over: The Best of Phil Ochs (1988) The War Is Over: The Best of Phil Ochs 1988 </Td> </Tr> </Table> <Tr> <Td> Interviews with Phil Ochs (1976) Interviews with Phil Ochs 1976 </Td> <Td> A Toast to Those Who Are Gone (1986) </Td> <Td> The War Is Over: The Best of Phil Ochs (1988) The War Is Over: The Best of Phil Ochs 1988 </Td> </Tr> <P> A Toast to Those Who Are Gone is a 1986 compilation album of recordings that Phil Ochs made in the early to mid-1960s, mostly between his contracts with Elektra Records and A&M Records . In line with recordings made on the former, Ochs espouses his left - leaning views on civil rights on songs like "Ballad of Oxford", "Going Down To Mississippi" and "Colored Town", his views on worker's rights on "No Christmas in Kentucky", his attack on the American Medical Association on "A.M.A. Song", and the unwilling hero (perhaps Ochs himself) on the title track . </P> <P> The CD carried an extra track, "The Trial", and the liner notes were by noted Ochs fan Sean Penn . </P>

Phil ochs a toast to those who are gone