Patrick Bonner Black Tar On a Stick Up and Down the Broom 1938
>> YOUR LINK HERE: ___ http://youtube.com/watch?v=YOEcwVu5utI
Recorded by Alan Lomax in Beaver Island, Michigan, August 1938. • Alan Lomax's work documenting the music and lore of the rural American South is well-known, but few are familiar with the folklife survey he made in the Upper Midwest in 1938. Under the auspices of the Library of Congress, he traveled in Michigan and Wisconsin for three months, recording (on 250 acetate discs and eight reels of film) a staggering wealth of material — French-Canadian and maritime ballads; bawdy lumberjack songs; Delta blues in Detroit; lyric pieces of Serbian, German, and Lithuanian origin; dance tunes played by Finnish accordionists and Native fiddlers, among much else. • Michigan-I-O: Alan Lomax and the 1938 Library of Congress Folk-Song Expedition is an introduction to Lomax's remarkable journey, and serves as an audio accompaniment to the recently released iBook of the same name. Written by Todd Harvey (curator of the Lomax Collection at the Library of Congress' American Folklife Center), and a collaboration between the Library and the Dust-to-Digital label, this innovative e-publication celebrates the 1938 field-trip with a compelling narrative illustrated with original ephemera, audio and video clips, excerpts from field notes, and telegrams. Taken as a whole, these releases provide fascinating insights into both the region that Lomax called the most fertile source of American folklore, and the man who would become America's most famous folklorist. • For more information about Lomax's Michigan recordings and associated releases/projects: • American Folklife Center of the Library of Congress: • http://www.loc.gov/folklife/lomax/mic... • Michigan State Museum: • http://museum.msu.edu/?q=node/1056
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