Alan Lomax, by Shirley Collins

Alan Lomax. Photo by Shirley Collins

 

We owe a lot to Alan Lomax and his father, John. Folklorists record and pre­serve some of the best we humans have to offer. It is through their hard work that we have before us so many record­ings of the great Bluesmen of the South — Muddy Waters, Lead Belly, and Jelly Roll Morton to name a few. Of course, we owe the musi­cians more. But often­times, with­out the ded­i­ca­tion of the John and Alan Lomaxes of this world, we would never hear the joy of those musi­cal leg­ends. We would never know their genius first hand. It would be lost to us and to posterity.

Alan Lomax was him­self a leg­end. He spent decades col­lect­ing folk art, mak­ing record­ings, films, tak­ing pic­tures, fol­low­ing in the foot­steps of his father. His out­put was more than prodi­gious. It was down­right aston­ish­ing. Not only did he help bring the Delta Blues to the con­scious­ness of a nation and the world, he also made folk record­ings in Italy, Spain, Ireland and the British Isles.

From the Library of Congress web­site, dis­cussing the addi­tion of new archival mate­r­ial col­lected by Lomax:

 

From the time he left his posi­tion as head of the Archive of American Folk Song at the Library of Congress in 1942 through the end of his long and pro­duc­tive career as an inter­na­tion­ally known folk­lorist, author, radio broad­caster, film­maker, con­cert and record pro­ducer, and tele­vi­sion host, Alan Lomax amassed one of the most impor­tant col­lec­tions of ethno­graphic mate­r­ial in the world.

The col­lec­tion has been housed in sev­eral large rooms at Hunter College in New York City. It includes more than 5,000 hours of sound record­ings, 400,000 feet of motion pic­ture film, 2,450 video­tapes, 2,000 schol­arly books and jour­nals, hun­dreds of pho­to­graphic prints and neg­a­tives, sev­eral data­bases con­cern­ing por­tions of the archive, and over 120 lin­ear feet of man­u­script such as cor­re­spon­dence, field­notes, research files, pro­gram scripts, indexes, and book and arti­cle manuscripts.

 


Leadbelly

Huddy Ledbetter (Lead Belly), Cerca 1942.


Here’s a por­tion of Midnight Special, by Lead Belly. Recorded by Alan Lomax. 

Just a taste of the song. Makes me want to hear more. More col­lec­tions of the Blues. More artists. And I won­der about all of the great musi­cians who never reached us. All of the great fid­dle play­ers, gui­tar play­ers, har­mon­ica play­ers and singers who never got the chance to per­form in front of thou­sands. And I won­der about the way those who did were treated back then. In the 1930s and 40s. What kind of obsta­cles did they have to over­come? The threats, the seg­re­gated coun­try they tramped through. The folk­lorists who recorded them were fre­quently in dan­ger as well. Many of the same peo­ple who dis­crim­i­nated against the Muddy Waters, the Lead Bellys, the Etta James … hated the intru­sion of folk­lorists into their realm. It took courage to keep doing it. It took obvi­ous courage for the musi­cians. But it also was tough for those record­ing them.

This is a nation of stark con­trasts and immense puz­zles. The rich­ness, diver­sity and vibrance of our art … and the stub­born, igno­rant, reac­tionary stance of too many of our cit­i­zens through time. Those artists perservered in the ugly face of that igno­rance and stubbornness.

We are a nation of tri­umph and tragedy, one that seems to take a bit longer than it should to see the ele­phant in the room. In our bet­ter moments, on our best days, we do. We really hear the songs, really see the paint­ings, really under­stand the poem, the novel, the play. A sign of progress would be an increase in those moments, an increase in the num­ber of those days .…


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