The Mudcat Café TM
Thread #165197   Message #3960042
Posted By: Bat Goddess
04-Nov-18 - 10:20 AM
Thread Name: Obit: Burt Feintuch, Folklorist, Musician
Subject: Obit: Burt Feintuch, Folklorist, Musician
I'm sad to announce that long time Press Room session member, UNH Folklore professor, ethnologist, fine musician, and friend Burt Feintuch passed away last Monday, October 29, 2018.

Some of you, especially in Cape Breton, may know him.

Here's his obituary in yesterday's Portsmouth [NH] Herald. I believe it's running in today's Boston Globe.

Saturday, November 3, 2018   
Portsmouth [NH] Herald

PORTSMOUTH — Burt Feintuch, ethnographer of traditional music, author, editor, contra-dance musician, folklore professor, film producer, record producer, and Director of Center for the Humanities at the University of New Hampshire died on Monday, October 29, 2018.
His career documented traditional musical forms ranging from the Northumbrian pipes in North East England to African-American gospel music in Kentucky to contemporary Scottish music on Cape Breton Island in Nova Scotia to the street and club music of New Orleans and finally to the zydeco-fueled trail rides of Texas and Louisiana. He was a member of the Library of Congress National Recording Preservation Board and represented the American Folklore Society at the United Nations’ World Intellectual Property meetings.

He authored seven books, including an encyclopedia documenting the culture of New England, which was co-edited with New Hampshire Senator David Watters. He produced numerous albums of traditional music for Rounder and Smithsonian Folkways. Black gospel music, refugees in New England, and black history in New England, respectively, were the subjects of the three films he produced. He secured many grants, including ones from the Mellon Foundation, the National Endowment for the Humanities, and the National Endowment for the Arts. Burt enthusiastically presented traditional artists at the Lowell Folklife Festival and various venues on Cape Breton Island.

Beloved as a witty, sardonic, and caring father, brother, partner, and colleague, Burt maintained his irreverent sense of humor even after he fell ill. When told he needed surgery that could impact his brain, he said, “Well, I hope this brings back my Hebrew.” And, “If you’re going to map my brain, will you please put in some points of interest?”

He is profoundly missed by his daughters with his first wife, Maxene Feintuch: Sophie, a program officer at an international human rights organization in New York and Hannah, who teaches English to recently arrived immigrant middle schoolers in Chelsea (Mass.) Public Schools. In addition to his daughters, he is survived by his siblings, Robert, a painter in New York; his sister-in-law, Rona Pondick, a sculptor in New York; his sister, Betty Weinkle, an executive in Colorado; and his long-time partner, Jeannie Banks Thomas, a folklorist who often accompanied him during his fieldwork.

In lieu of flowers, the family asks that donations be made to the Celtic Music Interpretive Centre on Cape Breton Island, an organization that Burt was passionate about: //celticmusiccentre. ca/store/index. php?route=product/ category& path=78. The Centre is a not-for-profit organization that collects, preserves, and promotes traditional Cape Breton music, see //www. celticmusiccentre.com/.