Lyrics & Knowledge Personal Pages Record Shop Auction Links Radio & Media Kids Membership Help
The Mudcat Cafesj

Post to this Thread - Printer Friendly - Home
Page: [1] [2]


Alan Lomax Archive going online

Related threads:
Lionel Rogosin films / blues / Lomax (7)
BBC prgrm: Shirley Collins on Alan Lomax (11)
Lomax in Ireland (4)
John Lomax's credibility, an example (29)
Alan Lomax- Forest City Joe. (9)
Sing Christmas - Alan Lomax - 1957 (9)
In the Footsteps of John A. Lomax (ABC-Oz) (4)
Great Lives Alan Lomax (3)
Review: Lomax Songbooks (7)
The Ballad Hunter - Alan Lomax (3)
Wanting Help finding a Lomax Recording (13)
Tech: Digitising Lomax: AFC crowdsourcing (2)
Lomax 1959-60 Southern Journey NEW LPs (18)
Alan Lomax Recording Locations (5)
Lomax review BBC radio NOW (10)
Upcoming Lomax radio feature (7)
Alan Lomax: Another View (80)
John A Lomax Jr. (8)
Lomax/Collins BBC Radio4 (17)
Nicki Minaj song samples Lomax recording-Rosie (7)
All of Alan Lomax's recordings online- f (9)
Alan Lomax in the Upper Midwest podcasts (6)
Alan Lomax Southern Journey: new LOC book (4)
Questions Re: the Lomaxes and Copyright (19)
Jean Ritchie on Stephen Colbert (13)
Alan Lomax on Radio 4 (8)
Lomax songbooks, comparison of content (8)
alan lomax documentary here (8)
The Lomaxes on BD (like graphic novels) (3)
New Alan Lomax biography reviewed (27)
Lomax Book containing "Grasshopper Sittin'... (2)
Obit: Bess Lomax Hawes 1921-2009) (34)
PBS t.v. special: Alan Lomax Songhunter (11)
'Lomax the Hound of Music' (3)
The Color Purple with Lomax music (1)
Documentary on Alan Lomax - PBS, 22 August 06 (37)
Blues In The Mississippi Night - Lomax (15)
Alan Lomax & the Ramblers (15)
Alan Lomax Birthday (6)
Happy! – Jan 15 (A Lomax / Sigmeister) (3)
Remixing Lomax (75)
'Land Where The Blues Began' Lomax, Sad. (52)
Obit: Alan Lomax-An Era Passes (1915-2002) (86)
Book: The Land Where The Blues Began (Alan Lomax) (12)
Alan Lomax? recording - Who's singing? (8)
Alan Lomax Tribute at NOMAD (1)
John Henry & Alan Lomax on Radio (5)
Help: Alan Lomax radio programme (5)
Lyr Add: Lomax Recording Trip Index (9)
Link Add: Alan Lomax Website (7)
Allan Lomax suffers stroke (7)
Lomax Collection on-line (16)
The Alan Lomax collection: Southern Journey (3)


ChrisJBrady 29 Mar 12 - 06:07 PM
Desert Dancer 29 Mar 12 - 07:19 PM
ChrisJBrady 29 Mar 12 - 09:42 PM
Desert Dancer 30 Mar 12 - 01:34 PM
GUEST 06 Apr 12 - 01:30 PM
Desert Dancer 06 Apr 12 - 05:18 PM
gnu 06 Apr 12 - 05:22 PM
gnu 06 Apr 12 - 07:55 PM
Desert Dancer 06 Apr 12 - 08:13 PM
Desert Dancer 11 Apr 12 - 02:38 PM
cnd 17 Sep 16 - 12:01 AM
maeve 17 Sep 16 - 07:00 AM
DaveRo 12 Jul 17 - 04:24 PM
Joe Offer 12 Jul 17 - 08:50 PM
Joe Offer 12 Jul 17 - 09:03 PM
Bill D 12 Jul 17 - 10:11 PM
Joe Offer 13 Jul 17 - 01:13 AM
Share Thread
more
Lyrics & Knowledge Search [Advanced]
DT  Forum Child
Sort (Forum) by:relevance date
DT Lyrics:













Subject: RE: Alan Lomax Archive going online
From: ChrisJBrady
Date: 29 Mar 12 - 06:07 PM

Many of the clips do not play (in the UK). A search of "copper" produces a listing of recordings of Bob and Jim Copper - these play fine. A search of "chantey" produces lots of chanteys / shanties but none of them play. Any ideas please?


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alan Lomax Archive going online
From: Desert Dancer
Date: 29 Mar 12 - 07:19 PM

That's strange, CJB, since they're all the same audio format.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alan Lomax Archive going online
From: ChrisJBrady
Date: 29 Mar 12 - 09:42 PM

All OK now.

Just found this gem:

Conversation between Alan Lomax and Ewan MacColl in London

http://research.culturalequity.org/rc-b2/get-dil-details.do?sessionId=132

:: Project ::        Visit with Ewan MacColl and Peggy Seeger
:: Date Range ::        03-01-1986 to 03-01-1986
:: Particpants ::        
Lomax, Alan
MacColl, Ewan
Seeger, Peggy
:: Subjects ::        
Hogmany festival of Scotland, recalled by Ewan MacColl
Scottish and Jewish performance style, differences between
Jewish communities, importance of literacy in
Northern Europe - trial marriage in
Labor lore of Northern England and Southern Wales


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alan Lomax Archive going online
From: Desert Dancer
Date: 30 Mar 12 - 01:34 PM

For the children's rhymes folks: keywords for your searches include

children's song
game song
jump rope song

~ Becky in Tucson


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: Folk music resource culturalequity.org
From: GUEST
Date: 06 Apr 12 - 01:30 PM

I was watching the 2012.03.08 The Colbert Report on the Canuck Comedy Channel website just now. The guests were three big names in music and one guy is in charge of the Andy Lomax archives. He play a snippet of a recording of Jean Ritchie Lomax made (1959 I think) and then one of Dylan's adaptaion of that into The Masters of War.

Long story short... check this out.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Folk music resource culturalequity.org
From: Desert Dancer
Date: 06 Apr 12 - 05:18 PM

Thread on the Colbert episode last month: Jean Ritchie on Stephen Colbert. It was a good one. Glad it made it to Canada. :-)

~ Becky in Tucson


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Folk music resource culturalequity.org
From: gnu
Date: 06 Apr 12 - 05:22 PM

Thanks Becky... shoulda thought of filtering Lomax too before I started this thread.

Yo... mod... close or combine eh? If you have the time.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alan Lomax Archive going online
From: gnu
Date: 06 Apr 12 - 07:55 PM

Just read the other thread... missed both! I feel like a dolt. Only saving grace is keeping the threads going, although inadvertently.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alan Lomax Archive going online
From: Desert Dancer
Date: 06 Apr 12 - 08:13 PM

Doesn't matter how you get there, as long as you get there, Gnu. The rest is housekeeping. :-)

~ Becky in Tucson


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alan Lomax Archive going online
From: Desert Dancer
Date: 11 Apr 12 - 02:38 PM

A tip on the archive's resources from Pat McPherson at CDSS via Facebook: there are ready-made classroom activities provided on the site. Here's a Teaching Resources start page.

~ Becky in Long Beach


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alan Lomax Archive going online
From: cnd
Date: 17 Sep 16 - 12:01 AM

I just found this website online of Lomax's songs he recorded.

http://lomaxky.omeka.net/items/tags

I think many here will find it to be an interesting and useful source of information or music, so I figured I'd share it.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alan Lomax Archive going online
From: maeve
Date: 17 Sep 16 - 07:00 AM

Thank you, cnd.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alan Lomax Archive going online
From: DaveRo
Date: 12 Jul 17 - 04:24 PM

Just noticed this in the NYT:
The Unfinished Work of Alan Lomax's Global Jukebox

(May be paywalled - try private browsing/incognito mode.)


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alan Lomax Archive going online
From: Joe Offer
Date: 12 Jul 17 - 08:50 PM

I think I'll copy-paste that article, Dave - but I recommend that everyone go to the NY Times site to see related videos and articles if you can.

https://www.nytimes.com/2017/07/11/arts/music/alan-lomax-global-jukebox-digital-archive.html

The Unfinished Work of Alan Lomax's Global Jukebox
By GIOVANNI RUSSONELLOJULY 11, 2017

There's a fundamental contradiction to the life and work of Alan Lomax, the prolific collector of American folk songs. He encouraged Western audiences to appreciate rural and indigenous traditions as true art, on the same level as classical music. Meanwhile, he wanted to help those marginalized societies maintain distinct cultural identities, empowering them against the encroaching influence of mass media.

So how does that work? How can we bring these traditions into a cosmopolitan world without compromising them? When a culture comes under the anthropologist's gaze, can it still write its own history?

In 1983 Lomax established the Association for Cultural Equity, known as ACE, a nonprofit dedicated to addressing that tension, largely by making sure the communities he had recorded reaped some reward. This spring, the organization unveiled the Global Jukebox, a free, interactive web portal with recordings of more than 6,000 folk songs from around the world that Lomax recorded or acquired. Most have never been publicly available.

It's still imperfect, but the jukebox is a huge achievement. It will ensure that his work lives on in a single, broadly accessible collection, under the stewardship of an organization whose mission he helped define. Yet there are some questions it still must answer. What is it doing to further the creative life of the communities that created this music? As Lomax put it in a dispatch from 1976, how can the jukebox "make culture again grow on the periphery — where culture has always grown"? And does the Global Jukebox resist the false notion that homegrown expression in nonurban areas is a thing of the past — or does it feed into it?

On the Global Jukebox website, the recordings are plotted on a world map. Using a system called cantometrics, devised by Lomax and the ethnomusicologist Victor Grauer, each song has been analyzed according to 41 variables, such as vocal inflection and ensemble size. Users can sort songs from around the world and sift for commonalities, finding clues to migration patterns, or the ways that societies with similar structures share modes of expression.

Lomax first envisioned creating something like this in the 1980s and worked for years to make it a reality, often adopting new methods and machinery as technologies advanced.

"The idea was that young people of the world were losing interest in their own traditions, and that had a lot to do with TV and the radio," Dr. Grauer said. "It was an overwhelming project. All the recordings in his archive needed to be digitized."

Lomax died in 2001, before the project could be completed, and his daughter, the anthropologist Anna Lomax Wood, has seen it through since then.

The Global Jukebox, in its current form, is not quite ready for prime time. It's virtually unusable on a mobile device. The tools that offer guided tours and invite user interaction are difficult to find. It doesn't readily show up on search engines.

Still, it amounts to an unprecedented compendium of worldwide musical heritage — in terms of its scope and its accessibility. And it invites further inquiry. Within five minutes, you're likely to find yourself Googling the name of a region you didn't know, or diving into the deep cuts of an album of old songs on Spotify.

Part of what's missing is contextualizing content. There are brief, boilerplate descriptions of most societies, plus a few essays and lesson plans written by anthropologists and ethnomusicologists. But beyond the songs themselves, we do not hear from the cultures that created the music.

"Music has a life. It's telling the lives of migration, and whatever else people are doing," said Diana Taylor, a professor of performance studies at New York University and director of the Hemispheric Institute of Performance and Politics. "There's something very rich about putting that music in context — which means the people's context."

"I would love to know what they think their music is doing in their communities," she said.

Lomax saw archives as tools to ward off cultural erasure. He meant to help populations maintain and expand on their traditions. At a time of high modernism, that meant capturing traditions on tape and establishing their own standard repertories. But to uphold and honor any population in the present day, it's crucial to avoid freezing it in place. (Even the Delta blues, which first inspired Lomax to make folk music his career, was an evolving form that had existed for only a few decades.)

With the Global Jukebox, ACE can actually foster a continuing conversation. The quintessential image of Lomax is one of a smiling man holding a microphone up to a singer. The image of today's folkloric inquiry might be one of the artist recording herself while she repurposes the tools of past generations, using new instruments and technologies.

In the 1960s and '70s, Lomax worked on various projects to ensure that rural communities would remain aware of their own traditions and the social contracts they reflected. He advocated for region-specific public TV programs as a way to make sure local communities "grow from their own roots," as he once wrote. He pushed Unesco — and then Sony — to put recording equipment into the hands of artists in small communities across the world.

With ACE, Lomax said his main purpose was to "repatriate" the audio and video materials he had captured across the globe — placing them back within their places of origin and incorporating them into local education initiatives. He also hoped to help people in those areas continue documenting themselves.

The association has led about 100 such projects. "We try to document cultures that are threatened, and provide a platform for them to participate in scholarly and general intellectual discourse," said Jorge Arévalo Mateus, ACE's executive director. "The Global Jukebox is really the centerpiece; everything will now feed back into that."

For now, that last statement remains an aspiration. But there are plenty of opportunities for it to become a reality. Last month the organization received a National Endowment for the Arts grant to digitize Lomax's blues recordings from the Mississippi Delta, house them at the Mississippi Department of Archives and History and create grade-school lesson plans using the recordings.

In Montemarano, Italy, the music enthusiast Luigi D'Agnese has worked with Dr. Wood, ACE's president, to create a museum dedicated to Lomax's recordings in the area. He wants to keep young people in touch with their local musical traditions. The organization recently supported a project documenting styles of traditional singing that have survived in refugee housing in South Sudan.

Other groups are doing similar work: In Peru, the vocalist Susana Baca helps run the Instituto Negro Continuo, which works to record and teach Afro-Peruvian music and dance traditions, making that repertoire available to young musicians so that it can take root it in their expressions.

"Young people want to experiment, they want to mix things and they play what they want," Ms. Baca said. "But it's also important to really drink up your own culture, to go to the source, to hear the old singers."

What would a Global Jukebox look like if it made space for a record of these evolving musical engagements?

Rather than focusing on only cantometrics and scholarly overviews, it could include personal histories and writings that explore the modern-day resonance of traditional recordings — in the cultures that ride their wake. And there is plenty of new music and art being created that draws on these traditions.

Take Jaimeo Brown's album of nouveau blues, using Lomax's old recordings, or the rock music of young Maya musicians in Central America, drawing on traditional instruments and indigenous languages. Is it folklore, or just contemporary art? Perhaps the divide was never so stark in the first place.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alan Lomax Archive going online
From: Joe Offer
Date: 12 Jul 17 - 09:03 PM

A previous NY Times article: https://www.nytimes.com/2017/04/18/arts/music/alan-lomax-recordings-the-global-jukebox-digitized.html


Alan Lomax Recordings Are Digitized in a New Online Collection
By ANDREW R. CHOW APRIL 18, 2017

lan Lomax made it his lifelong mission to archive and share traditional music from around the world. He spent decades in the field, recording heralded artists like Muddy Waters and Woody Guthrie, as well as far more obscure musicians, from the British Isles to Haiti. He also created systems to classify this music and explore the links between cultures.

Lomax died in 2002, but the organization he founded, the Association for Cultural Equity (ACE), is hoping to further his research with the Global Jukebox, a new online database. The project, an interactive website, allows users to listen to and learn about more than 6,000 songs from 1,000 cultures — including many from Lomax's personal collection.

The website, organized by map and by culture, is free to use. The wide-ranging samples were digitized from hard copies at the Library of Congress and include 1978 field recordings from the Kullu culture in Himachal Pradesh, India; harvest songs from 1954 Romania; and a ballad to John Henry from Asheville, N.C., in 1941, recorded by Lomax.

Lomax envisioned this sort of database as computer technology progressed in the 1980s. He began work on a "global jukebox" to store thousands of songs and dances, cross-referenced with anthropological data. "The modern computer with all its various gadgets and wonderful electronic facilities now makes it possible to preserve and reinvigorate all the cultural richness of mankind," he said in a 1991 interview with CBS.

The Global Jukebox places a large emphasis on analyzing these samples through cantrometrics, a system that Lomax fastidiously developed to break down music into variables like tonal blend, melodic range and social organization of vocal lines.

"The project was very ambitious for the point in time that Alan was working in," Kathleen Rivera, a research associate for ACE, said in an interview. "He was poring over these punch cards and computing systems for entire days. His vision couldn't match the technology that he had at the time. Today, we have the system that can make it all very clear for people."

ACE has been digitizing Lomax's collection over the years. In 2012, the association created the ACE Online Archives, which contain 17,000 free songs. And it will continue the digitization process: Anna Lomax Wood, Lomax's daughter and the organization's president, said that many more recordings — and corresponding analyses — are to be released onto the website in the years to come.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alan Lomax Archive going online
From: Bill D
Date: 12 Jul 17 - 10:11 PM

I just went there and listened. It is a very unusual format to choose what you want to hear, but there is a lot there...

https://theglobaljukebox.org/

(You find this big circle and point at one little wedge and read where it's about.)


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alan Lomax Archive going online
From: Joe Offer
Date: 13 Jul 17 - 01:13 AM

Hi, Bill -
Did you get any idea how much of the Rounder Lomax collection is now available at globaljukebox?
-Joe-


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate
  Share Thread:
More...

Reply to Thread
Subject:  Help
From:
Preview   Automatic Linebreaks   Make a link ("blue clicky")


Mudcat time: 26 April 4:42 AM EDT

[ Home ]

All original material is copyright © 2022 by the Mudcat Café Music Foundation. All photos, music, images, etc. are copyright © by their rightful owners. Every effort is taken to attribute appropriate copyright to images, content, music, etc. We are not a copyright resource.