Harry Smith's (1952) Anthology of American Folk Music
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Harry Smith's (1952) Anthology of American Folk Music Big influence on modern rock music. Hard to find online, expensive to buy. Basic info & track list: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anthology_of_American_Folk_Music More info: http://www.expectingrain.com/dok/cd/97/anthology.html Occasionally a single artifact, document or exhibition manages both to recast the way in which artists see their tradition and to reanimate their sense of what is possible within that tradition. Such cultural moments act as prisms, gathering together work from different ends of a genre's spectrum and allowing them to blend in a new way. In 1997, Smithsonian Folkways records re-released another such document, the "Anthology of American Folk Music," originally issued by Folkways Records in 1952. The brainchild of the avant-garde filmmaker, folklorist and anthropologist Harry Smith, the anthology comprised three boxed two-LP sets that contained 84 performances recorded between 1926 and 1933. Included were early black blues and white country music, Cajun recordings, hymns and sacred music, and more, thrown together under a loose framework that almost single-handedly redefined folk music. In doing so, the anthology became the single most important source of material and inspiration for many young singers in the 1950's and 60's and the touchstone of the early-60's "folk revival." Such performers as Bob Dylan, Joan Baez, Phil Ochs and the New Lost City Ramblers, as well as later offshoots like the Byrds, Bruce Springsteen and Jerry Garcia, owe not just repertory and techniques but, in a real sense, a large portion of their world view to the anthology's conflation of such seemingly different traditions. The package appeared on the small but important Folkways label, run by Moses Asch, who had recorded performers like Woody Guthrie, Leadbelly and Pete Seeger, and thought of his label as a great aural museum. Before issuing Harry Smith's Anthology, Folkways had released a series of compilations of various ethnic musics as well as early jazz music. But Smith's project was different. The anthology itself seemed to have a personality, much like that of its compiler: erudite, hermetic, witty in a deadpan way. The cover of each boxed volume was plain black cardboard, with the selections and performers listed plainly on a label affixed to the front. Volume 1 contained ballads (songs with a narrative content), Volume 2 was titled Social Music (dance music and religious music) and Volume 3 was a catchall called Songs, offering vocal selections with no real narrative aspect. (The six-disk reissue wisely follows the exact format and sequence of the original.) Each box contained a copy of a booklet written, designed and laid out by Smith himself, an idiosyncratic compendium of discographical information, bibliographical references and summaries of the songs, all set in various type fonts and illustrated with photographs, advertisements from old record catalogues and other ephemera. The music itself on the anthology opens a door to a world that will be just as strange to most listeners of today as it was in 1952, and perhaps more so. The lyrics offer a panorama of murders, religious visions, hangings, agrarian complaints, heroic exploits, swindles, assassinations and endless traveling. The extraordinary range of vocal sounds in which these marvels are expressed is no less wondrous. The nasal timbre of the coal miner and banjoist Dock Boggs on his two 1927 recordings included here, or the rasping throat tones of the religious street singer Blind Willie Johnson, so different from each other, both still carry the power to shock 70 years after they were recorded. The vitality and variety of the music are staggering, from the country singer Uncle Dave Macon's hollering, headlong vocal and banjo on "Down the Old Plank Road" to the inwardness of the New Orleans songster Rabbit Brown on his "James Alley Blues" to the pinched, wry, tall-tale quality of Kelly Harrell's small 1927 masterpiece "My Name Is John Johanna," a song about a laborer's disastrous trip to Arkansas in search of work. Several pieces, like Buell Kazee's "East Virginia," have the odd-sounding modal harmonic quality of English ballads; elsewhere one finds Anglo-Irish fiddle tunes, Cajun dance music from Louisiana and collective ensemble gospel singing by black and white groups that rivet you to your spot by their intensity and commitment. Many of the performers remain obscure even to this day. ?? ?? he performances were originally recorded commercially by companies that were trying to compete with radio in the 1920's by finding new markets among the people of the rural South. The 78 rpm records were often designated as "hillbilly" or "old time" (euphemisms for rural white) and "race" (euphemism for black). What Harry Smith did that was new was to throw these recordings together, with no regard for the commercial categories for which they had initially been recorded. The booklet resolutely avoided mentioning the race or ethnicity of performers, and many of the songs that were included cropped up in both black and white traditions. The rationale for listening to a performance on the anthology's terms was not that it represented the voice of a specific ethnic group; rather, strangeness, passion and mystery, the anthology seemed to proclaim, are universal human traits. It was a revolutionary message and is still so today, when so many claims of identity are staked along ethnic lines. Smith's cultural Trojan horse rolled into public view at the beginning of the Eisenhower 1950's, in the wake of World War II, as America was asking itself in many ways, not all of them healthy, what it meant to be American. Powerful currents of standardization were all around; anxiety about fitting in, assimilating, returning to normalcy after the war and a residual sense of threat from outside quickened the impulse to locate a common denominator in behaviors and values. It was the period in which Levittown was born. Into these currents strode the anthology, implicitly asserting the multifarious, the odd, the local as being somehow definitively American. That apparent paradox appealed to those who wanted to see behind the conformist scrim of the Eisenhower era. To them, the anthology was a sort of palimpsest wherein they read a secret cultural history of the nation. Among these were the young men and women who made up the folk revival. Many of them, like the members of the New Lost City Ramblers, a traditionalist group, strove to recreate the original performances in as faithful a manner as possible; others used the anthology as a trove of material to mine, and transmute. Bob Dylan is certainly the best example of this; his earliest performances were full of material taken from the anthology. Echoes of lyrics from anthology songs continued to appear in Mr. Dylan's later works. On his most recent disk, "World Gone Wrong" (1993), he performs several tunes that appear on the anthology. If the anthology energized a new generation of performers it did the same for a new generation of folklorists, mostly white and mostly male -- among them Mike Seeger, Ralph Rinzler and Paul Clayton -- who traveled south in hopes of finding the original performers. An amazing number of them turned out to still be alive; the Newport Folk Festivals of the early 1960's offered a procession of them -- Clarence Ashley, Dock Boggs, Mississippi John Hurt, Furry Lewis, Buell Kazee and others -- in one of the great reclamation projects in American cultural history. The re-issue of the anthology is the most significant event yet in Smithsonian Folkways' superb reactivation of the original Folkways catalogue, which the Smithsonian Institution acquired in 1987, after Mr. Asch's death. Smithsonian Folkways has taken care to allude repeatedly to the original anthology in its repackaging. Included is a reproduction of the original booklet as well as invaluable supplemental notes, an expanded bibliography and references to other recordings of the same material by other artists. There are essays on the anthology's effect at the time, including a wonderfully pointed one by the folklorist Jon Pankake, as well as reminiscences of Harry Smith, who died in 1991, by those who knew him. The re-issue also features a long essay by the writer Greil Marcus excerpted from his recent book "Invisible Republic," which offers insights into the anthology's place in American culture. Not included in the package, but worth reading, is a chapter in Robert Cantwell's recent book on the folk revival entitled "When We Were Good," which puts Smith's achievement in lucid historical and cultural context. The current set's sixth disk is an enhanced CD offering photographs, biographical material about Smith, video footage and linkage to an Anthology Web site. Somehow, in the process of gathering all its voices together, the anthology became not just a loose confederation but an integral unit, a whole made up of the most disparate parts, like some ideal America of its own. It was a gauntlet thrown down, in a sense, a challenge to ponder: what kind of unity could possibly underlie this diversity? It is a question we still ask, and the re-issue of this milestone set helps us ask it in appreciative wonder.
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Thank You, fantastic music!!!
This is the stuff! Thanks!
anybody still seeding?
FANTASTIC!
GREAT!!
Holy shit, unbelievable....THANK YOU!
Excellent! Stupendous! I've longed for this set! Many thanks! Now that I have it, I'll help seed it for a while!
Originally came from demonoid. This cat Harry Smith was some sort of artist / magician. He was connected with the OTO "Tahuti Lodge" out of Brooklyn. Apparently this anthology was meant to work an occult ritual designed to spark off the counterculture hippie movement, as a supernatural spell.
Many thanx indeed! Great music.
i love folk music
Thanks so much for this. A very great collection.
Wow. Great quality, and perfect track labeling. Nicely done.
Thanks a ton, and thanks to all the seeds.
Thanks a ton, and thanks to all the seeds.
A true gem! I can't thank you enough for this! Bravo!
Another one: how do I seed? If I'm going to start seeding I'd like to start with this one. Thanks!
thank you....
Thanks a bunch!
This was given to me when I left a record shop I worked in. We used to say that a record shop that didn't have this in stock wasn't a record shop. I love it, and it's deep in storage right now. Thank you for the upload.
This is the single most important set of recordings in the history of American music, even with huge kudos and apologies to the Lomax's. First found these as a kid in the '70's at the local library and have been listening ever since. These records can change your life.
please seed this looks amazing!!
Thanks in advance! Today is a good day in my life.
Wow! Wonderful up. Thank you. :)
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