Homegrown Concert with Artist in Resonance Creek Rocks
Автор: Library of Congress
Загружено: 2025-09-10
Просмотров: 775
The exciting old time duo The Creek Rocks, the recipients of the 2024 Artists in Resonance Fellowship from the American Folklife Center at the Library of Congress, bring old songs back to the Library in shiny new arrangements! Accomplished singer and banjo player Cindy Woolf and veteran guitarist and singer Mark Bilyeu established the group in 2015. Much of their work has been interpreting the traditional music of the Ozarks region. The Artists in Resonance Fellowship provided Cindy and Mark the opportunity to immerse themselves in the field recordings of folklorist Sidney Robertson Cowell, who in December 1936 and January 1937 visited communities in the Missouri and Arkansas Ozarks.
On August 21, 2025, the duo returned to the Library at the invitation of the AFC to perform some of the materials they learned here. Says Bilyeu of the event, "We get to take these songs Sidney Robertson recorded on a repeat journey of sorts, from the nation's capital to the Ozarks and back again." The Cowell recordings also serve as the source material for The Creek Rocks' current album-length recording project, which will be the culmination of their fellowship tenure. Their debut recording, "Wolf Hunter," was a similar project, featuring sixteen songs gathered from two well-known folk song collections, those of Max Hunter of Springfield, Missouri (Mark's birthplace), and John Quincy Wolf of Batesville, Arkansas (where Cindy grew up).
The Homegrown Concert Series is part of AFC's ongoing public programming highlighting the fields of folklife, ethnomusicology, oral history, and related disciplines; foregrounding its archival holdings; and fulfilling its congressionally mandated mission.
For transcript and more information, visit https://www.loc.gov/item/webcast-11847
Доступные форматы для скачивания:
Скачать видео mp4
-
Информация по загрузке: