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Podcasts
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MP3 |
| 1. |
Frank and Ann Thomas and Don Grooms
Recorded on May 28, 1995 by the Florida Folklife Program at the 1995 Florida Folk Festival in White Springs, Florida
(1:34:24; 88MB; D95-36)
Transcript of the introduction:
Welcome back to the Florida Folklife Collection podcast series from the State Library and Archives of Florida.
Over the years several Florida artists have enjoyed a sort of de facto master of ceremonies status on the Florida Folk Festival stage. Any of the following names would be quite familiar to any regular attendee of the festival, Cousin Thelma Boltin, Will McLean, Gamble Rogers, Don Grooms, and Dale Crider to mention but a few. Those names and many others resonate throughout the Florida Folklife Collection to such a degree that the songs and stories they have shared nearly comprise an unofficial biography of the performers and the festival itself. Many visitors to White Springs have enthusiastically enjoyed their role in the festivities as well.
In working to digitize and preserve the folk festival recordings I have often been impressed with the easy and comfortable rapport these artists have with their White Springs audience. It is little wonder then that so many of those audience members contact the State Archives for copies of folk festival performances. In some cases these patron requests contribute to the discovery of great moments from the festival stage. Such is the case with our newest podcast featuring Frank and Ann Thomas and a rollicking set from Don Grooms and friends recorded in 1995. Requesting CDs of folklife materials is very easy and we encourage you to contact us for more information or you may utilize the folklife database link on the left side of this screen to search for folk festival reels and access mp3 files that are available for all festival performances up to the 1980 Folk Festival. Additional mp3s will be added as digitization continues. But that’s enough talk for now, we have good music on the way from the Thomas’ and Don Grooms and thanks very much for listening. |
MP3 |
| 2. |
Florida Mexican American Music
Survey Sampler
(60:00:15; 68.9 MB; S
2029)
The Mexican American Music Survey was undertaken by the Florida Folklife
Program to document the musical
traditions of Florida’s various Mexican-American communities: Apopka,
South Dade County, Immokalee, the St. Johns River Basin, and Central
Florida. Funded by a grant from the Lila Wallace-Reader’s Digest
Community Folklife Program, the survey was conducted between 1994 and
1996 by folklorist Robert Stone. Among the musical traditions were serenatas,
conjunto, Quinceañara ritual music, ranchera, Michoacana, mariachi,
norteno, Tejano, and pop music. At the end of the project, a sampler
music tape
was created by the Florida Folklife Program for distribution to various
libraries.
Transcript
of the introduction:
In recognition of Hispanic Heritage
Month, this installment features the recorded product of the Florida
Mexican American
Music Survey, a field recording project conducted by the Florida Division
of Historical Resources from 1994 to 1996. The project sought to illustrate
how music provides Florida’s Mexican population with a living
bridge to their cultural history and identity.
The resulting sampler tape, featured in this podcast, offered a wide
variety of traditional and popular Mexican music all recorded in Florida.
It balanced older and contemporary styles with venerable and unusual
traditions such as Mother’s Day Serenatas, regional music, and
then contemporary Banda & La Macarena style. It also included recordings
of community ritual celebrations such as the Quinceañera, from
the Apopka and Homestead area. These field recordings provide the unfamiliar
listener
with a unique opportunity to appreciate some of the ways which Mexicans
Americans entwine their musical traditions with their celebrations and
daily life here in Florida thus enriching and expanding the musical environment
of our state.
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MP3

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3. |
Bluegrass
Duo Jim and Jesse with the Virginia Boys
Recorded on May 23, 1998 by the Florida Folklife Program at the
1998 Florida Folk Festival in White Springs, Florida
(0:44:54; 31MB; S 1576; tapes C98-107
- C98-108)
Transcript
of the introduction: When people think of bluegrass, they
may picture the backwoods of the Appalachian Mountains or perhaps Virginia,
Kentucky or The Carolinas. Few realize that the Sunshine state played
a
role in the development of bluegrass as well. From Chubby Wise to Vassar
Clements to the Orange Blossom Special, Florida has enjoyed top billing
in bluegrass music. In this month’s podcast we feature a live performance
by bluegrass pioneers with their own Florida connection.
When Jim and Jesse McReynolds played the 1998 Florida Folk Festival,
it was something of a homecoming. Jim and Jesse were brothers from Virginia
who began performing in 1945 with their band, the Virginia Boys, which
included for a while Florida’s famed fiddler Vassar Clements. In
the late 1950s, the popular duo starred on the Suwannee River Jamboree,
a weekly
country music program broadcast from Live Oak on WNER. They left the
Jamboree to join the ranks of the Grand Ole Opry where they entertained
audiences
for three decades.
This podcast features a cassette recording of the duo playing the Florida
Folk Festival’s Old Marble Stage on May 28, 1998. By this time,
Jim and Jesse had been playing music for over fifty years, but as this
intimate
recording makes clear, they retained every bit of their energy and enthusiasm.
So kick back and enjoy a Florida bluegrass homecoming with Jim and Jesse
and the Virginia Boys.
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MP3 |

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4. |
Recordings
of the Stephen Foster Memorial Center Fourth of July Celebration
Recorded on July 4, 1964 by Foster Barnes at the Stephen
Foster Center in White Springs, Florida.
(1:17:31; 70MB; S.
2043)
Welcome back to the Florida Folklife Collection podcast series from
the State Library and Archives of Florida.
For several decades the Stephen Foster Memorial in White Springs offered
an Independence Day Festival that featured live music, dances, games,
and food. The festivities took on added significance for the memorial
as it was also the birthday of songwriter Stephen Foster, the author
Florida’s state song, “Old Folks at Home.”
While few recordings of these early celebrations survive, the State
Archives of Florida is thrilled to present for your enjoyment the following
4th of July program from 1964. Running a little over an hour, it was
captured on reel to reel tape by memorial curator Foster Barnes.
The program offers listeners unique insight into the nature of patriotism
in mid-20th century America as well as providing some good, old-fashioned
singing and storytelling, free watermelon, home-style fixins and a mess
of wholesome fun. Draw yourself a cold glass of sweet tea, and celebrate
an old-time Independence Day with Cousin Thelma Boltin and friends way
down in White Springs. |
MP3 |
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5. |
Recordings of the 1954 Florida Folk
Festival
Recorded on May 6, 1954 by Foster Barnes
at the Stephen Foster Center in White
Springes, Florida.
(1:05:56; 60MB; S 1576; reel
T76-1)
Transcript
of the introduction:
Welcome back to the Florida Folklife
Collection podcast series from the State Library and Archives of Florida.
Today we feature the very first recording of the long-running Florida
Folk Festival. Recorded on reel to reel tape on Thursday, May 6, 1954,
it contains performances by local school children, representatives of
the Seminole Tribe of Florida, folk singers, and opening remarks by festival
director and renowned folk culture magnate, Sarah Gertrude Knott.
The Florida Folk Festival, which was first presented in 1953 as a four-day
concert located at the Stephen Foster Memorial in White Springs, has
since grown into one of the nation's oldest annual folk festivals, now
covering several stages and featuring hundreds of performers and artists.
This earliest recording captures the simple origins of the folk festival
and reveals the festival organizers 1950s viewpoint of folklife and what
was then considered important for preservation for future generations.
Fortunately, these performances were preserved, thanks in large part
to one man, memorial curator Foster Barnes. After the success of the
first festival, Barnes decided to record the event. Each year he became
a regular sight at the Festival, as he sat stage side with his recorder,
smoking his pipe and taking notes. Following his retirement in 1965,
other memorial staff maintained the practice. In 1979, when the Florida
Folklife Program assumed control of the festival, they too recorded the
performances, followed in 2003 by the Florida Park Service.
Today, nearly 3500 of these festival recordings reside at the State
Archives of Florida as part of the Florida Folklife Collection where
they can still be heard and enjoyed.
Now let’s go way down upon the S’wannee River and enjoy the sounds of
1954… |
MP3 |
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6. |
James
Kelly, Irish
Fiddler
Recorded May 22, 1992 by the Florida Folklife Program at the
1992 Florida Folk Festival in White Springs, Florida
(0:31:48; 20MB; S 1576; reel T92-66 & T92-67)
Transcript
of the introduction:
Welcome back to the Florida Folklife Collection podcast series from the State
Library and Archives of Florida.
Since the early days of European settlement in America,
Irish ballads and rhythms have influenced and informed American song.
In this podcast we feature Irish fiddler James Kelly originally of Dublin,
Ireland and widely recognized as one of Ireland's leading traditional
fiddle players. He is a recipient of the "Florida Folk Heritage
Award" as well as the "Florida Individual Artist Fellowship
in Folk Arts Award." In addition, James Kelly has shared his remarkable
talent with Floridians while serving as a master artist in the Florida
Folklife Apprenticeship Program. This performance was taken from
the Old
Marble Stage
of the 1992 Florida Folk Festival. He is accompanied by George Phillips
on guitar.
Please visit us again soon for more music from the Florida Folklife
Collection. And now James Kelly and George Phillips. Enjoy.
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MP3 |
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7. |
Bethlehem
Primitive Baptist Church Sacred Harp Singers
(S1576; Reels T83-75
and T83-76)
Transcript
of the introduction:
Welcome back to the Florida Folklife Collection
podcast series from the State Library and Archives of Florida.
In this podcast,
we present the second installment in our two-part series dedicated
to sacred harp singing.
This segment features the Bethlehem
Primitive Baptist Church Sacred Harp Singers of Old Chicora Florida
recorded by folklorist Dwight DeVane
in 1980. Please return next month for more music from the Folklife collection.
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Part
1 - MP3
Part
2 - MP3 |
8. |
Florida-Alabama
Progressive Seven Shape-Note Singing Convention
(S 1576 tapes T81-21,
T81-22, T83-82, T83-83, T83-84, T83-85)
Transcript
of the introduction:
Welcome to the Florida Folklife Collection podcast series from the State
Library and Archives of Florida.
America's sacred music has long provided a richly diverse field of study
for folklorists. From rustic church hymns, or impassioned gospel to popular
songs of faith and praise, sacred music has provided an immense body
of song. In this podcast, we present the first of a two-part series on
one of those sacred traditions: sacred harp singing.
This a capella singing tradition takes its name from the 1844 hymn book,
The Sacred Harp and represents the largest surviving branch of traditional
American Shape Note Singing. This style of church music utilized four
syllables (fa-sol-la-mi) which were represented by four shapes in later
hymnals; the triangle, circle, square and diamond. These shaped notes
allowed untrained or illiterate church members to participate in the worship
service. Frequently the assembled singers would sing the notes first and
then follow with the words as you will hear them do in this podcast. In
Sacred Harp singing members sit facing inward in a hollow square. The
leader will select the tune and beat time with their hand while standing
in the center of the square. Any participant is welcome to lead if they
so chose. The tradition proved popular with both Anglo and African American
churches, especially in rural areas where it is still practiced.
This month, we feature the Florida-Alabama Progressive Seven Shape-Note
Singing Convention held in Crestview, Florida and recorded by folklorists
Dwight DeVane and Doris Dyen in 1980. Please return next month as we
present more sacred harp music.
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Part
1 - MP3
Part
2 - MP3
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9. |
Suwannee
River Jamboree Radio Program
Recorded during a rebroadcast of the Suwannee River Jamboree radio show
(c. 1958-1962) in 1985.
(0:28:08; 32MB; S 1576; tape T85-66)
Transcript
of the introduction:
Welcome to the Florida Folklife Collection podcast series from
the State Library and Archives of Florida.
In this feature we'll take a nostalgic look at old time Florida radio
with an original broadcast of the Suwannee River Jamboree preview.
The Suwannee River Jamboree was broadcast from WNER out of Live Oak, Florida.
The program ran from 1952 to 1962 and was billed as the deep south country
music show from the heart of the Suwannee River Country.
This broadcast, believed to be from 1958, was created from a tape reel
transfer of one of the original transcription discs from the radio program.
So, let's sit back and adjust our dial for 1958 and the Suwannee River
Jamboree preview, the show's about to start.
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MP3 |
10. |
Stephen
Foster Memorial Radio Program: Holiday Music
These radio programs were created in the early 1960s by the Stephen Foster
Memorial to promote the park and its activities, as well as to educate
the public about Stephen Foster and Florida folk music.
(0:20:36; 24MB; S 2042; tape 63-4-13)
Transcript
of the introduction:
Welcome to the Florida Folklife Collection podcast series from
the State Library and Archives of Florida.
In this celebration of the Holiday Season we're joined by the staff of
the Stephen Foster Memorial Center of White Springs, Florida. The radio
program that we're about to enjoy was created by The Stephen Foster Memorial
Center in 1963 and broadcast by radio stations in Central Florida.
It features the Starrett Family of Gainesville, Minstrel Mark Moore and
the tubular bells of the carillon tower at the Stephen Foster Memorial.
Now, let's tune our dial back to 1963, Happy Holidays and enjoy.
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MP3 |
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11. |
Gamble
Rogers
Gamble Rogers performing at the 1978 Florida Folk Festival in White Springs,
Florida.
(0:53:55; 63MB; S1576; tape T80-15
& T80-16)
Transcript
of the introduction:
Hello and welcome to the State Library and Archives of Florida.
This is the inaugural MP3 podcast from the Florida Folklife Collection.
My name is Jamie Madden. I'm the audio archivist here at the Archives
responsible for the digitization and preservation of the audio materials
in this collection.
During the processing of the Florida Folklife recordings, we've discovered
several exciting performances. Some of them have been included on two
promotional compact discs we've released entitled Music from the Florida
Folklife Collection and More Music from the Florida Folklife Collection.
These audio selections are also available here on our site. Hopefully,
some of you have had a chance to listen to and enjoy those recordings.
We felt that podcasting provided yet another excellent means for sharing
some of these discoveries with researchers and music lovers.
In our first installment, we'd like to feature a performance by a revered
figure of the Florida folk community, Gamble Rogers, a raconteur and musician
who is remembered as much for his character and warmth of spirit as he
is for his music.
This performance is from May 27, 1978. It was recorded at the 1978 Florida
Folk Festival. Let's hand the microphone over to Cousin Thelma Boltin
and Gamble Rogers. Enjoy.
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MP3
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