a_s1576_t77-276 | (Minstrel) Mark Moore in performing in Denver Colorado | Sound | Singers Musicians Singing Music performance Folk singers Old time music Autoharp music | /fpc/memory/omeka_images/thumbnails/catalog_audio.jpg |
a_s2043_00020 | 100th Anniversary Celebration of creation of state song Old Folks at Home | Sound | Foster, Stephen Collins, 1826-1864 Music performance Performing arts Anniversaries Singing Choir singing Choirs (music) State songs Special events Public officer Choruses Singers | /fpc/memory/omeka_images/thumbnails/audio.jpg |
100th Anniversary Celebration of creation of state song Old Folks at Home
- Date
- 1951-09-30
- Description
- Six reel to reel recordings. Songwriter Stephen Foster wrote Old Folks at Home in 1851. In 1935, the Florida Legislature designated "Old Folks at Home" (often referred to as "Way Down Upon the Suwannee River") as Florida's state song. Over the next two decades, several Floridians began to push for a memorial to the song's composer, Stephen Collins Foster, considered by many to be the nation's first commercial songwriter. Finally, after the efforts of the Florida Federation of Music Clubs, the state opened the Stephen Foster Memorial, a 250-acre state-owned park, in White Springs, Florida in 1950, and would eventually comprise a bell tower, a Stephen Foster Museum, landscaped park grounds, and an annual Florida Folk Festival, along with other public programs. That same year, the state created the Stephen Foster Memorial Commission to administer the development and maintenance of the park.
- Collection
a_s2042_sfm_11 | 15-minute Programs | Sound | Radio programs Radio programs, Public service Radio announcing Folklife Folklore Advertising, Public service Public radio | /fpc/memory/omeka_images/thumbnails/catalog_audio.jpg |
15-minute Programs
- Date
- 1961
- Description
- One reel to reel recording (15 minutes). These 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.
- Collection
a_s1576_t77-277 | 1977 Portable Folk Festival | Sound | Folklore revival festivals Folk festivals Special events Concerts Music performance Blues (Music) Blues singers Guitar music Dulcimer music Hammer dulcimer Gospel music Gospel songs Singers Musicians Guitarist Bands (Music) | /fpc/memory/omeka_images/thumbnails/audio.jpg |
1977 Portable Folk Festival
- Date
- 1977-04-16
- Description
- Three reel to reels. Johnny Shines was a blues singer-guitarist who once traveled with famed blues singer Robert Johnson. He was re-discovered in the 1960s during the folk revival boom, and played festivals throughout the 1960s and 1970s. His sound was very similar to Robert Johnson's, and here he played several Johnson songs. Bluegrass and Kentucky mountain music singer Phyllis Boyens (who later appeared in the film Cola Miner's Daughter as Loretta Lynn's mother) and Nimrod Workman (who also had a bit part in the same film) released the album Passing Through the Garden in 1976, and they were promoting that album at this performance. Workman was a former coal miner and union organizer in Kentucky. Bessie Jones, born in inland Georgia, promoted Georgia Sea Island songs, and later in the 1960s formed the Georgia Sea Island Singers. She died in Brunswick Georgia in 1984. The Red Clay Ramblers was a part of the "New-Grass" movement of the 1970s, forming in 1972. The Chapel Hill, North Carolina-based group featured Tommy Thompson (1937-2003) (banjo), Jim Watson (guitar/mandolin), Jack Herrick (guitar), Mike Craver (piano), and Bill Hicks (fiddle). Conway was a scholar at Appalachian State University and filmmaker of Appalachian culture, and an associate of the Red Clay Ramblers. She introduced Shines and the Red Clay Ramblers at the concert.
- Collection
a_s1576_t92-003 | 19th Century music at the 1992 Florida Folk Festival (Main stage) | Sound | Musicians Folk festivals Folklore revival festivals Festivals Special events Performing arts Performances Music performance Old time music Songs Singing Musical ensembles Guitar music Banjo music String instruments Banjoists Musical groups | /fpc/memory/omeka_images/thumbnails/catalog_audio.jpg |
a_s1576_t87-116 | 97th Regimental String Band performing at the 1987 Florida Folk Festival (Old Marble Stage) | Sound | Musicians Singers Bands (Music) Festivals Folk festivals Folklore revival festivals Special events Music performance String bands Old time music Stringband music Singing | /fpc/memory/omeka_images/thumbnails/catalog_audio.jpg |
a_s1576_t90-130a | 97th Regimental String Band performing at the 1990 Florida Folk Festival (Main Stage) | Sound | Singers Folk festivals Folklore revival festivals Festivals Special events Performing arts Music performance Musical groups Old time music String bands Stringband music Bands (Music) Musicians | /fpc/memory/omeka_images/thumbnails/catalog_audio.jpg |
a_s2043_00006 | 99th Celebration of Creation of state song Old Folks at Home | Sound | Foster, Stephen Collins, 1826-1864 Music performance Performing arts Anniversaries Singing Choir singing Choirs (music) State songs Special events Choruses Singers | /fpc/memory/omeka_images/thumbnails/audio.jpg |
99th Celebration of Creation of state song Old Folks at Home
- Date
- 1950
- Description
- One reel to reel recording. Songwriter Stephen Foster wrote Old Folks at Home in 1851. In 1935, the Florida Legislature designated "Old Folks at Home" (often referred to as "Way Down Upon the Suwannee River") as Florida's state song. Over the next two decades, several Floridians began to push for a memorial to the song's composer, Stephen Collins Foster, considered by many to be the nation's first commercial songwriter. Finally, after the efforts of the Florida Federation of Music Clubs, the state opened the Stephen Foster Memorial, a 250-acre state-owned park, in White Springs, Florida in 1950, and would eventually comprise a bell tower, a Stephen Foster Museum, landscaped park grounds, and an annual Florida Folk Festival, along with other public programs. That same year, the state created the Stephen Foster Memorial Commission to administer the development and maintenance of the park.
- Collection
a_s2043_00060 | 9th Anniversary celebration of the Stephen Foster Museum | Sound | Anniversaries Museums Performing arts Music performance Concerts Singing Singers | /fpc/memory/omeka_images/thumbnails/catalog_audio.jpg |
9th Anniversary celebration of the Stephen Foster Museum
- Date
- 1959-10-04
- Description
- One reel to reel recording. In 1935, the Florida Legislature designated "Old Folks at Home" (often referred to as "Way Down Upon the Suwannee River") as Florida's state song. Over the next two decades, several Floridians began to push for a memorial to the song's composer, Stephen Collins Foster, considered by many to be the nation's first commercial songwriter. Finally, after the efforts of the Florida Federation of Music Clubs, the state opened the Stephen Foster Memorial, a 250-acre state-owned park, in White Springs, Florida in 1950, and would eventually comprise a bell tower, a Stephen Foster Museum, landscaped park grounds, and an annual Florida Folk Festival, along with other public programs. That same year, the state created the Stephen Foster Memorial Commission to administer the development and maintenance of the park.
- Collection
a_s2043_00128 | Ada Miller performance at the Stephen Foster Memorial | Sound | Concerts Music -- Performance Performing arts Friction idiophones Glass harmonicas | /fpc/memory/omeka_images/thumbnails/audio.jpg |