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search for archival spoken word!
Dear ARSC list members,
Sound Portraits Productions and City Lore (New York's center for urban folk
culture) recently received funding from the Corporation for Public
Broadcasting to find wonderful spoken word 'moments' from archival field
recordings for broadcast on NPR's Weekend Edition Sunday as a part of our
American Talkers series. To learn more about Sound Portraits and our radio
programs on NPR, see our website: www.soundportraits.org.
To date, we've broadcast four segments: the street cries of fish monger Clyde
"Kingfish" Smith recorded in Harlem in 1939 by Herbert Halpert, excerpts from
Alan Lomax's first interviews with Woody Guthrie in 1940, the stories of
ex-slave Fountain Hughes, and most recently, interviews with marines on
Valentine's Day, 1945, sending poems and messages to their loved ones back
home.
We're hoping you can help us as we continue our search for poetry in the
voices of everyday people, people who happen to be exceptional talkers. We're
looking for voices recorded in the 30s, 40s and 50s, often voices that speak
from a time and a place that are fading or have since disappeared.
We've been focusing most of our search efforts at the Folklife Center at the
Library of Congress. Though their archive is enormous and rich, we're casting
the net wider and hoping to delve into other collections. Do you have any
suggestions of places to explore? People we should speak with? Websites to
look into, recordings to listen to, magazines to read? An American Talker
doesn't need to be a traditional storyteller per se; any kind of great voice
can work. Please spread the word to anyone you think might be helpful. We'll
happily give a listen to any and all possibilities--please send them our way!
Thanks so much for your consideration,
Meagan Howell
Associate Producer
Sound Portraits Productions
Documenting a Hidden America
www.soundportraits.org
a non-profit radio production company