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[ARSCLIST] Henrietta Yurchenco, Pioneer Folklorist, Dies at 91
From the New York Times:
Henrietta Yurchenco, Pioneer Folklorist, Dies at 91
By DOUGLAS MARTIN
Published: December 14, 2007
Henrietta Yurchenco, whose quest to save living music from the past took
her from the mountains of Guatemala and southern Mexico to a New York City
radio station to the Jewish community of Morocco, died Monday in Manhattan.
She was 91.
The cause was lung failure, her son, Peter, said.
Like a linguist nailing down a dying language, Ms. Yurchenco, an
ethnomusicologist, recorded music from long ago that faced an unclear
tomorrow. In an interview, Pete Seeger said she “went to places people
didn’t believe she would be able to find.”
Among her thousands of recordings are ritual songs from North, South and
Central American Indians, including peyote chants, and music celebrating
everything from love to agriculture, found from Eastern Europe to the
Caribbean to Appalachia to Spain.
Oscar Brand, the folk singer and radio personality, citing her work with
Native Americans, said, “She went out of her way to discover the soft
spots, the shining things you couldn’t see in the mists back in the
mountains.”
Ms. Yurchenco was also a radio producer, announcer and interviewer.
Beginning in the 30s, she broadcast only folk music, both traditional and
modern, at a time when few knew it.
Woody Guthrie called her in 1939 or 1940 and asked if he could be on her
live show. Bob Dylan, a little tongue-tied, did one of his early radio
interviews with her in 1962. In an interview with NPR in 1999, she said she
scoured union halls and immigrant groups to find genuine music.
Ethnomusicologists study music in varying ethnic contexts. Ms. Yurchenco
began by tracking down 14 all-but-unknown Mexican and Guatemalan tribes,
reaching them with little but a mule and 300 pounds of recording equipment.
She eventually recorded 2,000 of their songs for the Library of Congress.
Later, she studied the music of the Sephardim, Jews who had been thrown out
of Spain in the 15th century. She arrived in Morocco just as many Sephardim
were preparing to move to the new state of Israel, and she seized a last
chance to capture their ancient songs in the original context.
Ms. Yurchenco was intrigued by women’s roles in creating music and of the
sexual politics involved in making it. Mr. Seeger said women may be the
best music collectors, partly because many have the patience to appreciate
a grandmother singing a 400-year-old ballad to a baby.
Ms. Yurchenco wrote several books, including a biography of Woody Guthrie.
At least one book is still to be published: a study of the music of
Morocco’s Sephardic women. She long taught at City College, lectured widely
and fought fiercely for her leftist ideals.
Starting in 2005 and continuing almost until her death, Ms. Yurchenco
invited like-minded friends to her apartment to sing songs against the Iraq
war, often the same ones used against the Vietnam War. Some of their
singing was broadcast on Internet radio.
Henrietta Weiss was born in New Haven on March 22, 1916. She told The
Villager, a neighborhood newspaper in Manhattan, that her father was “a
dreamer who started out in business and failed miserably.” She was a
promising pianist who attended the Yale School of Music.
At Yale, she met Boris Yurchenco, an Argentine-born painter, at a meeting
of the John Reed Club, named for the American writer who chronicled the
Bolshevik Revolution. They were married in 1936, the year she was first
arrested in a protest; she was demonstrating against a brass band from
Mussolini’s Italy.
In 1939, her musical interests led her to WNYC, the public radio station
then owned by New York City. She made friends with people like Burl Ives,
the folk singer and Alan Lomax, a legendary music collector.
In 1941, she followed her husband on a trip to Mexico. An engineer from
WNYC came along to record music, and she took over when he left. With
financial support from groups like the American Philosophical Society, she
repeatedly visited the area to record animal sacrifices, healing ceremonies
and much else. Scorpions, both yellow and green, were a persistent problem.
Ms. Yurchenco and her husband divorced in 1955. In addition to her son,
Peter, of Skillman, N.J., she is survived by two grandchildren.
Legend has it that Mr. Seeger and the Almanac Singers, an earlier name for
the Weavers, wrote the song “Kisses Sweeter Than Wine” in Ms. Yurchenco’s
relatively quiet bathroom during a noisy party in her apartment. Mr. Seeger
said that was not quite true, though he recalled her famous parties.
Mr. Seeger explained that Leadbelly, the great folk and blues artist, was
in Ms. Yurchenco’s bathroom with the singer Sam Kennedy, who perched on the
obvious as he sang “Drimmin Down,” a lament about a dead cow. (Leadbelly
later livened up the beat and used the tune for his own cow song, “If It
Wasn’t for Dicky.”)
Mr. Seeger liked the melody and added lyrics about wine.
Dave Nolan
Audio Archivist
92nd St. Y
Audio Digitization Room - basement
1395 Lexington Ave.
NYC NY 10128
(212) 415-5559
e-mail to: dnolan@xxxxxxx