Music in the Digital Library of
Appalachia
DLA music entries are derived from non-commercial sound recordings that
document much of Appalachian music's geographic, ethnic, vocal, and
instrumental diversity. The several thousand presently available provide
an unprecedented resource for study of repertoire, technique, lore, and
the musical interchanges among the region's traditional musicians, many of
who are no longer living.
The recordings, which range from the late 1930s to recent times, are
especially strong in the areas of fiddle,
banjo,
harmonica,
and dulcimer
tunes; secular ballads
and songs; gospel
songs, and the unaccompanied lined-out
and shape
note singing styles. Included as well are such relative unknowns as
the mouth
bow with origins in Africa, Cherokee
singing and dance music, Swiss-American singing and yodeling,
Hungarian-American cymbalum playing
, and the jug
band sound from the early 1900s comprised of a loose rural-urban mix
of blues,
hillbilly, and jazz.
In many instances the repertoire and playing styles documented in these
recordings date well back into the 1800s. Among the music's readily
detectable influences are musical expressions arising from slavery,
minstrel stage music, Civil War military music, and the dance music of
Britain, Ireland and, in some instances, France and Germany.
In addition to their performances many of the singers and players can
be heard talking
about their music, instruments, lives and times. The extensive radio
program material dating from the late 1930s through the 1940s, provide
data useful for studying the commercialization of the region's music and
the extent to which urban music and entertainment forms were an influence
in the region, especially prior to the advent of
television.
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