Thứ Ba, 6 tháng 3, 2018

Youtube daily Music Mar 6 2018

Jogging Music 2018 - House Music 2018 - Deep House - Running Music Mix #32

For more infomation >> Jogging Music 2018 - House Music 2018 - Deep House - Running Music Mix #32 - Duration: 1:31:41.

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Selena Gomez & Marshmello - Wolves (Said The Sky Remix) [Lyrics] | JulyNice Music 2018 - Duration: 3:29.

In your eyes, there's a heavy blue One to love, and one to lose

Sweet divide, a heavy truth Water or wine, don't make me choose

I wanna feel the way that we did that summer night, night

Drunk on a feeling, alone with the stars in the sky

I've been running through the jungle I've been running with the wolves

To get to you, to get to you I've been down the darkest alleys

Saw the dark side of the moon To get to you, to get to you

I've looked for love in every stranger Took too much to ease the anger

All for you, yeah, all for you

I've been running through the jungle I've been crying with the wolves

To get to you, to get to you, to get to you

Your fingertips trace my skin To places I have never been

Blindly, I am following Break down these walls and come on in

I wanna feel the way that we did that summer night, night

Drunk on a feeling, alone with the stars in the sky

I've been running through the jungle I've been running with the wolves

To get to you, to get to you I've been down the darkest alleys

Saw the dark side of the moon To get to you, to get to you

I've looked for love in every stranger Took too much to ease the anger

All for you, yeah, all for you I've been running through the jungle

I've been crying with the wolves To get to you, to get to you, to get to you

I've been running through the jungle I've been running with the wolves

To get to you, to get to you

I've been down the darkest alleys Saw the dark side of the moon

To get to you, to get to you I've looked for love in every stranger

Took too much to ease the anger All for you, yeah, all for you

I've been running through the jungle I've been crying with the wolves

To get to you, to get to you, to get to you

For more infomation >> Selena Gomez & Marshmello - Wolves (Said The Sky Remix) [Lyrics] | JulyNice Music 2018 - Duration: 3:29.

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Google Chrome Hidden feauture|Chrome music lab|Kannada tech 2018 - Duration: 3:40.

We'll come to Tech Tricks In Kannada

In this video chrome browser hidden secret,music lab

Like this video and subscribe my channel for more updates

Watch full video

Thank you for watching

For more infomation >> Google Chrome Hidden feauture|Chrome music lab|Kannada tech 2018 - Duration: 3:40.

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Shahid malang Music night - Duration: 1:38.

For more infomation >> Shahid malang Music night - Duration: 1:38.

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ROYALTY FREE MUSIC | CLASSICAL | POETRY IN MOTION | Music Factory - Duration: 3:08.

For more infomation >> ROYALTY FREE MUSIC | CLASSICAL | POETRY IN MOTION | Music Factory - Duration: 3:08.

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OPAQUE - Colours (Non-Copyrighted original music) - Duration: 2:10.

Dj Opaque - colours

Follow me on Instagram @djopaque

Follow ne on Twitter @opaquedj

check out my soundcloud in the description!

Avoid the Flag!

Please carry out a conversation in the comments

All feedbacks are encouraged!

Please subscribe and like the video!

I hope you liked Colours! It was made for holi which is a festival in india Where i live.

For more infomation >> OPAQUE - Colours (Non-Copyrighted original music) - Duration: 2:10.

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Van William - Before I Found You (Official Music Video) - Duration: 3:26.

For more infomation >> Van William - Before I Found You (Official Music Video) - Duration: 3:26.

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Cafe Music & Cafe Music Playlist: Best of Bossa & Jazz BGM Cafe Music Compilation Jazz Mix - Duration: 3:26:25.

Title: Cafe Music & Cafe Music Playlist: Best of Bossa & Jazz BGM Cafe Music Compilation Jazz Mix

For more infomation >> Cafe Music & Cafe Music Playlist: Best of Bossa & Jazz BGM Cafe Music Compilation Jazz Mix - Duration: 3:26:25.

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NCS 24/7 Live Stream 🎵 Gaming Music Radio | NoCopyrightSounds| Dubstep, Trap, EDM, Electro House - Duration: 2:13:36.

NCS 24/7 Live Stream 🎵 Gaming Music Radio | NoCopyrightSounds| Dubstep, Trap, EDM, Electro House

For more infomation >> NCS 24/7 Live Stream 🎵 Gaming Music Radio | NoCopyrightSounds| Dubstep, Trap, EDM, Electro House - Duration: 2:13:36.

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3 Hours of Soft Jazz Playlist & Smooth Jazz Saxophone Music and Chill Music - Duration: 3:01:30.

Title: 3 Hours of Soft Jazz Playlist & Smooth Jazz Saxophone Music and Chill Music

For more infomation >> 3 Hours of Soft Jazz Playlist & Smooth Jazz Saxophone Music and Chill Music - Duration: 3:01:30.

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Coffee Time & Coffee Time Music for Office, for Work and Relaxation: Reggae Instrumental Music - Duration: 3:39:23.

Title:Coffee Time & Coffee Time Music for Office, for Work and Relaxation: Reggae Instrumental Music

For more infomation >> Coffee Time & Coffee Time Music for Office, for Work and Relaxation: Reggae Instrumental Music - Duration: 3:39:23.

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【Nightcore】Khi Nỗi Đau Quá Lớn [Remix] → NgokTN Music ♪ - Duration: 3:46.

For more infomation >> 【Nightcore】Khi Nỗi Đau Quá Lớn [Remix] → NgokTN Music ♪ - Duration: 3:46.

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Best Gym Hip Hop Workout Music 2018 - Svet Fit Music - Duration: 40:51.

Svet Fit Music

For more infomation >> Best Gym Hip Hop Workout Music 2018 - Svet Fit Music - Duration: 40:51.

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🏙️ Rogez - In Town (Official Music Video) | Trap Soul Song 2018 - Duration: 2:35.

In Town

Rogez

Love

In Town

In Town

Hey why not give me less than a day or so and she'll be mine

Things keep on getting better

Rogez gotta rush

Like a rocket dust

Accross the city willy

Places to go fast really

I'm charming alarming

And moving really swiftly

Clothes are really pretty

And they gonna last past long

And they got the glow

Nothin going slow

Just like a song

Got a threefold wallet

So the wallet talk

So the wallet full

I just pull it

The wallet talked

The wallet tucked on me bro

I just want to keep it locked in town

If she's about me I'll find out

In town

If she's about me I'll find out

Back again

A.M. whip this and that

I'm am with this and her

And I got the moon going soon

I got ways to ride a monsoon

P.M. noon reflect the sun

Meditation in rotation

Baby doll a sensation

I be movin too you

Never lackin that smooth

Land of the flow

Beats on lapping

Rogez is clockin unstoppin

Make it happen

Make it happen

mackin attackin these girls is happenin yea

Hey why not give me less than a day or so and she'll be mine

Hey, things keep on getting better

I just want to keep it locked in town

If she's about me I'll find out

In town

If she's about me I'll find out

In town

If she's about me I'll find out

In town

In town

For more infomation >> 🏙️ Rogez - In Town (Official Music Video) | Trap Soul Song 2018 - Duration: 2:35.

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Comet - Love More (Music Video) - Duration: 3:56.

Tied to my bed

I was younger then

I had nothing to spare

But time and you

it made me love, it made me love, it made me looove mooore

to what you said, the words you said left out

all around to the sky whereas to fly

and she took the time

to believe and to believe in what she said

she made me love, she made me love, she made me looove mooore

she made me love, she made me love, she made me looove more

more

more

more

For more infomation >> Comet - Love More (Music Video) - Duration: 3:56.

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Reggae Music Hits 2018 - Best Reggae Mix Of Popular Songs 2018 - Duration: 1:01:35.

Hello friends ! If you like this channel music please like & share, subscribe channel. Thanks you very much !!

For more infomation >> Reggae Music Hits 2018 - Best Reggae Mix Of Popular Songs 2018 - Duration: 1:01:35.

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Alan Jabbour, 1942-2017: His Legacy in Folklife & Traditional Music - Duration: 2:10:02.

>> From the Library of Congress in Washington, D.C.

[ Silence ]

>> Betsy Peterson: All right.

We have a jam-packed evening here.

So, I'm just going to dive right in and get started.

So, I am Betsy Peterson.

I'm the director of the American Folklife Center here

at the Library of Congress and I'd like to welcome you

to a very special edition of the Benjamin Botkin lecture series.

This evening, in various ways,

we're going to explore the legacy of a very special person

in the history of the library, in the history

of the American Folklife Center, Alan Jabbour.

Alan passed away on January 13th, 2017, and I'm happy to see

so many familiar faces and also many family members of Alan

and Karen Jabbour are here and I especially want to welcome them

and I will actually probably let you stand

and if I do not get all of your names, please forgive me,

but I want Karen Singer Jabbour and daughter Rebecca and Aaron,

daughters, daughter and son of Alan and Karen, please stand.

And their spouse and children.

I know there are many siblings of Karen

and I think there are family members of Alan here.

So, please stand up.

We would love to say thank you and welcome.

[ Background noise ]

>> Betsy Peterson: Before introducing the speakers,

I want to say as we know, Alan was the founding director

of the American Folklife Center and in that role,

he was a direct successor to Benjamin Botkin,

head of the library's folklore section in the 1940's.

So, it's appropriate that we're presenting this evening event

of talks and music about Alan as part of this series.

This series also allows us to present the, and highlight,

the work of the best in leading scholars,

experts in the disciplines of folklore at the musicology,

oral history, and cultural heritage.

It also allows us to enhance the collections

of the American Folklife Center, and for the center

and the library, the Botkin lectures form an important facet

of our acquisitions activities.

Each lecture is videotaped as you can gather,

with these bright lights, and it becomes part

of the permanent collections of the center.

So, the lectures are going to be posted later as a webcast

on the libraries website where they will be available

to people throughout the world and for generations to come.

So, if you have noisy cellphones on right now or anything

that might ring later, please turn it off at this time.

So, Alan, being the director of the American Folklife Center,

from 1976, I think September of 1976 through June of 1999,

that was only one of many roles

that Alan assumed throughout his lifetime in his efforts

to preserve and carry forward folk cultural traditions.

Alan was a musician, an artist, a native Floridian,

a southern gentleman, a writer, an administrator with a vision,

folklorist, researcher,

president of the American Folklore Society,

a member of numerous boards and so much more.

Our speakers this evening will be addressing many

of these different facets and aspects of Alan's contributions,

but before I introduce them I did want

to mention one dimension of Alan's work

that I think has received very little attention over the years

and that is Alan's work to raise the profile of philanthropy

and giving for the folk and traditional arts.

Alan came to D.C and the federal government in the 1970's

and we know that was a very heaty

and sometimes turbulent time for cultural heritage

and preservation legislation and government support and Alan

and several other folklore luminaries at that time,

Archie Green, Bess Lomax Hawes, and Ralph Rinzler,

among them were right there at the very beginning

and they helped build this foundation

for several public folklore institutions

and perhaps Alan's work at the national endowment for the arts

as an initial head of the folk arts program provided him a

window for him to understand the importance of support.

And not only to provide needed financial resources,

but also to lend legitimacy and validation to the diversity

of folk and traditional culture in the United States and beyond.

But, with so much emphasis on public support, Alan and others,

Joe Wilson, Archie Green,

also recognized the critical importance of galvanizing

and strengthening private and individual support

for the grass roots vernacular culture

that we all hold so dear.

Alan and others helped to find the fund for folk culture

in 1991 and held the planning meetings right here

in the library.

Alan was the first chair of the board of trustees and in

that capacity, helped guide the direction of that fund

to help serve as an advocate and liaison for the field of folk

and traditional arts with private philanthropy.

In that role, over about a 15-year span, they steered over,

well over $10 million dollars of new support

to the folk arts field which is pretty amazing and in his work

at the folklife center,

Alan also established several endowments and gift funds

to support the work of the center and others

and individuals to do their work.

The Ray Virginia Alan fund, the Blant Nolan fund, the Gerald

and Karen Parson's fund and of course,

the Henry Reed fund for folk artists.

On the occasion of Alan's retirement,

Alan and Karen Jabbour, with several other individuals,

established the fund, the Henry Reed fund in 2000.

It honors Alan's musical mentor, West Virginia fiddler Henry Reed

and provides support for folk artists

or to projects benefiting folk artists whether it be a program,

a recording project, a, providing opportunities

for artists to do research and to work with other artists.

Since 2004, the Henry Reed fund has provided awards

to 10 individuals and I know we have several individuals here

tonight, perhaps some Henry Reed recipients,

but I know we also have many individuals who have given

to the Henry Reed fund and I truly want

to thank you for doing that.

I also want to acknowledge Henry Reed's son,

Dean Reed who is here with us tonight

and Henry Reed's grandson, Terry,

if you would stand up we would love to.

[ Background noise ]

>> Betsy Peterson: And I also want to encourage if any

of you are feeling that you want to extend Alan's legacy

and honor Alan's legacy by contributing

to the Henry Reed fund, there is a flier outside the door

that will give you the information

about how to do that.

Please feel free to talk to me or any staff member

and actually, that reminds me while I am up here

to thank all the American Folklife Center staff

for all the incredible work they've done

to put this together.

They all, very much, all of us, very much,

want to honor Alan's legacy.

So, thank you American Folklife Center staff,

but now on with the program.

To tell you more about Alan and the work

that these individuals have done with Alan over the years,

we do have several friends, research partners,

family who are going to share their memories

and observations with us tonight.

We are also going to end with a great old-time music jam

which I think is very fitting.

Many of us have spent time with Alan very late into the night

and early morning listening or playing music with him.

So, I think it's only fitting

that we end this evening with that.

We will be making announcements about that and what to do.

I know Athea already mentioned property passes.

It's very important as I'm sure some of you know.

So, our first speaker is going to be CARL FLEISHHAUER

and Carl was one of the first employees

of the American Folklife Center and one

of Alan's closest collaborators for decades.

He was a field worker on many

of American Folklife Center's documentation projects

in the 1970's and 80's.

In the old-time music world, he was crucial

to documenting the Hammond's family, which was a project

that he worked on with Alan.

He's also knows as a top bluegrass photographer

and has published a book.

Prior to his recent retirement, he worked on various aspects

of digital preservation in the Library of Congress

and that's actually probably putting that very mildly.

He was instrumental to bringing digital preservation

to the library.

He has now returned to the American Folklife Center

as a volunteer, yay, and working on the digital preservation

of American Folklife Center field work projects,

which is a series of projects that Alan

and Carl spearheaded and masterminded.

So, without further ado, please lets welcome CARL FLEISHHAUER.

[ Background noise ]

>> CARL FLEISHHAUER: Thank you Betsy

and I'm pleased to be here.

What I'm going to talk about, as Betsy suggested,

is Alan as the leader of the center from the start.

A little about his thinking, activities at the center

and policy development in federal, cultural sector.

The study and performance of music that Alan did

so well will be the subject of the next presentations.

Let me start with Alan and strategic planning.

This is a bureaucratic exorcise that tends

to repeat at regular intervals.

I should know after 40 years here at the library proceeded

by working a university and on the boards of some non-profits.

All too often, staff or board members are put

through agonizing committee discussions

that eagled impenetrable documents written

in bureaucratese.

Not so with Alan.

Even as the center first took shape, planning moved forward

in semiformal 2-way conversations

with the center staff and the folklife center board.

Alan listened as much

as he imparted insights and information.

He was an inveterate telephone caller,

especially before email was prevalent.

As ideas took shape, Alan had 2 advantages over most

of his conversation partners, solid experience

at the library gained when he was head of the archive

of folksong from 1969 to 1974 and a sense

of the federal context for cultural activities resulting

from his work at the library and as the head

of the new folk arts program at the national endowment

for the arts from 74 to 76.

That work was under the estimable chairman Nancy Hanks

and I remember a conversation from that period.

Here's how it works Carl, Alan said,

if the letter awards a grant, Nancy signs it.

If it says no, we're sorry, then I sign it.

Translating plans into action sometimes required staff members

to read before the lines.

For important matters, of course, Alan conferred

with the center's board and with the library chain of command,

often but not always, aligned with one another, but for staff

like me, some actions just seemed to happen.

You could be surprised.

Of course, usually, they had been heralded

by earlier discussion and marched in step

with the center's mission.

Archie Green's excellent wording embedded

in the center's enabling legislation,

but here's an example.

Alan's academic background was rooted in music

and ballad scholarship and he wanted

to be sure the center's program was as broad

as the term folk life.

Actions to advance this goal popped into view

in Alan's earlier hiring.

Adding Rusty Marshall to the staff.

Rusty had been a student of Henry Glassy and was immersed

in folk architecture and material culture

and Elena [inaudible], a Lithuanian American

with great insights into the evolving expressive culture

of those who came from Europe.

There was also carry over from a project that Alan helped launch

when he was at the archive.

[inaudible] Spots was folk music of America record albums.

Work that flowed into one

of the new center's first public events, symposium and book,

ethnic recording in America.

Speaking of ethnicity, Alan rarely talked

about his own family history, but in 2007, a writer picked

up his remarks about his field work

with the Virginia fiddler Henry Reed.

Reed's father had immigrated

from Ireland while Alan's had come from Syria.

Quote, your family story telling creates a felt connection

between your past and your present life

in America, Alan said.

It's curious that my father was the immigrant and I ended

up being the most attentive person

to certain cultural traditions here.

Regarding communication, Alan's descriptions

of the center's accomplishments showed a real knack

for putting a range of events and activities

into a coherent statement.

The quarterly newsletter was an excellent vehicle for this

and other topics and for about 10 years, Alan made good use

of the director's column.

He once said, the newsletter gives you news and views

and people tell me the views are the most interesting.

On 3 occasions, Alan drafted reviews

of the center's accomplishments.

Short ones at the 5 and 10-year marks in 1981 and 1986

and 17,000 word offering for the 20th in 1996.

Free of bureaucratic jargon, these reports paint a picture

of a successive, successful program, upbeat and affirming

to be sure and here we tip the hat to Jim Hardon

who edited the newsletter through this period.

The center's agenda reflected a range

of advice from multiple voices.

Nevertheless, Alan was the nerve center for the ideas

that were translated into action.

Some were topical like ethnic groups

and material culture while others concerned activities.

For example, exhibitions, publications and concerts.

The first concert was staged within weeks

of the center's establishment.

When Alan wrote about it 20 years later,

he signaled the value of the series not only in terms

of artistic expression and the celebration of community arts,

but also in terms of support for institutional

and congressional relations.

The audience, Alan said, was quote, dominated by library

and capitol hill staffers, making it for years,

the center's public face on the hill.

Alan guided the center to other forms of public communication

such as a CD publishing venture with Rounder Records

and during Alan's first decade as director, the center began

to provide access via the internet.

Finding aids before the immergence of the world wide web

and after 1994,

online multimedia collections accessed via the web.

Exhibitions illuminated subjects ranging from ethnic recording

to Nevada Buckaroos here with the Smithsonian

to folk life in Rhode Island.

A photo display in the U.S senate office building.

Exhibits provided visibility not only for the senate,

but also with the white house.

First lady Rosalynn Carter

and daughter Amy opened an installation on Georgia folk art

and folk life in 1978,

while president Mrs. Regan opened the American Cowboy

Exhibition in 1983.

During the 1980's, the center director Alan attended meetings

of the world intellectual property organization

to discuss intellectual property and folk expression.

His article for UNESCO's copyright bulletin noted

that copyright law focused on the rights of an individual

or incorporated entity in contrast to the way that,

in many tradition communities, creative expression is seen

as belonging to groups.

[ Background noise ]

>> CARL FLEISHHAUER: Protecting folklore, Alan wrote,

means acknowledging an intermediate sphere

of intellectual property rights between individual rights

on the one hand and the national,

international public domain on the other in terms

of legal history and legal frameworks,

this is a radical idea.

Meanwhile, as we look back, our attention is often drawn

to the center's field work projects.

Alan staged more than a dozen from 1977 to 1994,

rural and urban like this New Jersey pair in the pinelands

and in industrial Patterson.

These were team projects

with mostly youthful workers although the 1979 team

in Rhode Island included professor Kenny Goldstein,

wearing the white shirt in this team meeting in a project

that was led by our recently departed college Peter Bardis.

May he rest in peace.

These were generally survey projects lasting a month or 2.

Some cooperatively with the national park service,

some with state arts councils.

Alan often visited and participated.

Field projects were integrated into the center's program

in addition to exhibits,

products included David Taylor's book on Italian Americans

in the west from a multistate survey,

Charles Woolf's double album of Blueridge religious music,

and Mary Huffard's evocative web collections

from West Virginia's coal fields and more.

Meanwhile, for Native American music,

the federal cylinder preservation project came first,

field work came second.

Cylinder recordings of the Omaha Tribe were created

by Alice Fletcher and Francis La Flesche between 1895 and 1905.

In 1983, Alan visited the Omaha Indian reservation

to share copies with the tribal council and to seek agreement

on selection and publication.

When he played some examples, 2 elderly men were present.

When John Turner began singing, Alan wrote,

I knew we were home free.

Soon, the center published album,

documented 2 Omaha powwows, created a website and co-hosted

by the tribe's cultural representative,

staged a performance at the library.

The field work projects contributed

to policy development, most strikingly in relation

to historic preservation

where the federal legal apparatus expanded

from the 1960's to the 1990's with a fresh interest

in what was called intangible elements of cultural heritage.

In 1977 and 78, national park service director William Wayland

was on the center's board and Alan worked

with park service representatives to frame

up a field project on the Blueridge parkway

to provide material for park interpretive programs.

In later cooperative projects

like the 1983 pinelands folklife project in New Jersey,

the center provided not only support for interpretation,

but also for park service planning efforts including land

use concepts that were sensitive to neighboring communities.

By the 1980's, Alan wrote,

national park service planners quote,

represent a new generation of professionals

who have been gradually abandoning the acquire control

and manage model for national parks and exploring models

for cooperation with local communities operating

on the premise that local people should be enlisted, not evicted.

In 1985, the center joined Utah's Historic Preservation

Agency to carry out a field project in Grouse Creek.

In the 1987 a park service project in Iowa Massachusetts.

Meanwhile, the impact

of the early field projects influenced the center's

recommendations concerning historic preservation policy

in Ormand Loomis's 1983 report, cultural conservation,

the protection of cultural heritage in the United States.

The field projects added to the library's holdings

of archival collections.

Their organization, description,

and preservation received a boost in 1978

when the folk archive was brought into the center.

Founded by Robert Gordan in 1928,

the archive had long been part of the library's music division.

Alan used his skills as a diplomat and negotiator

to find an acceptable arrangement

for that administrative move.

When Alan talked about the field work projects,

he emphasized their debt to New Deal era work,

the federal writer's project,

photography from the foreign security administration

and of course, the work of John and Alan Lomax

and their cohorts, Herbert Halpert,

Sidney Robertson Cowell, Ben Botkin, and Charles Seeger,

a personal favorite of Alan's.

These predecessors, Alan wrote,

modeled quote, a documentary cycle.

Field work, collection building and subsequent public outreach

and as we have seen, Alan pushed the center quoting him again

to recycle documents back into cultural use.

[ Background noise ]

>> CARL FLEISHHAUER: Alan continued to enact this cycle

in his retirement years

in the great Smoky Mountains National Park.

Alan, Ted Coil, and Karen Singer Jabbour documented cemetery

traditions, especially the celebration of Decoration Day.

The work was initially for an environmental impact statement.

A push for the recognition

of non-Native American tradition cultural properties

in the environmental impact process.

Alan's work with Karen Singer Jabbour, his wife of 55 years,

represented documentary recycling of another sort.

Repeating their teamwork from the 1960's when Karen

and Alan visited the Virginia fiddler Henry Reed

and other folk musicians.

Their joint effort in the 2000's yielded their engaging

and thoughtful book, Decoration Day in the Mountains.

I'll close with a paraphrase of Alan's own tribute

to Ben Botkin, the man from whom this lecture series is named.

Adjusting the words, a bit

to celebrate Alan's final phase of life.

His official Washington career was over.

Neither his personal accounts, nor those of others,

suggest any deep unhappiness with the tensions

of administrative life in the federal maw.

He continued to be a public folklorist,

now in a private capacity.

It had been a vigorous period in the American cultural enterprise

and both Alan Jabbour as an individual

and the American Folklife Center as a cultural institution,

were at the very epicenter of the enterprise.

Thank you.

[ Background noise ]

>> Betsy Peterson: Thanks so much Carl.

That was wonderful and it's wonderful

to see all these incredible photographs and the photographs

that we saw earlier during the reception, many of those are

from the field survey projects that Alan and Carl did.

Now, we are on to our next speaker,

a gentleman named DAVID DURCHGOTT

and who I have not personally met,

but I know he is a contributor to the Henry Reed fund

and also runs an organization that Alan served on,

on the board, International Arts and Artists.

Sort of going back to some

of the comments that I made earlier.

So, David, welcome.

[ Background noise ]

>> DAVID DURCHGOTT: Thank you.

Thank you very much.

In 1974, I was working for the South Carolina Arts Commission

and my responsibilities there included coordinating the first

national endowment for the arts funded multistate project.

We were documenting the local folk ways

of the South Carolina low country using methodology

which would be simultaneously used

in Mississippi and Kentucky.

Alan is the director of the nation endowment

for the arts new folk art program flew

to South Carolina to meet me.

I picked him up at the Columbia airport and we drove 2 hours

to Charleston to view the programs.

That drive and conversation was fascinating.

It was my first exposure to Alan

and like practically every other conversation we had throughout

the subsequent 42-year friendship, it was enlightening

in an era prior to the internet and Google,

Alan was not only familiar with music and the material culture

of Charleston, my hometown, but then he also knew

about my family's history and historic connection

to Jacksonville, his hometown.

I never left a conversation with Alan

without learning something new.

His interests were broad and his knowledge was encyclopedic

and thinking back to that 2-hour drive in our original meeting,

I later realized that I could've,

he could've easily flown directly to Charleston

to meet me there, but I'm sure that Alan wanted that car time

to get to know who I was.

Within the context of this tribute to Alan's legacy,

I felt it was very important to mention the breadth

of Alan's impact went far beyond the traditional music

and folklife communities that he loved so dearly.

In his work as the first director

of the folk arts program at the NEA in 1974 to 1976,

Alan helped millions bring the arts to millions and millions

of people and he did it in a way that they could understand,

touching the very fiber of who they were and where they were.

Additionally, Alan personally and directly affected the lives

of 100's of people like me, who were then working across the U.S

as we could to carry that same message.

Here, in D.C., Alan was on the board

and co-chaired the humanities D.C., which was from 1987

to 1988 which is the local affiliate

of the national endowment for the humanities.

Nationally, he also helped organize the alliance

for American Quilts from 2001 to 2007

and he facilitated starting the Quilt Alliance's national

documentation index.

He served on the boards of the Alliance

of the National Heritage Areas, the European Center

for Traditional Cultures, and shared the fun for folk,

fun for folk culture, as Carl mentioned, from 1991 to 1994.

And closest to me, Alan served on the board

of International Arts and Artists for 14 years.

He was our board chair for 7 and a half years, 3 successive years

at the terms May 25th of 2009 until his death last year.

He guided International Arts and Artists, an organization

that focuses on sharing cultures, through the recession

and with, through a lot of organizational growth.

He encouraged the organization to reach

out to the broadest range of cultures from other nations

as well as to all American ethnicities.

We lived around the corner from each other as well for 25 years.

[ Background noise ]

Throughout all of these involvements, in every aspect

of his life, Alan was demanding of himself,

and yet showed tremendous kindness

and patience with others.

He was [inaudible] and yet in the most folksy manner.

He always spoke endearingly and proudly of his children,

his love of Karen, and his appreciation of her intellect.

And her unwavering support was evident throughout their

remarkable half century of marriage.

I wanted to thank him in front of everyone, a dear friend,

who I'll miss greatly.

Thank you.

[ Applause ]

>> Betsy Peterson: Thank you, David.

Now I want to call up to the stage Ken Perlman,

who many of you know, and was also a partner of Alan's,

and is considered to be one

of the top claw hammer banjo players in the world.

Known in particular for his skillful adaptations

of Celtic tunes to the style.

And he draws his material from traditional sources,

including the music of Scotland, Ireland, Cape Britain,

Prince Edward Island and the American South.

But his approach to the music is highly innovative.

Also, as an active folklorist, Ken has spent

over 2 decades collecting tunes and oral histories

from traditional fiddle players on Prince Edward Island

and Eastern Canada, which has resulted in 2 books

and a 2 CD anthology of field recordings.

He has toured throughout most of the English speaking world,

sometimes with Alan, and in Western Europe,

both as a soloist, and for over 15 years,

in a duo with Alan Jabbour.

So, oh, you are right behind me.

Okay. I didn't know if I needed to kind of stall, but I don't.

So, without further adieu, Ken Perlman.

[ Applause ]

>> Ken Perlman: Well, thank you, so much.

Before I start, I'd like to thank Karen Jabbour

for the great honor of speaking here to remember Alan in front

of so many wonderful people.

Alan and I toured together, okay, this is the, okay, got it.

Sorry. Technology.

Alan and I toured together for nearly 15 years.

We first encountered each other, musically, in August 2000

at a music camp in the Rockies.

His official accompanist bowed out at the last minuted,

and given that I was the resident old time banjo picker,

he asked me to accompany him in his concert set.

From the moment he touched bow to string,

and we started playing together,

there was a strong musical affinity, an uncanny blend

of fiddle tone with banjo tone, along with a sharing

of sensibilities and tastes.

His approach was strong and powerfully rhythmic,

but fully lyrical and delicately phrased, even charming.

As soon as I heard him interpret a tune, even one I had heard

around the scene for years,

that instantly became the definitive version for me,

and one I wanted to emulate.

He inspired me, not only to learn many dozens

of his tunes note for note, but to develop a whole new way

to accompany them that fit his style like a glove.

This melding of fiddle and banjo can be heard on our first CD,

Southern Summits, and jointed by guitarist Jim Watson, I guess,

who couldn't make it at the last minute,

he as going to be here tonight,on the CD,

You Can't Beat the Classics,

which was completed just a few months before the onset

of Alan's last illness.

I'd like to go back to slide 2 for a minute,

and here's a little sample of the sound

that we developed together, a tune called Waynesboro,

just a little excerpt.

[ Music ]

[ Background noise ]

[ Applause ]

I can still remember our recording it, here,

in Washington, 10 years ago.

After a few visits back and forth,

Alan and I started touring, and until the state

of his health intervened, we toured or worked together

at music camps at least 3 or 4 times a year.

Our travels took us to England, Ireland, Scotland and Shetland,

Western Europe and Canada,

but mostly we toured regionally in the United States.

Depending on the season, our travels took us

to the Northeast, or his native South Land,

the Pacific Coast, or the Midwest.

In what was probably our longest tour, in the fall of 2010,

we started out in Atlanta, curved through Alabama,

Tennessee and Kentucky, on up into Michigan,

headed northwest past Chicago to Madison,

and then back to D.C. via Indiana.

[ Background noise ]

And here's another picture from that era.

Touring with Alan was an eye-opening experience.

He was a much loved and respected figure,

renowned not only in the folk and acoustic music worlds,

but also in the world

of academic folklore, as you've heard.

Even in a world of perfect, and near, strangers,

he had only to walk in to command attention.

And most folks would emerge from any given social occasion,

deeply impressed with his wisdom and charm.

He considered himself to be as much a storyteller as musician,

and his song intros at concerts were often quite elaborate.

Nevertheless,

[ Laughter ]

Do you play, no.

[ Laughter ]

Nevertheless, audiences hung on every word.

When he led jam sessions,

participants would eagerly follow wherever he led,

even if they had never before heard his selected tune

or tune version.

Although Alan was never a full time musician,

he made incalculable contributions

to the music world.

While still a graduate student, he took his reel

to reel recorder off to the Piedmont and Southern Mountains

and preserved the music of several important roots fiddlers

on tape, most notably Henry Reed of Monroe County, West Virginia.

He learned quite a number of those tunes on fiddle,

and began teaching them to a coterie of musicians in

and around Chapel Hill, North Carolina.

Along with Bertram Levy, who is here tonight, Bobby Thompson

and Tommy Thompson, he founded the Hollow Rock String Band,

whose recordings and concerts launched the contemporary old

time music revival.

The Hollow Rock band and other products

of the Chapel Hill scene,

such as the Fuzzy Mountain String Band,

you can tell the era, and the Red Clay Ramblers, same,

introduced many, many tunes to the old time scene

that have become beloved classics.

Amongst these tunes are Over the Waterfall, Frosty Morning,

Kitchen Girl, Ebenezer,

which Alan usually called West Virginia Highway,

Magpie and Green Willows.

[ Background noise ]

And, as you've heard, he became the founding director

of the Folklife division, here at the Library

of Congress, in the 70's.

In that capacity, he promoted music, and other folk arts,

and supervised the recordings of many additional roots musicians,

most notably the Hammonds family

of Pocahontas County, West Virginia.

He also had to interact with many notable business leaders,

philanthropists and politicians

of the last quarter of the 20th century.

A fact that led to many interesting conversation during

our long drives between tour destinations.

Thinking back on the many stories and anecdotes

that Alan shared during our travels, I recently go

to thinking that, perhaps, one over arching theme

to describe his life was the notion of the quest.

What brought him to North Carolina in the first place,

was an impulse to study someone else's quest.

The topic of his dissertation was the story of Bear Wolf.

Once there, he became intrigued by the study of folklore

and ballads, and inspired by the search

for child ballad melodies among the singers of Appalachia.

And drawing on his background

as a highly trained classical violinist,

he embarked on a year's long quest to locate

and record Appalachian fiddlers and preserve their tunes.

Alan started with Piedmont players, like John Lewis,

and then headed deeper into the mountains.

He encountered a fiddler named Oscar Wright

and found himself deeply drawn to his tunes.

Wright told him that the source of those tunes was old man,

Henry Reed, who not only was still living,

but could easily be tracked down in Glen Lyn, Virginia.

[ Background noise ]

Alan often told the story, you've seen that picture before,

too, Alan often told the story of how he and Karen drove

up to the Reed residence, for the first time,

late one afternoon, knocked on the door,

and were immediately invited to partake

of a large family dinner, despite, as Alan puts it,

that Reed had no idea who we were or why we were there, too,

and be like his gestures.

In any event, after dinner, the tape recorder came out

and numerous tunes were recorded,

including one called West Virginia Gals,

that Alan said moved him

so deeply his musical life was changed forever.

His next quest was learning the tunes

and translating them effectively to fiddle.

Now you should know that it's not easy

for a classically trained violinist to play fiddle music.

In fact, now a days, we often make fun of such people.

[ Laughter ]

The bowing is completely different, liveliness

and rhythmic attack are far more important than soaring tone

and following a conductor's directions.

Nevertheless, Alan watched and listened

to the old time players he met, and figured out, not only how

to play these tunes effectively, but to play them so compellingly

that they attracted a coterie of collaborators,

entranced a generation of musicians,

and launched a musical revival.

[ Background noise ]

This said, his take on the tunes changed as he went through life.

Judging from the first Hollow Rock LP's,

his early playing was strong and lively, but as the years went

by the quieted delicacy of phrasing and lyricality

that were truly unique in the world

of contemporary folk music performance.

And I was very fortunate to come along right at the moment

that this unique approach

to the music was coming fully into its own.

Alan loved playing with strong innovative banjo pickers.

And working with him served as a great inspiration

to numerous influential banjoists.

Tommy Thompson, there on the right,

developed a highly percussive, semi-melodic picking style

to drive the Hollow Rock String Band sound,

and carried that style into the Red Clay Ramblers.

Many, many banjo pickers that came up during the 70's

and 80's cite Tommy's playing as one

of their main, formative influences.

Bertram Levy eventually put aside the mandolin he played

in his Chapel Hill days, and took up 5 string banjo.

And as he re-explored the Hollow Rock repertoire,

he developed a new approach to claw hammer

that can be heard merge with Alan's fiddling

and James Reed's guitar playing on the CD,

the Henry Reed Reunion.

And that's Bertram on the right.

He's here tonight.

And then, in the 90's, banjoist philosopher, Stephen Wade,

who is also here today, and you'll hear from him in a,

very shortly, was one of Alan's favorite musical collaborators,

and in fact, a CD made from one

of their live performances has just been issued.

Alan used to tell quite a number of stories

about the tunes we played, some of which reflected

on the vicissitudes of collecting a repertory

and then observing from a distance

as individual tunes became disseminated.

He always regretted, for example, that he never thought

to ask fiddler John Lewis about the spelling

of the tune title, Rose Division.

He wrote down r o s e, like the flower, but was later left

to wonder could it actually have been r o w e apostrophe s,

or even r h o d e apostrophe s?

You may remember this musing.

Alan later found out from, he often talked

about a quirky a modal tune, originall recorded by Reed,

with no title, but dubbed Texas by the Hollow Rock crew,

when they put it on an LP,

because of a story that Reed had told.

Can we hear that audio please?

[ Music ]

Okay. So Alan later found out, from Reed, that the real name

of the tune was Newcastle.

But despite years of trying to correct the nomenclature,

people in the old time music revival could simply not

be budged.

As far as they were concerned,

the name of the tune was Texas, and that was that.

Another case that bemused him involved a very sweet lyrical

tune in the key of g, again collected

from Henry Reed with no title.

Can we have the other tune on that slide, please?

[ Music ]

Anyway, Alan included it on a tape he sent

out to the West Coast, positioned right next

to another tune called Lady of the Lake.

Somehow things got conflated,

to use one of Alan's pet expressions,

and the g tune started spreading on the West Coast

under the title Lady of the Lake.

Years later, Alan was able to trace how the tune,

with its newly minted name, moved from fiddler to fiddler,

until its original provenance was forgotten and it got

into the hands of a well known contra dance fiddler

from New Hampshire, named Rodney Miller.

Miller recorded it on an LP called New England Chestnuts.

[ Laughter ]

And from that time on, virtually everyone

in the folk scene has assumed it was an old New England tune.

This said, as it happens, the title Lady of the Lake,

fits the tune perfectly.

And the melody is far better suited for contra dancing

than it is for southern square dancing, so no harm done.

Alan often compared the function of tune collectors

to the workings of an hourglass.

In an earlier era, a given tune might be known

by many musicians, then

as the music culture declines there were fewer

and fewer players, and the number of people

who know the tune shrinks,

sometimes to as few as a single person.

When the collector comes along, hopefully before that last grain

of sand has disappeared, he or she teaches the tune to others.

It then comes back to life and spreads again,

sometimes becoming even better known

than it was in the first place.

[ Background noise ]

No tune is a better case in point, here,

than Over the Waterfall.

It was collected from Henry Reed, a single known source,

and spread so quickly and pervasively

that few people now a days have any idea where it came from.

It first appeared as cut number 7 on the b side

of the first Hollow Rock LP.

Not long afterwards, Alan moved to L.A. and was asked

to judge a fiddle contest at nearby Topanga Canyon.

One of the contestants, not knowing who was judging,

announced that he was going to play a tune

from the Hollow Rock String Band called Over the Waterfall.

As Alan put it, that tune beat me to California.

[ Laughter ]

Flash forward about 15 years, Alan and Karen were

in Hungary attending a music party, Halvic Injunction

with an Academic Conference, a band from Brittany was

on center stage when the word got

out that the tall American played the fiddle,

Alan was 6 6 in his stocking feet.

In Alan's words, I saw the band members talking among

themselves, and I guess they were probably saying,

what song do we know that the tall American might also know?

Finally, a young woman who served as band leader,

turned to Alan and asked brightly,

can you play, Over the Waterfall?

[ Laughter ]

Anyway, here's the version of Over the Waterfall

from the Hollow Rock recording that, on that fateful,

when that fateful cut was made.

[ Background noise ]

[ Music ]

Maybe we'll get a chance to play that in the jam session.

Anyway, I'd like to conclude by playing Billy in the Lowland,

and this is a tune that Alan and I felt was the best vehicle

for capturing the essence of our sound, and the tune

that we almost always used to open our concerts.

Not surprisingly, it was collected from Henry Reed,

who said it was originally from east Virginia, which is the way

that West Virginian's refer

to what is now called the state of Virginia.

[ Laughter ]

[ Background noise ]

I think a tuning would be appropriate here.

It is a banjo, after all.

[ Music ]

[ Applause ]

>> Betsy Peterson: Thank you, so much.

That was really wonderful.

I also want to say, that there are some CD's in the back

by Ken, both, and by Stephen Wade who we will here

from in just a second.

They are recordings that are with Alan, so if you would

like to hear more, please go back and get a copy.

I'm also looking forward

to hearing more music, very shortly.

It's wonderful to hear the full dimensions

of Alan being talked about here.

For some of us, folklore, as we get sort of mired

in the academic and the words, it's sure nice

to hear words with music.

Our next speaker is Stephen Wade, and many of you know him.

He has spent nearly his entire life in the study

of American folklife, and he's probably best known

for banjo dancing, a theatrical performance

that combines storytelling, traditional music,

and percussive dance, which was one

of the longest running off Broadway shows in the country.

Here, at the Library, we are particularly appreciative

of his book, The Beautiful Music All Around Us, Field Recordings

and the American Experience,

which showcases nearly two decades of research,

during which Wade tracked down the communities, families

and performers connected with the iconic AFC field recordings,

and do, indeed, demonstrate how important research is.

The book received the 2013 ASCAP Deem's Taylor Award,

and the Association of Recorded Sound Collections Award

for Best History.

Wade has released a number of award winning CD's,

of which the latest is Americana Concert, Alan Jabbour

and Stephen Wade at the Library of Congress.

So please, give a warm welcome to Stephen Wade.

[ Applause ]

>> Stephen Wade: Alan and I would always open all

of our shows with this tune here.

We started playing together, I met him in 19 mid 70's,

and we started playing here in DC around 82.

[ Music ]

You're ready there?

All right.

That's Zan McLeod, and he was a good friend of Alan's, too.

[ Applause ]

When my wife and I got married, Zan and Alan played that.

[ Music ]

[ Applause ]

Thank you, very much.

Well, as I said, Alan and I opened our every concert

with that tune, that he called Stony Point.

But it goes by more names than that.

These include, Old Vad, Wild Horse, Celtin's Reel,

Pig Town Fling, Unfortunate Dog, Buck Creek Girl,

Richmond Ruckus, and when Earl Scruggs recorded it

with Paul Warren, they called it Fiddling Banjo.

Back when we performed it,

Alan noted that there'd always be some accommodating soul,

he said, who would call it the Wild Horse at Stony Point.

I thought of a way of approaching this tune

without Alan here to lead it might reside in that banjo here,

made during the Civil War.

The history that dwells in this instrument, and the past lives

who once held it, calls to mind the remark that Alan often made

about Quince Dillion, a fiddler in fifer from the Mexican War,

who, as an old man, taught young Henry Reed,

who then decades later, guided the youthful Alan Jabbour.

Only one person Alan marveled stood between himself

and that misty figure of Jacksonian America,

that tenacious thread still intact extends

to those here tonight,

who in turn learn their music from Alan.

And thus, ancestries become continuities.

The epigraph of this new album, a concert that Alan and I played

at the Coolidge Auditorium 20 years ago,

comes from something Alan wrote.

He said, how complicated and powerful,

beyond our own imaginings, are the radiations of what we do.

Alan's thought applies not only

to the influences his repertory had upon others,

but within the music itself.

Alan exemplified an approach that Indian fiddler,

John W. Summers, a contemporary of Henry Reed's,

called the originality of the tune.

That is, that each piece possesses a detailed identity.

Dick Summers saw it as the fiddler's obligation

to learn however many parts a tune might have,

and to take no shortcuts in that, in their execution.

Similarly, Buddy Thomas, a Kentucky fiddler committed

to the older styles, felt the need to bow the tune out.

The influential radio fiddler, Georgia Slim Rutland,

likewise spoke of his mother's council,

when he first started playing.

She said, don't ever detract from a tune.

Add to it all you want, but don't take away.

These musicians shared, in common, a view of fiddle tunes

as complex, self-contained works.

And that's how Alan crafted his pieces.

[ Background noise ]

[ Music ]

[ Applause ]

[ Background noise ]

Tonight's invitation also asks us to also consider Alan

in relation to his legacy in folk life.

When Alan began his graduate studies at Duke,

his classroom professor sometimes played selections

from the folk music albums issued

by the Library of Congress.

These performances, many recorded in domestic settings,

did not scrub away the sounds of those places.

In the background, sometimes, a dog barks,

a kitchen clock ticks, roosters crow, a truck drives by,

these records alerted Alan to the kind

of first person collecting he soon undertook himself,

nor in the ensuring years, as head of the folk archive

and later as director of the American Folklife Center,

did he divorce cultural expression

from lived experience.

Art is not a thing apart, he once told me,

it can't be set aside from life.

One song emblematic of that fusion, and included

on those albums that Alan heard, comes from Vera Hall, a singer

and domestic worker from Livingston, Alabama.

In October, 1940, she recorded for the Library,

Another Man Done Gone, a blues she learned

from her husband recently returned from prison.

Well, the well known number most often appears

as a lover's plaint.

In her rendition, she largely sang spirituals,

it seemingly becomes a civil rights anthem.

In what could serve as a mission statement

for the American Folklife Center, Vera Hall later said,

any song that we sing have reference

to the life that we live.

[ Background noise ]

[ Music ]

[ Applause ]

[ Background noise ]

Well, he closed with a medley.

The first recalls a tune that Alan played as Patty

on the turnpike, though it, too, goes by other names.

We follow with Kitchen Girl, that Alan learned

from Henry Reed and then transmitted to the world,

and we end with Sheep Shell Corn by the Rattling of His Horn,

a piece recorded in 1941 for the Library of Congress

by Fiddler Emmett Lundy.

Lundy, born in southwest Virginia in 1864,

learned from a much older fiddler named Green Leonard.

He said of Green Leonard, quote, he didn't teach them tunes

to me, but I catched them from him.

And in his last days, he told me that I was the only one

that tracked him down, and he wanted

to learn me some old pieces before he died,

he didn't want them to be buried,

and live after he was done.

Sheep Shell Corn lives on through Emmett Lundy.

He played it majestically, a description that applies as much

to Alan Jabbour, this tall swan of a man, musician, folklorist,

administrator, author and inspiration to so many.

I hear,

[ Applause ]

I hear now, since he left us, Alan's courtly words resound,

how complicated and powerful, beyond our own imaginings,

are the radiations of what we do.

[ Background noise ]

[ Music ]

[ Applause ]

That's Zan McLeod.

Thank you.

[ Applause ]

>> Betsy Peterson: Thank you, Stephen.

Thank you, Zan.

[ Background noise ]

And we are coming down to our last speaker.

I think the Jabbour family should always have the last

word, before we start hearing some music, and playing music.

So please do not go away.

But to come down to the, you know, the practical universe,

if you do need to leave, there are staff at the back

and will guide you to the elevators,

and make sure you get on your way.

And for those of you who stick around, and play an instrument,

and have an instrument with you, please don't forget

about those property passes.

We want to make sure you get out.

So, and then finally, thank you, Stephen, again, thank you Zan,

thank you, Ken, and thank you Carl, and thank you, Alan.

Our last speaker is Karen Jabbour, she's Alan's wife,

love and lifelong research partner throughout his career.

Their work together includes rich documentation

of the tradition of Decoration Day, which was published

in the book, Decoration Day in the Mountains,

and I think she need no other introduction.

Karen.

[ Applause ]

>> Karen Jabbour: Good evening, family and many friends.

Welcoming all of you here has reminded me

of a generous reflection

that Alan's first administrative assistant,

here at the American Folklife Center, made.

Eleanor Sreb said that her late husband didn't leave her a lot

of money, but he left her very rich in friends.

And I certainly feel rich in friends tonight.

My thanks to the Folklife Center staff for their dedication

in bringing about this tribute to Alan's legacy.

And my heartfelt appreciation to Carl Fleishhauer,

to David Furchgott, to Ken Perlman, and Stephen Wade,

and Zan McLeod for their devotion to portraying for all

of us, in words, photographs and music,

and their long creative interaction with Alan.

Finally, thanks to you musicians who will continue the legacy

in your tribute in the jam later tonight.

As many of you know, when Alan retired in 1999,

he took on a project offered to him

by the National Parks Service to create a study

of the cultural tradition

of holding cemetery decoration events

for the environmental impact statement for a major road

in Great Smokey Mountains National Park

to the graveyards left behind by the people

who were moved off the land.

Without Carl to rely on for documentation, Alan drafted me

as his field collaborator and photographer.

I can take a picture, this is my photograph of Alan,

which has been very hard for me to look in the eye tonight,

because I know he's looking right at me.

So after 2 years of attending these cemetery events,

we submitted the study for the EIS volume.

With so much enthusiasm and documentation left over,

that we went on to publish a book in 2010 with University

of North Carolina Press, called Decoration Day in the Mountains,

which has been mentioned tonight.

This only wet Alan's appetite to continue surveying cemeteries

with me, throughout the entire rural south.

And he completed, before his death, a second book,

now awaiting my editing, at the University Press of Mississippi.

In the course of studying cemetery traditions,

we researched illusions in the literature, in literature art

and song to cemetery events.

Alan had a special place in his heart for slow airs,

called hens, played by southern fiddlers.

When we were doing research at Boreal College Library,

he heard a solo version of the 19th century hymn,

the Old Church Yard, played by Sanford Kelly.

And he recalled an illusion in John C. Campbell's book,

the Appalachian Highlander in His Home,

to a congregation singing this hymn

in a processional to the cemetery.

Alan noted in Kelly's playing, the slow, monophonic style

and irregular pulse of the old unaccompanied singing style.

I'd like to conclude by playing, for you, Alan's fiddling

of the Old Church Yard, the final track on his last album,

You Can't Beat the Classics.

The words to the first verse are, Oh come, come with me

to the old grave yard, I well know the path

through the soft green sward, friends slumber we would want

to regard, we'll trace out their names in the old grave yard.

[ Music ]

[ Applause ]

Thank you, folks, and Ken will now organize the jam.

[ Applause ]

>> Okay. So here's a moment a lot

of you have been looking forward to.

What we're going to do is everybody whose brought

instruments, this is your time to go get them.

And we'd like to clear, make a clearing, kind of here,

a big circle space that people can come

and join once you've got your instruments, and others can sit

around and listen or participate.

But we'd like to clear some chairs right here,

and make an opening that people can sit around.

>> The first tune we're going to play is often called Ebenezer.

And this is collected from Henry Reed and was

on the first Hollow Rock album, and Alan said

that Henry Reed often called it West Virginia Highway.

And if anyone else has any memories to share.

So we're going to start this tune.

Do you want to kick it off?

This is Bertram Levy, by the way, an original Hollow Rocker.

[ Applause ]

>> I should say, right off the bat, that this is Alan's fiddle.

[ Cheering ]

[ Background noise ]

[ Music ]

[ Applause ]

>> Bertram, do you want to pick a tune?

[ Background noise ]

Yeah, for a little while.

Yeah. So, you know Alan and I, we were like brothers,

we grew up together with this music.

I mean, Alan was kind of, I mean he was the inspiration,

but we were the, 3 or 4 of us were the people that really kind

of put it all together and made it come alive

and we shared the tunes and we shared the whiskey

and the camels and we shared being bad boys and we.

It was a great experience and I'll just relate one,

one memory which is once we visited Henry.

I was his sidekick and I would go with him to visit some

of these folks and we visited Henry and took him

down to Narrows and we sat under a tent and Alan was sitting here

and Bobby Thompson was sitting here and I was sitting there

and Tommy Thompson was sitting there

and Henry was sitting there and he hadn't been out of his house

in many years and people would all come up

and offer him something to drink and they'd all go,

they'd point it out and they say Henry,

that's you when you were young.

So, that was, we knew then that Alan had the right stuff.

So, this is a beautiful tune which is John Brown's March.

Remember the 4, begins with a 4 chord on the second part.

[ Background noise ]

[ Music ]

>> Hey. That wasn't a Henry V. tune, was it?

It was? Marcie do you have a tune that you'd like us to play?

[ Background noise ]

>> Well, okay.

Okay, we're going to do Sheers and Stockings.

Do you have any stories about that other

than it's a Henry V. tune?

>> I think we actually named this tune.

I don't think Henry had a name for it, did he?

Yeah, the title.

There were many tunes that Henry didn't remember the title

or sometimes we'd play them with the one title

and then he'd write back to Alan

and he'd say I think that's a different title, but now that I,

you know, when I, last time I talked to Alan,

last time I talked to Alan, he, we were musing about the facts

that during our working we always wondered while the old

guys never played the fiddle when they were working.

When they were young men and only took it up again

when they were older and then Alan and I were musing

about 6 months before he passed away and we realized

that we also picked up the fiddle again

after we stopped working and I said Alan, we were those guys

and we didn't know it.

We thought we were maybe documentarians or something,

but we were just fiddlers just like them

and you probably are the same.

So, this is Sheers and Stockings.

[ Music ]

>> Okay. Do you have a tune you'd like to suggest?

>> Green Willis.

>> Green Willis, you want to do to d?

Banjo players mind going to d?

Okay, but that's all right we're in the territory.

Okay, so we're going to D

and we're going to play Green Willis.

[ Background noise ]

>> Okay, we're going to play Green Willis

and this originated actually as a jig called the New Rig Ship,

a Scottish tune and during the late 19th century became a

fifing tune played as a march or quickstep

in the south called Chapel Hill Serenade and then it got sped

up into a reel and that's how we play it now.

So, let's start, you'd be interested in knowing that.

>> Once Alan and I were sitting around with Libba Cotton

and she said, I know that tune, we used to call

that Chapel Hill Serenade when I lived there.

We used to hear the fife and drum march

down the street playing that tune and.

[ Background noise ]

[ Music ]

>> Okay. So, going around in this end

of the circle, a detune.

How could we not?

So, you've already heard the story of this one.

Do you know anything more

about Over the Waterfalls and what I say?

David, you had a story you wanted to tell about?

>> DAVID DURCHGOTT: All,

all I know about Over the Waterfall is it comes

from an old English ballad in which she tried, the,

she wanted to get rid of her husband

and so she gave him some wine and blinded him and sat him

by the cliff and then he said, she said just stand there

and she got back and she ran to push him over,

but he was a crafty old guy and he just stepped out of the way

and she went over the waterfall.

[ Background noise ]

[ Music ]

>> Okay, kind of in this end of the circle, anyone have a tune?

Rocking the Babies to Sleep, cool.

Can you play that?

All right, you want to lead it?

Okay.

>> You know this [inaudible] over here, he's the one

who taught it to Alan didn't you rock,

or you at least Rocking the Babies to Sleep.

[ Background noise ]

[ Music ]

[ Background noise ]

>> Let's finish up with Frosty Morning.

Everyone knows Frosty Morning.

[ Music ]

[ Background noise ]

>> This has been a presentation of the Library of Congress.

Visit us at loc.gov.

For more infomation >> Alan Jabbour, 1942-2017: His Legacy in Folklife & Traditional Music - Duration: 2:10:02.

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ЧТО ТЫ СЕБЕ ПОЗВОЛЯЕШЬ?! | АНИМЕ ПРИКОЛЫ #21 | ANIME COUBS #21 | АНИМЕ ПОД МУЗЫКУ | ANIME FOR MUSIC - Duration: 6:12.

For more infomation >> ЧТО ТЫ СЕБЕ ПОЗВОЛЯЕШЬ?! | АНИМЕ ПРИКОЛЫ #21 | ANIME COUBS #21 | АНИМЕ ПОД МУЗЫКУ | ANIME FOR MUSIC - Duration: 6:12.

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LAKEY INSPIRED - Going Up [No Copyright Music] - Duration: 3:01.

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