Langue : English
Fabrication artisanale American Music en visite avec leurs amis et leurs mentors, Mike Seeger et Alice Gerrard trace les origines de la musique américaine rurale de folk traditionnelle cultures dans le sud des Etats-Unis et alors démontrer comment traditionnelle musique est appris, joué, adapté et interprétée par des musiciens plus jeunes issus de milieux urbains. En plus de Mike et Alice, musiciens comprennent Tommy Jarrell, Roscoe Holcomb, Lily peut Ledford, Elizabeth Cotten, Dewey Balfa, Marc Savoy, Tracy Schwarz, Hank Bradley, Jody Stecher, Irene Herrmann, Stefan expéditeurs, Will Spires, Eric Thompson et Susie Rothfield. (1980, 42 minutes) Sonny Terry, Shoutine le Blues dans une chambre de motel à Oakland en Californie, harmonica blues aveugle grand Sonny Terry raconte une histoire sur son début dans le show business et puis joue un solo original dans son propre style incroyable, créés dans plus de 50 ans de jouer. 6 minutes (1969) Les Blues de Balfa à travers leurs apparitions festivals, des concerts et des enregistrements, les frères Balfa est devenu le plus... / Divers / Dvd
SKU: LO.30-1732H
UPC: 000308061062.
Play parties are an American phenomenon with roots in children's games songs from the British Isles. They are song, dance and game all in one. Play parties came about in rural America during the second half of the 19th century. Many of these authentic folk songs are still popular today. This is a one-of-a-kind collection, based on research and interviews of people who actually performed and attended play parties as children. Also included in this terrific resource are the movement instructions for each play party.
SKU: GI.G-10352
ISBN 9781622774685.
With his hallmark wit and eloquence, Colonel John R. Bourgeois gives an autobiographical account of his life and career as a musician from humble roots who rose through the ranks to became the twenty-fifth director of “The President’s Own†United States Marine Band. Page after page is filled with recollections from Colonel Bourgeois’s tenure with the Marine Band, many of which involve the most significant musical and political figures of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries, including multiple presidents, first ladies, and a number of renowned conductors and artists. Augmenting the stories are newspaper clippings, letters from U.S. presidents, transcriptions of speeches Colonel Bourgeois gave at various events, musical programs for select concerts from throughout his illustrious career, and 90 previously unpublished photographs of John Bourgeois with his family, friends, and the presidents and first ladies he served. Perfect for wind band aficionados and history buffs alike, readers are sure to delight in the tales and musings of this towering figure of American political and musical life. Colonel John R. Bourgeois, USMC (ret.), was the twenty-fifth director of “The President’s Own†United States Marine Band. His acclaimed career spanned nine presidential administrations, from Presidents Eisenhower to Clinton. A native of Louisiana, Colonel Bourgeois is a graduate of Loyola University in New Orleans. He joined the Marine Corps in 1956 and entered “The President’s Own†in 1958 as a French hornist and arranger. Named director in 1979, Colonel Bourgeois was promoted to his present rank in 1983. He retired from active duty on 11 July 1996. As director of “The President’s Own,†Bourgeois was music adviser to the White House. He selected the musical program and directed the Band in its traditional place of honor at the U.S. Capitol for four presidential inaugurations and regularly conducted the Marine Band and the Marine Chamber Orchestra at the White House, appearing there more frequently than any other musician in the nation. He is the only Marine musician to have served in every rank from private to colonel.