Audio file
Title: Commentary by Big Bill Broonzy on railroad and levee gangs, work songs, and leaving the army
Date recorded: March 2, 1947
Contributor(s): Performer: Lomax, Alan; Performer: Broonzy, William Lee Conley (Big Bill); Recordist: Lomax, Alan
Genre: interview/commentary
Instruments: voice
Culture: African American, Southern U.S.
Language: English
Setting: Decca StudiosOriginal format: Acetate Disc
Tape number: TD106
Track: 1
Part of: New York City 3/47
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Date recorded: March 2, 1947
Contributor(s): Performer: Lomax, Alan; Performer: Broonzy, William Lee Conley (Big Bill); Recordist: Lomax, Alan
Genre: interview/commentary
Instruments: voice
Culture: African American, Southern U.S.
Language: English
Subject(s):
Note: Big Bill Broonzy recalls his work in railroad and levee camps, the work songs sung, and the lessons he learned from his time in the army.Setting: Decca Studios
Location: New York City, New York, United States
Archive ID: TD106R01
Tape number: TD106
Track: 1
About the session: In 1947, using his own Presto disc recording machine, Alan Lomax recorded bluesmen Big Bill Broonzy (1893–1958), Memphis Slim (1915–1988), and Sonny Boy Williamson (1914–1948) at Decca Studios in New York City, after they had given a concert at Town Hall. In a session of candid oral history and song, the three artists explain the origin and nature of the blues. "They began with blues as a record of the problems of love and women in the Delta world," Lomax wrote. "They explored the cause of this in the stringent poverty of Black rural life. They recalled life in the Mississippi work camps, where the penitentiary stood at the end of the road, waiting to receive the rebellious. Finally, they came to the enormities of the lynch system that threatened anyone who defied its rules." The interviews were issued in a fictionalized form in Common Ground (1948) under the title "I Got the Blues," but they were deemed so controversial that their album release was delayed for ten years. When United Artists finally issued them on LP as "Blues in the Mississippi Night" in 1959, Alan used pseudonyms to protect the artists and their families.
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