Old Weird Americana: A tribute to Harry Smith - free live performance
Music Millennium
3:00PM
Portland, OR
A 60th Anniversary Tribute to the Harry Smith Anthology of American Folk Music
Saturday, May 12th 3:00 PM
Artist, filmmaker, and musicologist Harry Smith was born in Portland, and he changed the world with music. Old Weird Americana is a celebration of his legend and legacy and the 60th anniversary of the release of his Anthology of American Folk Music. In-store performers include Ural Thomas, Joe McMurrian, Lewi Longmire, Bob Shoemaker, David Lipkind, Kory Quinn, Miz Kitty, and more.
The Anthology of American Folk Music was a compilation of recordings of American folk and country music commercially released as 78 rpm records between 1926 and 1932. The anthology was released in 1952 on Folkways Records as three two-LP sets. In 1997, the album was re-released as a boxed set of six compact discs on Smithsonian Folkways Recordings. In 2000, a fourth installment of the anthology, conceived of in the '50s but abandoned, became available on Revenant Records. The Anthology is generally thought to have been enormously influential on the folk & blues revival of the '50s and '60s, and brought the works of Blind Lemon Jefferson, Mississippi John Hurt, Dick Justice and many others to the attention of musicians such as Bob Dylan and Joan Baez, and featured such legendary acts as The Carter Family and Clarence Ashley.
Smith edited and directed the design of the anthology, including the cover art, which featured a Theodore de Bry etching of a monochord which Smith had taken from a mystical treatise by scientist/alchemist Robert Fludd. Smith also penned short synopses of the songs in the collection, which were made to resemble newspaper headlines—for the song “King Kong Kitchie Kitchie Ki-Me-O” by Chubby Parker, Smith notes: Zoologic Miscegeny Achieved Mouse Frog Nuptuals [sic], Relatives Approve. Smith culled selections from his amassed personal collection of 78 rpm records, picked for their commercial and artistic appeal within a set period of time, 1927 to 1932. Smith chose those particular years as boundaries since, as he stated himself, "1927, when electronic recording made possible accurate music reproduction, and 1932, when the Depression halted folk music sales." Smith earned a belated Grammy, the Chairman's Merit Award, for his contribution to this collection shortly before his death in 1991.
On May 20th, the Old Weird Americana tribute show comes to the Alberta Rose Theatre, including performers Ural Thomas, Joe McMurrian, Lewi Longmire, Baby Gramps, James Low, Mark Lemhouse, Lauren Sheehan, Michael Dean Damron, Bob Shoemaker, Mike Midlo, PDX Country Underground, Miz Kitty, Kory Quinn, Jane Keefer, Tin Pan Alley Killers, Joe Hickerson, The Ghost of Harry Smith, and more. http://albertarosetheatre.com/