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TITLE: 'The High Lonesome Sound' Revisited: Documenting Traditional Culture in America
SPEAKER: John Cohen
EVENT DATE: 06/11/2009
RUNNING TIME: 61 minutes
DESCRIPTION:
In the early 1960s, the multitalented musician, filmmaker, and photographer John Cohen journeyed to eastern Kentucky to document the songs of church-goers, miners, and farmers, and the rural community that produced and sustained their uniquely American sound. The result was "The High Lonesome Sound," a classic 1963 documentary film than evocatively illustrates how music and religion help Appalachian people maintain their dignity and traditions in the face of change and hardship. Featuring master traditional musician Roscoe Holcomb, Cohen's film also documented how different musical strands are synthesized in the playing of an individual performer. In this presentation, Cohen discussed the making of his influential documentary, its initial reception, and its continued impact in the shaping of documentary filmmaking and ethnographic research on traditional culture both in the United States and abroad.
Speaker Biography: A respected musician and founding member of the seminal old-time string band "The New Lost City Ramblers," John Cohen has also had an equally distinguished career as a filmmaker, photographer, and record producer. The term ???high lonesome sound,??? which he coined for his legendary 1963 documentary film, has become synonymous with an entire genre of American music. In addition to extensive fieldwork and documentation of Appalachian culture, Cohen has done important ethnographic research throughout the United States, Britain, and the Peruvian Andes. His highly-praised publication, "There Is No Eye: John Cohen Photographs" (2001), and the complementary Smithsonian Folkways CD "There Is No Eye: Music For Photographs," brought together several threads of Cohen's work over the past 50 years. As a producer, his many noteworthy recordings include Smithsonian Folkways' releases "An Untamed Sense of Control" by Roscoe Holcomb, "Dark Holler" by Dillard Chandler, "The Lost Recordings of Banjo Bill Cornett," "If I Had My Way" by Rev. Gary Davis, and the compilation "Back Roads to Cold Mountain." Cohen worked with T-Bone Burnett as music consultant to the film "Cold Mountain," and appeared in Martin Scorcese's film about Bob Dylan, "No Direction Home."
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SERIES: Benjamin Botkin Lecture Series