Alabama
The American Folklife Center contains rich and varied
materials from Alabama documenting the diversity of the state's
traditions. Among its unique recordings are African American spirituals, work songs, and
shouts from the 1930s-40s; fiddle music; coal miners' songs; Sacred Harp singing; and the music
of blues and gospel artists. The Center's 1982 Ethnic Heritage and Language Schools Project documented
a Greek/Lebanese school in Birmingham.
Collections
Finding Aid: View a complete list of our Alabama collections.
Local Legacies: This project provides a "snapshot" of local culture as it was expressed in the year 2000. View Alabama's
Local Legacies projects.
Veterans History Project: Browse state collections from the Veterans History Project.
Online Collections: Southern
Mosaic: The John and Ruby Lomax 1939 Southern States Recording Trip and "Now
What a Time:" Blues, Gospel, and the Fort Valley Music Festivals,
1938-1943
Concert Webcasts
Blind Boys of Alabama: African American gospel music from Alabama. Recorded June 5, 2002. [webcast Part I] [webcast Part II]
Birmingham
Sunlights: African American gospel quartet from Alabama. Recorded December 7, 2005. [webcast and event flyer]
Additional Resources
Educational Resources: View a list of educational materials related to Alabama from A Teacher's Guide to Folklife Resources.
Folklife Resources: Find state folklife-related agencies, societies, archives, higher education programs, and more, in Folklife Sourcebook: A Directory of Folklife Resources in the United States.
Publication: "Lebanese Arabic School at St. Elias Maronite Catholic Church and Greek
School at Holy Trinity-Holy Cross Greek Orthodox Cathedral," in Ethnic Heritage and Language Schools in America. [catalog record]
Published Recordings: Sacred Harp Singing, Recording Laboratory, Library of Congress,
AFS L11. [audiocassette] [compact disc]
"Jordan and Jubilee: Songs from Livingston, Alabama," The Ballad Hunter,
Part IX, Library of Congress, AFS L53. [audiocassette]
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