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sfolklife
Добавлен 5 май 2011
Stories in the Clay: The Pottery and Poetry of Neolia Cole Womack
Short film by Hunter Randolph.
A charming and amusing look at the work of A.R. Cole’s daughter Neolia, who “probably wrote more on the bottom of pottery than anyone else.”
Subtitled version available here:
ruclips.net/video/TpV5uZYtojI/видео.html
A charming and amusing look at the work of A.R. Cole’s daughter Neolia, who “probably wrote more on the bottom of pottery than anyone else.”
Subtitled version available here:
ruclips.net/video/TpV5uZYtojI/видео.html
Просмотров: 208
Видео
Stories in the Clay: The Pottery and Poetry of Neolia Cole Womack
Просмотров 2723 года назад
Short film by Hunter Randolph. A charming and amusing look at the work of A.R. Cole’s daughter Neolia, who “probably wrote more on the bottom of pottery than anyone else.”
A.R. Cole, Potter (1969, Terry Rushin) [subtitles]
Просмотров 9293 года назад
A.R. Cole, Potter (1969, Terry W. Rushin) with subtitles This documentary by student filmmaker, Terry W. Rushin, shares a day in the life of ceramicist and potter A.R. Cole and his family's multi-generational pottery shop in Sanford, North Carolina. Content warning: the final scene of the film contains an anti-Semitic slur made by A. R. Cole. Original film elements found in the Terry W. Rushin ...
A.R. Cole, Potter (1969, Terry W. Rushin)
Просмотров 1893 года назад
A.R. Cole, Potter (1969, Terry W. Rushin) This documentary by student filmmaker, Terry W. Rushin, shares a day in the life of ceramicist and potter A.R. Cole and his family's multi-generational pottery shop in Sanford, North Carolina. Content warning: the final scene of the film contains an anti-Semitic slur made by A. R. Cole. Original film elements found in the Terry W. Rushin Documentary on ...
Tommy Jarrell and Fred Cockerham (1971, Blanton Owen)
Просмотров 12 тыс.3 года назад
This 1971 film by folklorist Blanton Owen captures rare footage of Tommy Jarrell on fiddle and Fred Cockerham on banjo, playing together on Cockerham's front porch in Low Gap, North Carolina. Original film elements found in the Blanton Owen Collection #20027 (finding-aids.lib.unc.edu/20027/), Southern Folklife Collection, The Wilson Library, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Laborato...
Tommy Jarrell and Fred Cockerham (1971, Blanton Owen) [with subtitles]
Просмотров 21 тыс.3 года назад
This 1971 film by folklorist Blanton Owen captures rare footage of Tommy Jarrell on fiddle and Fred Cockerham on banjo, playing together on Cockerham's front porch in Low Gap, North Carolina. Original film elements found in the Blanton Owen Collection #20027 (finding-aids.lib.unc.edu/20027/), Southern Folklife Collection, The Wilson Library, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Laborato...
"We Shall Overcome" from FD-750, Highlander Research and Education Center Collection #20361
Просмотров 6657 лет назад
Recording transferred from acetate disc, FD-20361/750, by the Southern Folklife Collection, The Wilson Special Collections Library, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. The collection includes acetate and transcription discs documenting the struggle for justice through political and social activism. Recordings of folk music, protest songs, labor songs, and African American religious son...
"We Shall Overcome" from FD-754, Highlander Research and Education Center Collection #20361
Просмотров 6447 лет назад
Recording transferred from acetate disc, FD-20361/754, by the Southern Folklife Collection, The Wilson Special Collections Library, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. The collection includes acetate and transcription discs documenting the struggle for justice through political and social activism. Recordings of folk music, protest songs, labor songs, and African American religious son...
"No More Mourning" from FD-730, Highlander Research and Education Center Collection #20361
Просмотров 1737 лет назад
Recording transferred from acetate disc, FD-20361/730, Highlander Folk School dispatch, "Broadcast to England," 1937: disc 2 of 4, at the Southern Folklife Collection, The Wilson Special Collections Library, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. The collection includes acetate and transcription discs documenting the struggle for justice through political and social activism. Recordings o...
"No More Mourning" from FD-764, Highlander Research and Education Center Collection #20361
Просмотров 2747 лет назад
Recording transferred from acetate disc, FD-20361/764, Songs by Zilphia Horton and Bill Lane recorded at the Highlander Folk School: disc 19 of 23, Songs performed include:[The Old Man Came To...], Zilphia Horton; "No More Mourning After While," Zilphia Horton; "I Heard The Voice of Jesus," Bill Lane; the Southern Folklife Collection, The Wilson Special Collections Library, University of North ...
Joe & Odell Thompson, 15 March 1988 #2
Просмотров 4 тыс.12 лет назад
From Hi-8 video, call no. v8m-138, in the Nancy Kalow Collection (#20113). Joe and Odell Thompson, 15 March 1988. Videotape of a concert at Gerrard Hall, on the campus of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, features traditional string band musicians Joe Thompson on fiddle and Odell Thompson on banjo For educational use only. The content and comments posted here are subject to the U...
Black Banjo Gathering: Joe Thompson & Bob Carlin
Просмотров 4,1 тыс.12 лет назад
Black Banjo Gathering: Joe Thompson & Bob Carlin
Joe and Odell Thompson, 15 March 1988
Просмотров 2,4 тыс.12 лет назад
From Hi-8 video, call no. v8m-138, in the Nancy Kalow Collection (#20113). Joe and Odell Thompson, 15 March 1988. Videotape of a concert at Gerrard Hall, on the campus of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, features traditional string band musicians Joe Thompson on fiddle and Odell Thompson on banjo For educational use only. The content and comments posted here are subject to the U...
Squaredance with Joe Thompson, Carolina Chocolate Drops, John Dee Holeman.mp4
Просмотров 1,1 тыс.12 лет назад
From DVD, call no. DVD-130, in the Dom Flemons Collection (#20427). For educational use only. The content and comments posted here are subject to the UNC Wilson Special Collections Library copyright and privacy policy (www.lib.unc.edu/mss/pspol/permission.html). UNC and the Southern Folklife Collection reserve the right in their sole discretion to remove any content at any time.
Joe & Odell Thompson, 17 August 1987
Просмотров 17 тыс.12 лет назад
From Hi-8 video, call no. v8m-138, in the Wayne Martin & Nancy Kalow Collection (#20047). Joe Thompson is a traditional fiddler from North Carolina. On this videotape made on August 17, 1987, Odell Thompson accompanies on banjo. This first of two tapes was recorded as part of a project supported by the NC Arts Council. For educational use only. The content and comments posted here are subject t...
Hazel Dickens--"Pretty Bird"--28 October 2003
Просмотров 7 тыс.13 лет назад
Hazel Dickens "Pretty Bird" 28 October 2003
Thank you.
Great to see Fred's finger-picking style on Reuben's Train.
Thank you for uploading
Wow, thanks for uploading!
Man Fred’s banjo is so loud and distinct, it’s mesmerizing. I’m so happy to have found this video. Thank you!
I think it's because of the Formica fingerboard.
Built by Kyle Creed.
@@donhuber9131do you have any more info on this specific banjo? I’ve never seen a creed Banjo with the style of tuners on Fred’s banjo in this video. It looks more like a catalog banjo with a Formica fingerboard than a Creed.
Lovely woman. I always enjoyed visiting with Neola when I went to the shop. She gave me seeds from one of the plants in front of the shop which I grew in my garden in North Carolina. I have pieces made by Neola, Celia, Kenneth and even A.R. Good memories.❤
I bet a few Foxfire books were written on the porch.
This you so much for this work of art. 😄😁😃🎻🪕❤️🔥❤️🔥❤️🔥❤️🔥❤️🔥
This is my favorite video I've ever seen on RUclips up to this point. I've been using RUclips since it's birth in 2006, for perspective.
May we never forget!
Where's John Dee?
Only guy i know that says "Wish i was nine hundred more" What a savage 😂
Great Tommy that’s the best version of John browns dream I ever heard him do
I wish more black old time musicians were recorded before the folk revival. I read somewhere when those earliest records were cut in the 20's and 30's many old time musicians were indeed black, but typically gospel and that early Dixie jazz was recorded and sold for white folks and blues recorded and sold to black audiences. I think there was a departure from the perception of, "hill billy" music too, especially for blacks, as I would imagine many of whom strove to break association with the plantation lifestyle of a slave many of their parents would've still remembered vividly at the time. Unfortunately I reckon this included musical traditions and the baby was thrown out with the bath water. In spite of many songs of the old time cannon being written and performed primarily by black musicians of the late 1800s, as a whole it seems black musicians moved onto more progressive musical pursuits of blues and jazz. Perhaps this was already underway shortly after the Civil War ended, and may explain the black-face minstrel acts. Perhaps black performers before this significant cultural shift simply weren't performing the music as much, and for some reason I don't understand whites, who genuinely enjoyed the music, found hearing historically black music more palatable if it were played by a white performer with shoe polish all over their face. Folks are strange. At that point, I can only imagine seeing a white performer pretend to be black and perform this, "old time" music would turn any apprehension a black musician felt about performing music written by slaves into outright aversion. It is unfortunate though, that there's so few black musicians these days playing traditionally black songs with fiddle and banjo.
I keep finding myself back here. Gold.
Excellent.
And the lady by the sink is my great great grandma
Jimmy smith is my great uncle
😎
What an amazing video. I'll be lucky man if this is how I spend my twilight years.
Love it! Two of my favs!
Amazing
Tommy and Fred were masters of their craft. What made them great musicians is that they enjoyed playing it.
At 3:08, [F. Cockerham, indistinct] is Fred saying, "Old Bunch of Keys, I believe he said."
I think he says, “Better watch the kids, babysit.”
what genre would this be?
Old time , where bluegrass music found it’s roots.
I hadn't seen this one before until now, thank you so much for sharing it!!!!!!!!!!!! I wish I could watch several hours of this!
This is wonderful, I felt like I was hanging on the porch with them! It made me happy and sad to see two of my favorites in these forgotten days!
This is my favorite thing on the internet.
they don't do this anymore. thank God for Tommy Jerrell.
Thank you for posting this! I found a piece of Neolia’s work in a Habitat for Humanity resale shop yesterday all the way down in Corpus Christi, TX. I can’t say how grateful I am to have found this video to better appreciate this beautiful piece of pottery.
Mebane Community Park has a great statue dedicated to them.
I really wish they showed all the songs they played. They really didn’t get cut off short. I only found this. But thank you for posting.
Why is there *always* one person who’ll dislike excellent things? It depresses me. Anyway, that idiot guy aside, thanks very much for uploading this. I had no idea there was any extant footage of jarrell and cockerham playing together at all (and I’ve looked!), so stumbling upon this was pretty mind-blowing. Really fantastic.
Love it! ❤️🎵❤️
Wow! thanks so so very very much for uploading this Gem of a video. I am so pleased to of found this video which I’ve not seen before. Thanks so much once again from England
Love this song! These men are American treasures.
Gold
Though I was born a long long while after Tommy Jarrell and Fred Cockerham passed away, I still enjoy these fine tunes and will forever remember North Carolina Bluegrass’s great history.
Not Bluegrass my brother! Something better!
Woa, was that Bubbles at 3:03??
Lol
I kept thinking the same thing as I watched this!
What do you mean?
Watch Trailer Park Boys, I bet Fred liked kittens too
Are those geared tuners on Tommy's fiddle?
Yes they are geared tuners
I several sets in my shop that iv taken off old fiddles. I replaced them with original wood pegs. I never cared much for them because they kill the tone and make the violin headstock heavy imho.
It get no better than this what a great performance the Thompsons Legends of American Roots Music👏👏👏👏
What a cultural treasure.
The Bear Runned Over the Mountain @5:04
Once I heard a fiddle tune that DIDN'T sound like "Battle of New Orleans". Anyone know about this?
Lol, i get what your saying but at least try and listen closer. Not even the same chord changes
This stuff is in a league of its own compared to horton
I was familiar with Fred's clawhammer, but he goes into some really fine two-finger picking around the 17 minute mark.
That was a real highlight for me as well. I thought that I heard some fingerstyle picking on those old County LPs, but had no definitive evidence...til now!
They make machine head tuners for Bowed instruments & Tommy Jarrell popularized them.
Tommy Harrell popularized these machine head tuners.
That was my Great Granddaddy and can remember watching him turn pottery. Celia was my grandmother and taught me to turn pottery in the early 80's. Now my daughter is picking it up with her own twist and seems to be a natural. I have the wheel my grandmother turned pottery on in her later years and will be setting it up for my daughter. I hope Granddaddy Cole is watching and I know he would be proud. Thank you for sharing this video.
I remember back in the 70's every Saturday someone was alway playing music on the porch some place these days are almost gone I been out playing fiddle music and banjo for the store workers in Our town scene this COVID thing started to get there mind off it and put a smile on some souls face I thank GOD for My talent He give Me
I heard that wood screen door close. That brought back memories of my youth of the kids running in and out. Even the cat could open the door and go in and out.