Delray Beach, FL – The Spady Cultural Heritage Museum will present Rhythm & Roots, Southern Music, an exhibition dedicated to the music and musicians of the South from January 5 – March 29, 2009.
While the South has a rich tradition of deeply rooted music forms—Appalachian, Blues, Bluegrass, Cajun, Country and Gospel among them —the region is also home to numerous transplanted music traditions. Music from Asian, Caribbean, Latino and Native American communities is constantly evolving and flourishing in new environments.
“Rhythm & Roots is a tribute to all of the musical forms that come together to create the Southern sound,” said Gerri Combs, Executive Director of Southern Arts Federation. “The Rhythm & Roots exhibit, part of our Southern Visions program, showcases key Southern musicians and the instruments they play.”
Musicians recognized as “early innovators” are Thomas A. Dorsey, known as Georgia Tom and often referred to as the Father of African-American Gospel; Charley Patton, called Father of Delta Blues for his bluesman artistry and lifestyle; Arnold Schultz, a Kentuckian whose thumbpicking brought him acclaim on the guitar; and Dewitt “Snuffy” Jenkins and Earl Scruggs, both of whom drew on the distinctive five-strong banjo traditions of their native west North Carolina, where players plucked the string with the thumb, index and middle fingers in a fluid style influenced by local fiddle music. Scruggs, half of the famed Flatt and Scruggs duo, perfected the syncopated 3-finger roll with breakneck tempos and virtuoso technique.
Two Southern musicians noted in the exhibit for bringing their sounds to Northern audiences are Dewey Balfa, among the first to perform Cajun music outside of his home in Louisiana, and North Carolinian Wade Mainer, who recorded bluegrass at Midwest recording studios and catered to industrial workers in Michigan and Ohio.
Artifacts featured in Rhythm & Roots, Southern Music include a fretless banjo, fiddle, dulcimer, lyra, shiffarobe fiddle, cigarbox fiddle, accordion, tit fer (triangle), chikintar, frottoir, goombay drum, cowbells, shekere, rada drum and mandolin. The exhibition’s accompanying audio guide gives visitors an opportunity to hear samples of the music and instruments shown in the exhibit.
Rhythm & Roots explores the musical traditions of both indigenous cultures of Native Americans as well as those of more recent arrivals to the South. The exhibition highlights Cherokee musician Walker Calhoun and the music of the corn dance in the American Indian Voices section. Acknowledging the multicultural south, Rhythm & Roots also explores the increasingly international flavor of music being heard in the New South.
Rhythm & Roots is the latest addition to Southern Visions: The Southern Arts & Culture Traveling Exhibits Program, operated by the Southern Arts Federation. Since 1995, Southern Visions has provided over 500,000 people with access to artistically excellent exhibits celebrating the South’s rich artistry and cultural heritage. Rhythm & Roots, Southern Music is presented in partnership with the National Endowment for the Arts with additional support from the Alabama State Council on the Arts, Georgia Council for the Arts, Kentucky Arts Council, and the Tennessee Arts Commission. Corporate support for the exhibition was provided by the Hart Law Firm of Atlanta.
About the Southern Arts Federation: The mission of the Southern Arts Federation is to promote and support the arts in the South; enhance the artistic excellence and professionalism of Southern arts organizations and artists; and serve the diverse populations of the South. SAF works in partnership with state arts agencies of Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, and Tennessee. For additional information, visit www.SouthArts.org.
The Spady Cultural Heritage Museum, a non-profit organization located at 170 NW 5th Avenue in Delray Beach, is dedicated to discovering, collecting and sharing the African-American history and heritage of Florida. Located in the former home of the late Solomon D. Spady, the most prominent African American educator and community leader in Delray Beach from 1922 to 1957, the museum opened in July 2001. It is the only museum of its kind in Palm Beach County. For more information, call 561-279-8883 or visit www.spadymuseum.org.
Official Website: http://www.spadymuseum.org
Added by KatherineLoretta on December 7, 2008