(AGENPARL) – mer 22 febbraio 2023 You are subscribed to Folklife News & Events from the Library of Congress.
The American Folklife Center is kicking off the 2023 Homegrown concert series with a solo performance by the banjo player, fiddler, and singer Jake Blount, an award-winning musician and a scholar of African American musical traditions. Blount’s performance will be part of Live! at the Library, the special series featuring extended visiting hours and special programming every Thursday night. It will also be part of the Black History Month celebrations at the Library of Congress and is presented in cooperation with the Folklore Society of Greater Washington.
The concert will occur on February 23 at 6:00 pm in the Members Room, LJ-162 on the first floor of the Library’s historic Thomas Jefferson Building. The concert is free, but visitors will require a free timed-entry pass to the Library, which can be reserved by selecting “get tickets” at the link. Live at the Library festivities begin at 5:00 pm and the concert is at 6:00. When reserving your pass, please select the entry time closest to when you think you’ll arrive at the Library. If all advance passes are gone, the Library expects to give away some passes at the door.
A talented musician and eloquent speaker, Jake Blount speaks ardently about the African roots of the banjo and the subtle, yet profound ways African Americans have shaped and defined roots music and Americana. He highlights the Black and Indigenous histories of popular American folk tunes. His most recent album, The New Faith, presents spiritual music, filled with hope for salvation and righteous anger in equal measure. A fascinating journey into dystopian Afrofuturism, the album takes us to an island in Maine populated by Black refugees after the collapse of global civilization due to catastrophic climate change. it presents songs of resilience, their bones imbued with the spirit of survivors – the ancestors who endured slavery, Jim Crow, police brutality, the impacts of a pandemic that has disproportionately affected communities of color – and their strength is the music’s lasting impression. Blount, like his heroes Octavia Butler and N.K. Jemisin, uses parables of the future as a lens to investigate the present with a brutal but affecting honesty. About half of the songs on The New Faith were sourced from field recordings in our collections in the American Folklife Center archive at the Library of Congress. AFC is therefore thrilled to work with other Library offices and with the Folklore Society of Greater Washington to bring both Jake Blount and his songs home to the Library of Congress. We hope to see you there!
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