Various - Root Hog or Die: An Alan Lomax Centennial Tribute 6LP
Various - Root Hog or Die: An Alan Lomax Centennial Tribute 6LP
Mississippi Records
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"Big pig, little pig, root hog or die. That's been a saying among the mountain people—that means if you don't work you don't get anything to eat. The pig's got to root if he gets anything to eat. The hog has to root if gets anything to eat. That's the range hog, the wild hog. The hog in the wild stage.” –Neal Morris to Alan Lomax, 1959.
2015 marked the centennial of Alan Lomax’s birth and to commemorate it, the Alan Lomax Archive collaborated with Mississippi Records to compile a limited 6-LP box-set, surveying Lomax’s career through 100 songs gathered from fifty years of his field recordings, 1933 to 1983. Root Hog Or Die combines the famous (Jelly Roll Morton, Big Bill Broonzy, Margaret Barry) with the unheard (Brother Alec Stamps and the congregation of Rose Hill Missionary Baptist of Greenville, Mississippi; the women’s league of the South Hill Methodist Church in South Hill Village, Anguilla; an adolescent hambone performer in Harlem named Steven Wright) and is the most geographically and stylistically diverse compilation of Lomax’s recordings to date, including artists from Bangladesh, Ireland, Italy, Morocco, Romania, Spain, and across Britain, the Caribbean, and the United States. More than half of the tracks are previously unreleased, and are accompanied by photographs (many previously unpublished); an introduction and recording chronology by the Lomax Archive’s curator and the set’s compiler Nathan Salsburg; and Alan Lomax's 1976 essay "An Appeal for Cultural Equity."
2015 marked the centennial of Alan Lomax’s birth and to commemorate it, the Alan Lomax Archive collaborated with Mississippi Records to compile a limited 6-LP box-set, surveying Lomax’s career through 100 songs gathered from fifty years of his field recordings, 1933 to 1983. Root Hog Or Die combines the famous (Jelly Roll Morton, Big Bill Broonzy, Margaret Barry) with the unheard (Brother Alec Stamps and the congregation of Rose Hill Missionary Baptist of Greenville, Mississippi; the women’s league of the South Hill Methodist Church in South Hill Village, Anguilla; an adolescent hambone performer in Harlem named Steven Wright) and is the most geographically and stylistically diverse compilation of Lomax’s recordings to date, including artists from Bangladesh, Ireland, Italy, Morocco, Romania, Spain, and across Britain, the Caribbean, and the United States. More than half of the tracks are previously unreleased, and are accompanied by photographs (many previously unpublished); an introduction and recording chronology by the Lomax Archive’s curator and the set’s compiler Nathan Salsburg; and Alan Lomax's 1976 essay "An Appeal for Cultural Equity."
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Tags: americana, compilation, folk, mississippi records