Southern Register Spring 2009

Page 1

the the newsletter of the

Center for the Study of Southern Culture • Spring 2009

the university of mississippi

Sixth Annual Blues Symposium Held February 26–27 in Oxford, Missississippi Miranda Cully

C

rowds of blues enthusiasts gathered in Oxford as the University of Mississippi and the Center for the Study of Southern Culture played host to the sixth annual Blues Today Symposium February 26–27, 2009. This year’s symposium, themed “Documenting the Blues,” featured such panelists, speakers, friends, and veteran folklorists as David Evans, George Mitchell, Art Rosenbaum, and Sylvester Oliver. Highlights included an all-blues Thacker Mountain Radio show, an unveiling of our own Blues Trail marker on the lawn of Barnard Observatory, and a coinciding performance by gospel great Mavis Staples at the Gertrude Castellow Ford Center. After a prekickoff Brown Bag lecture with Mark Camarigg (Living Blues), Scott Barretta (Highway 61 radio, Mississippi Blues Trail), and Greg Johnson (Blues Archive) on Wednesday, audiences on Thursday heard a lecture by Evan Hatch (MA 2002) on John Work III and saw the unveiling of an exhibition of Work’s recordings. Johnson also unveiled the newly digitized audio and video from the Alan Lomax Archive, noting that “much of what we know about the history and development of blues music and culture was passed along to us through the research of

Living Blues staff, past and present, at the Living Blues Trail marker unveiling ceremony are (left to right) Mark Camarigg, Jim O’Neal, Amy van Singel, David Nelson, Scott Barretta, and Brett Bonner. David Evans, George Mitchell, Alan Lomax, Jim O’Neal, and others.” According to many participants and visitors alike, the blues edition of Thacker Mountain Radio on Thursday, February 26, was exceptional. George Mitchell, who first recorded R. L. Burnside in 1967, shared his love for the blues and the Blues Today Symposium with his kind words and music. Additionally performing on Thacker Mountain Radio was Grammy-winning symposium participant Art Rosenbaum, who per-

formed on the fiddle with accompaniment from Oxford guitarist and incoming Southern Studies master’s student Jake Fussell. Local bluesmen Kenny Brown and Cedric Burnside with Lightnin’ Malcolm performed a tribute to Mitchell for his recordings of the earliest notable Burnside. “The community support was particularly strong this year, especially for the special blues-themed Thacker Mountain continued on page 3


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