September 2025 American Folklife Center Community Collections Grants Symposium: Session 6
In September 2025, the American Folklife Center (AFC) held a three-day symposium to celebrate awardees of the Community Collection Grant (CCG) program and their documentation projects. In session six (of six), Scott Tilton and Rudy Bazenet, of the Nous Foundation, speak about their CCG project titled, “La Musique Nous Réunit: Documenting Louisiana French Music.” Chancee Martorell and Panida Rzonca, of the Thai Community Development…
September 2025 American Folklife Center Community Collections Grants Symposium: Session 5
In September 2025, the American Folklife Center (AFC) held a three-day symposium to celebrate awardees of the Community Collection Grant (CCG) program and their documentation projects. In session five (of six), Kimberly Wieser presents about her CCG project, “Continuing Comanche Culture: Culture as Making, Craft as Shared Story.” Rocío Del Águila presents about her work to document the Hispanic cultural heritages of Latino communities…
Contributor:
Wieser, Kimberly - Abdul-Malik, Karen - Águila, Rocío Del - Underwood, Robert
Date:2025-09-25
Film, Video
September 2025 American Folklife Center Community Collections Grants Symposium: Session 3
In September 2025, the American Folklife Center (AFC) held a three-day symposium to celebrate awardees of the Community Collection Grant (CCG) program and their documentation projects. In session three (of six), Russell Oliver presents about his CCG project, “Documenting the Stories, Agricultural Traditions, and Culture of Specialty Coffee Farmers in Puerto Rico.” Yvette Cohn Storr describes her work documenting dance traditions of Hispanic communities…
Contributor:
Storr, Yvette Cohn - Rice, John - Oliver, Russell
Date:2025-09-25
Film, Video
September 2025 American Folklife Center Community Collections Grants Symposium: Session 4
In September 2025, the American Folklife Center (AFC) held a three-day symposium to celebrate awardees of the Community Collection Grant (CCG) program and their documentation projects. In session four (of six), Alex Lumelsky speaks about his work to preserve stories of the Chaldean community in the United States, a minority ethnic group from northern Iraq residing primarily in southeast Michigan. Laura Grant and Merlene…
Contributor:
Grant, Laura - Skillman, Amy - Everson, Merlene - Lumelsky, Alex
Date:2025-09-25
Film, Video
American Folklife Center Community Collections Grants: Presentation by AFC Staff
In September 2025, the American Folklife Center (AFC) held a three-day symposium to celebrate the recipients of the Community Collection Grant (CCG) program and their documentation projects. In this session, four staff members from the American Folklife Center – Andrea Decker, PhD, Allina Migoni, Rebecca McGivney and Shelly Justement – present about their work to process collections received through the Community Collections Grant program.
Contributor:
Justement, Shelly - Fenn, John - Migoni, Allina - McGivney, Rebecca - Decker, Andrea
Date:2025-09-25
Film, Video
September 2025 American Folklife Center Community Collections Grants Symposium: Session 1
In September 2025, the American Folklife Center (AFC) held a three-day symposium to celebrate awardees of the Community Collection Grant (CCG) program and their documentation projects. In session one (of six), Nicki Saylor (Director, American Folklife Center) gives introductory comments about the symposium. Folklorist Ashley Minner Jones presents about her research among elders of the Lumbee community in East Baltimore, Maryland. Aarti Mehta-Kroll and…
Homegrown Concert of Tejas Roots Music with Nick Gaitan
The Nick Gaitan Band, based in Houston, Texas, celebrates the vibrant musical cultures of Tejano and Chicano communities on the Gulf Coast of the United States. The group blends the genres of conjunto, cumbia, Louisiana swamp pop, country, and rhythm and blues, creating a sound they call “Tejas Roots Music.” This concert took place as part of a symposium honoring recipients of the Community…
Contributor:
Gaitan, Nick - Valdez, Nicolas
Date:2025-09-24
Film, Video
Conversation with Nick Gaitan
Houston’s native son, Nick Gaitan, is a singer-songwriter, bandleader, and music historian, with deep roots in the wide-ranging musical culture of Houston’s East End and the broader Gulf Coast. Gaitan is proficient in the many genres of music that co-exist in the region ranging from Tejano and conjunto to honky-tonk, blues, rockabilly and soul and ska. The occasion for this interview was a concert…
Contributor:
Shankar, Guha - Gaitan, Nick
Date:2025-09-24
Film, Video
September 2025 American Folklife Center Community Collections Grants Symposium: Session 2
In September 2025, the American Folklife Center (AFC) held a three-day symposium to celebrate awardees of the Community Collection Grant (CCG) program and their documentation projects. In session two (of six), Isaac Rodriguez presents about his work to document the contemporary music scene in Houston, Texas. Steve Rowland and Shamah ShaRize speak about their project titled, “Time Out of Joint – Prisoners and Former…
Contributor:
Sharize, Shamah - Punzalan, Ricky - Rowland, Steve - Rodriguez, Isaac - Lafontant, Anthony
Date:2025-09-24
Film, Video
2025 NEA National Heritage Fellowship Award Public Ceremony
Join us as we honor the 2025 National Endowment for the Arts National Heritage Fellows in a live ceremony in Coolidge Auditorium at the Library of Congress, September 17, 2025, 5:30pm-6:45pm. The NEA National Heritage Fellowship is the nation’s highest honor in folk and traditional arts. Each year since 1982, the program recognizes recipients’ artistic excellence, lifetime achievement, and contributions to our nation’s traditional…
Contributor:
Saylor, Nicole - Baron, Carmen - Thibeaux, Kristen - Guerrier, Peniel - Reiko, Adrienne - Hladyshevsky, Andrew - Tamayo, Steven - Mahlay, Oleh - Deychakiwsky, Nick - Chauveaux, Tony - Marsh, Ernie
Date:2025-09-17
Film, Video
Conversation with Joe Johnson
Joe Zavaan Johnson is a multi-instrumentalist, arts educator, and Black music researcher. He is an Ethnomusicology Ph.D. Candidate at Indiana University-Bloomington where he is completing a dissertation that examines the Black banjo renaissance through the lenses of Black studies, human geography, folklore, and ethnomusicology. Johnson frequently collaborates with grassroots organizations focused on coalition building, community healing, and cultural reparations.
Contributor:
Johnson, Joe - Fenn, John
Date:2025-08-28
Film, Video
Black Banjo Bodylands: (Co-)Constructions of a Musical Instrument
Joe Johnson’s presentation theorizes the banjo as a Black diasporic site of ritual, memory, and ancestral resistance. Mobilizing Ana Maurine Laura’s concept of “Bodylands,” this presentation examines the (co-)constructions of banjos and the Black bodies who activate them as ancestral technology. It highlights how Black practitioners claim the instrument through spiritual, material, and organizational practices by tracing the banjo’s trajectory from its 17th-century Caribbean…
Contributor:
Johnson, Joe - Fenn, John
Date:2025-08-28
Film, Video
Homegrown Concert with Artist in Resonance The Creek Rocks
The exciting old time duo The Creek Rocks, the recipients of the 2024 Artists in Resonance Fellowship from the American Folklife Center at the Library of Congress, bring old songs back to the Library in shiny new arrangements! Accomplished singer and banjo player Cindy Woolf and veteran guitarist and singer Mark Bilyeu established the group in 2015. Much of their work has been interpreting…
Contributor:
Bilyeu, Mark - Woolf, Cindy
Date:2025-08-21
Film, Video
Conversation with The Creek Rocks
Accomplished singer and banjo player Cindy Woolf and veteran guitarist and singer Mark Bilyeu established The Creek Rocks in 2015. Much of their work has been interpreting the traditional music of the Ozarks region. The Artists in Resonance Fellowship provided Cindy and Mark the opportunity to immerse themselves in the field recordings of folklorist Sidney Robertson Cowell, who in December 1936 and January 1937…
Contributor:
Winick, Stephen - Cutting, Jennifer - Bilyeu, Mark - Woolf, Cindy
Date:2025-08-21
Film, Video
The Henhouse Prowlers Bluegrass Concert
After two decades of touring and performing, bluegrass quartet the Henhouse Prowlers proudly look to the future, expressing their passion for music and humanity. Banjoist Ben Wright and upright bassist Jon Goldfine have been the heart of the band since its inception, while guitarist Chris Dollar and mandolinist Jake Howard (who joined 7 and 5 years ago respectively) bring fresh energy to the band’s…
Contributor:
Howard, Jake - Dollar, Chris - Goldfine, Jon - Wright, Ben
Date:2025-08-14
Film, Video
Conversation with The Henhouse Prowlers Interview
The Henhouse Prowlers are an American four-piece band who have been playing together and promote bluegrass music for 20 years. All four members possess a knack for storytelling, compelling songwriting and intricate instrumentation. Working with the US State Department and under their own nonprofit, Bluegrass Ambassadors, the Prowlers have toured more than 25 countries across the globe. The group’s experiences with people and musicians…
Contributor:
Winick, Stephen - Howard, Jake - Dollar, Chris - Goldfine, Jon - Wright, Ben
Date:2025-08-14
Film, Video
El Motor: Coffee and the Heart of Puerto Rico
“El Motor: Coffee and the Heart of Puerto Rico” immerses viewers in the world of Puerto Rican coffee, revealing how this cherished crop serves as both economic lifeline and cultural heartbeat. Through intimate portraits of generational farmers, dedicated harvesters, and innovative processors, “El Motor” uncovers the profound relationship between the land, its people, and the coffee that has shaped Puerto Rico’s identity for centuries.…
Contributor:
Caraballo, Gessellie - Pintado, Ignacio - Atienza, Roberto - Rodriguez, Remy - Giuliani, Joseph - Roig, Luis - Muñoz, Rafael - Masini, Angela - Morales, Bernardo - Arroyo, Gustavo - Roig, Tato - Muñoz, Pablo - Suárez, Mariana - Pardue, Douglas - Beauchamp, Gabriel
Date:2025-06-25
Film, Video
Bayou, Buddha, and Padaek: Southern Louisiana’s Lao Foodways
“Bayou, Buddha, and Padaek: Southern Louisiana’s Lao Foodways” is a two-part documentary that delves into the rich culinary traditions of the Lao Buddhist immigrant community in Louisiana. Through vibrant storytelling and intimate interviews with first, second and third generations, the film uncovers how these unique foodways are woven into the fabric of an existing Cajun and Creole culture, highlighting the fusion of flavors and…
Conversation with Susana Behar
Susana Behar sat down with Stephen Winick to discuss her concert at the Library. For almost 20 years, she has focused her artistic career on the preservation and performance of the Sephardic musical repertoire. Passionate about the richness of traditional music and its connection to cultural memory and storytelling, she has performed across the U.S., Latin America, Canada, Israel, and Japan. In 2017 she…
Contributor:
Winick, Stephen - Behar, Susana
Date:2025-05-22
Film, Video
Susana Behar Ensemble
Susana Behar was born in Havana to a Cuban family with roots in the Sephardic community of Turkey. From an early age, she was immersed in the traditional music of her homeland as well as the evocative kantikas in Judeo-Spanish (Ladino) passed down by her grandparents. In 1965 she emigrated to Venezuela, where she started to explore and perform the music of her adoptive…
Contributor:
Behar, Susana
Date:2025-05-21
Film, Video
The Medical Carnivalesque: Folklore Among Physicians with Lisa Gabbert
This lecture provides an overview of the occupational folklore that exists among physicians in the United States today. Much of this folklore is humorous; it can also be earthy and even quite dark. Gabbert focuses on folklore that emerges in physician-to-physician communication, arguing that the content and themes that emerge are strikingly parallel to the ones identified by Mikhail Bakhtin in his concept of…
Contributor:
Gabbert, Lisa
Date:2025-05-20
Film, Video
Conversation with Lisa Gabbert
This entry in the Benjamin Botkin Folklife Lecture Series offers an overview of the occupational folklore that exists among physicians in the United States today. Much of this folklore is humorous, but it can also be earthy and quite dark. Lisa Gabbert is a Professor of Folklore Studies in the Department of English and Director of the Folklore Program at Utah State University. Her…
Contributor:
Groce, Nancy - Gabbert, Lisa
Date:2025-05-20
Film, Video
Conversation with Ensemble Sangineto
Ensemble Sangineto is one of the most popular folk groups on the Italian scene, comprised of three talented singers and instrumentalists. Adriano and Caterina Sangineto are twins; Adriano plays Celtic harp and Caterina plays bowed psaltery and flute. Jacopo Ventura rounds out the trio on guitar and bouzouki. The group sings in three-part harmony, with Caterina’s clear voice taking the lead. The Sanginetos are…
Ensemble Sangineto: Traditional Music from Italy
The ensemble Sangineto is one of the most popular folk groups on the Italian scene, comprised of three talented singers and instrumentalists. Adriano and Caterina Sangineto are twins — Adriano plays Celtic harp and Caterina plays bowed psaltery. Jacopo Ventura rounds out the trio on guitar. The group sings in three-part harmony, with Caterina’s clear voice taking the lead. The Sanginetos are children of…
Documenting Ourselves: Impacts, Outcomes & Insights (Session 4)
The fourth of four sessions in a day-long public symposium on the Library’s Community Collections Grant program (2022-2024) featured presentations by awardees on their grant-supported cultural documentation projects. This session featured JW Newson, Douglas Taylor, Tameshia Rudd-Ridge and Jourdan Brunson.