Berea College Welcomes Public to Kentucky Musicians: Musical Traditions


Berea College welcomes the public and campus community to “Kentucky Musicians: Musical Traditions.” This event on Thursday, October 15, 2015, at 3:00 p.m. in Phelps Stokes Chapel is free and open to the public. It is co-sponsored with the Loyal Jones Appalachian Center.

The convocation will feature Jamie and Jesse Wells, Carla Gover, George Gibson, Ron and Sarah Howard, the Mount Sinai Spirituals, and Brett Ratliff. These musicians will share their stories and music about their communities, and evolving traditions. This program celebrates the recent addition of John and Alan Lomax’s Kentucky sound recordings to Berea College’s online Sound Archives. The live performances will offer a variety of musical genres of eastern Kentucky as documented in the Lomax recordings.  

Lomax believed that a chief result of his and his father’s efforts for the Library of Congress was that “for the first time America could hear itself.” For this benefit to endure he cautioned that “…folksongs should not be buried in libraries as they are in Washington and in universities over the country.”

The recordings by Lomax are now digitized and readily accessible to listeners. This online effort seeks to realize Lomax’s vision of meaning and accessibility for the present day. It is made possible through the partnering of Berea College with the American Folklife Center of the Library of Congress, the Association for Cultural Equity, and the University of Kentucky. The official launch event for the Lomax Kentucky Recordings online collection will precede the convocation from 6:30-8:00 p.m. at Hutchins Library.

This “Kentucky Musicians: Musical Traditions” convocation is co-sponsored with the Loyal Jones Appalachian Center’s Celebration of Traditional Music and is in conjunction with the Annual Celebration of Traditional Music.

The convocation events, which are provided to both the campus and public communities, are a significant part of a student’s educational experience at Berea College. For the schedule of all convocations this academic year, see: legacy.berea.edu/convocations. All convocations are free and open to the public.

Categories: News, People, Programs and Initiatives
Tags: Convocation, Event, Loyal Jones Appalachian Center, music

Berea College, the first interracial and coeducational college in the South, focuses on learning, labor and service. The College only admits academically promising students with limited financial resources—primarily from Kentucky and Appalachia—but welcomes students from 41 states and 76 countries. Every Berea student receives a Tuition Promise Scholarship, which means no Berea student pays for tuition. Berea is one of nine federally recognized Work Colleges, so students work 10 hours or more weekly to earn money for books, housing and meals. The College’s motto, “God has made of one blood all peoples of the earth,” speaks to its inclusive Christian character.