Manuscript music, 193-?.

ArchivalResource

Manuscript music, 193-?.

In one folder are handwritten transcriptions of folk music from Boyd, Floyd, and Rowan Counties [Kentucky?] and possibly elsewhere, probably collected or transcribed by Winston Wilkinson or others. The music includes unaccompanied melodies (with and without lyrics), songs for solo voice with piano accompaniment, fiddle tunes, dulcimer tunes, and banjo tunes. Vocal works contain only a single verse. Some titles are transcribed more than once or in different arrangements. The transcriptions appear to have been done by more than one person. In a second folder are typewritten lyrics to songs with all verses, alphabetized by title.

1 item.

Information

SNAC Resource ID: 7764324

University of Virginia. Library

Related Entities

There are 3 Entities related to this resource.

United States. Works Progress Administration

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w67b4x1k (corporateBody)

Organizational History President Franklin D. Roosevelt established the Works Progress Administration (WPA) in 1935 as a part of his New Deal to curtail the Depression's effects on the United States. The WPA attempted to provide the unemployed with jobs that allowed individuals to preserve skills or talents. The Federal Writers' Project (FWP), one branch of the WPA, provided work for over 6,600 unemployed writers, journalists, edit...

Wilkinson, Winston

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6k93j1d (person)

Winston Wilkinson is a black Mormon attorney who works for the U.S. Department of Education. From the description of Oral history, 1986-1987. (Unknown). WorldCat record id: 122486644 Winston Wilkinson was hired in 1934, along with John Stone, by Arthur Kyle Davis, Jr., of the University of Virginia, to transcribe music. (Stone was hired to collect folk songs.) Funding for this activity came from the Civil Works Administration, a New Deal program. Along with his wife, Marie, ...

Federal Music Project (U.S.)

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6t767zd (corporateBody)

The prime objective of the Federal Music Project (1935-1939) and the subsequent WPA Music Program (1939-1943) was "...to give employment to professional musicians registered on the relief rolls." The project employed these musicians as instrumentalists, singers, concert performers and teachers of music. The general purpose of the Music Project was to establish high standards of musicianship, to rehabilitate musicians by assisting them to become self-supporting, to retrain musicians and to educat...