Metropolitan Washington
Object Details
- Introduction
- The Smithsonian has long counted on Washington area residents as an audience for its many museums and programs. In this first of a planned multi-year program, tables were turned as traditional musicians from local black, Hispanic and Asian American communities told Festival visitors about the social organizations and the multi-cultural urban context within which their aesthetic expressions flourish. Washington, the residential city beyond the national monuments, burgeons with cultures transplanted from beyond urban, state, and national boundaries as well as with hybrid traditions newly rooted in an urban environment. Over the next several years the Office of Folklife Programs intended to explore the fascinating, vital, and variegated pool of cultures that enliven the Washington metropolitan area. The 1987 program gave special emphasis to music among Washington's communities. Music is a central part of festive occasions and celebrations as well as an integral feature of everyday life. People mark what they feel is distinctive and valuable through the use of music, frequently accompanied by dance and ritual. For instance, various Asian communities of Washington have maintained some of the seasonal ceremonies of their homelands, such as Lao or Chinese New Year's celebrations. These elaborate and colorful ceremonial events incorporate music, costumes, parades, food, and dance and draw community members from the entire eastern seaboard. African American gospel music thrives in a variety of forms in Washington, ranging from the harmonies of traditional quartet groups to the sounds of more contemporary soloists, ensembles, and choirs, some of which blend classical techniques with more traditional black gospel music. Hundreds of churches support numerous choirs, smaller family groups, and other ensembles and soloists who provide their memberships with gospel music. Gospel music is central to a variety of community events in addition to regular services: for example, pastor, choir, and church anniversary celebrations, as well as funerals are filled with gospel music. Particularly within Washington's growing Latino community, sharing of traditions has resulted in a synthesis or pan-ethnic style, celebrating a multicultural heritage. In this urban milieu Hispanic, Caribbean, and African musicians constantly create new urban performance forms by drawing fragments from known repertoires and styles and transforming them into new expressions through the use of new harmonies, updated texts, and changes in tempo, rhythmic configurations, or performance style. Phyllis M. May-Machunda served as Curator of the Metropolitan Washington program and Camila Bryce-Laporte as Assistant Program Coordinator. The Metropolitan Washington program was made possible in part by the Music Performance Trust Funds, a non-profit organization created by U.S. recording companies to fund live and free performances (Trustee: Martin A. Paulson).
- Fieldworkers
- Camila Bryce-Laporte, Arnaé Burton, Olivia Cadaval, Mia Gardener, Richard Kennedy, Michael Licht, Phyllis M. May-Machunda, Daniel Sheehy, Daphne Shuttleworth, Nicholas R. Spitzer, Kazadi wa Mukuna
- Presenters
- Arnaé Burton, Kathy Bullock, Alicia María González, Richard Kennedy, David T. Lee, Von Martin, Oscar Ordenes, Daniel Sheehy, Nicholas R. Spitzer, Richard Spottswood, Nap Turner, Kazadi wa Mukuna, Pearl Williams-Jones
- Participants
- John Cephas and Phil Wiggins, blues, Washington, D.C. Choraliers, 1st Baptist Church of Deanwood, gospel, Washington, D.C. Comparsa Panameña, Panamanian costume band, Washington, D.C. Conrado Rosales y la Banda Salvadorena, Salvadoran music, Washington, D.C. Cubanakán, Afro-Cuban music, Washington, D.C. Hazel Dickens, traditional southern mountain music, Washington, D.C. Emmanuel Choraleers, gospel, Washington, D.C. The Four Echoes, gospel, New Carrolton, Maryland The Garcia Family, Mexican children's games, Washington, D.C. Great Change Ensemble, gospel, Seat Pleasant, Maryland Grupo Batuque, Brazilian samba band, Silver Spring, Maryland Han Sheng Chinese Opera Institute, Peking opera, Washington, D.C. Bill Harris, 1925-, blues, Washington, D.C. Lisa Henderson, 1958-, gospel, Washington, D.C. Image, soca, calypso music, Dale City, Virginia John Jackson (1924-) & James Jackson, blues, Fairfax Station, Virginia Flory Jagoda, Ladino music, Falls Church, Virginia Jah Honey & the Unconquered People, reggae music, Washington, D.C. The Junkyard Band, go-go music, Washington, D.C. Kankouran, West African drumming, Washington, D.C. Khmer Traditional Music Ensemble, traditional Cambodian music, Silver Spring, Maryland Kings of Harmony, gospel, Lanham, Maryland Djimo Kouyate, Mandingo griot music, Washington, D.C. Los Fuertes de Colombia, Colombian music, Silver Spring, Maryland James Kika Makubuya, 1945-, Ganda music, Washington, D.C. Mattie Johnson & the Stars of Faith, gospel, Washington, D.C. McCollough Kings of Harmony Spiritual Band, gospel brass band, Washington, D.C. Mt. Bethel Baptist Church Choral Choir, gospel, Washington, D.C. Nguyen Dinh Nghia & Daughters, traditional Vietnamese music, Vienna, Virginia ODADAA!, Ga music, Alexandria, Virginia Kambo Oholara, Macujumbe stilt walker, Washington, D.C. Ollantay, Bolivian urban music, Arlington, Virginia Potomac Valley Boys, bluegrass, Leesburg, Virginia Prophecy, gospel, Washington, D.C. Alberto Rios y sus Paraguayos, Paraguayan music, Washington, D.C. Ross School, Salvadoran children's games, Washington, D.C. Rumiñahui, Andean music from Ecuador, Wheaton, Maryland St. Augustine Gospel Choir, gospel, Washington, D.C. St. Teresa of Avila Choir, gospel, Washington, D.C. Sons of Grace, United House of Prayer, gospel, Washington, D.C. The Sounds of Africa, Zairian urban music, Silver Spring, Maryland Don Stover, traditional banjo music, Brandywine, Maryland The Teagle Family, gospel, Laurel, Maryland Trinidad Steel Band, calypso pan music, Washington, D.C. Don Vails & the Salvation Corps, gospel, Hyattsville, Maryland Vision, gospel, Hyattsville, Maryland
- Collection Creator
- Smithsonian Institution. Center for Folklife and Cultural Heritage
- See more items in
- Smithsonian Folklife Festival records: 1987 Festival of American Folklife
- Archival Repository
- Ralph Rinzler Folklife Archives and Collections
- Identifier
- CFCH.SFF.1987, Series 3
- Type
- Archival materials
- Collection Citation
- Smithsonian Folklife Festival records: 1987 Festival of American Folklife, Ralph Rinzler Folklife Archives and Collections, Smithsonian Institution.
- Collection Rights
- Permission to publish materials from the collection must be requested from the Ralph Rinzler Folklife Archives and Collections. Please visit our website to learn more about submitting a request. The Ralph Rinzler Folklife Archives and Collections make no guarantees concerning copyright or other intellectual property restrictions. Other usage conditions may apply; please see the Smithsonian's Terms of Use for more information.
- Collection Restrictions
- Access to the Ralph Rinzler Folklife Archives and Collections is by appointment only. Visit our website for more information on scheduling a visit or making a digitization request. Researchers interested in accessing born-digital records or audiovisual recordings in this collection must use access copies.
- Record ID
- ebl-1503511975491-1503511975498-4
- Metadata Usage
- CC0