Initiated by Ron Pen, Musicology professor and Director of the John Jacob Niles Center
for American Music, and organized and supervised by Director of Archives Ruth
Bryan, 16 graduate students in Dr. Pen's musicology seminar (MUS 702) spent a
total of 166.5 hours in 90 visits over three months this spring semester
processing and cataloging 42 of the original 85 boxes that comprise local and
internationally-known folk singer Michael Johnathon's recordings and papers
held in Special Collections.
A
songwriter and author who began his career in the 1980s, Michael Johnathon
created and hosts the worldwide broadcast of the WoodSongs Old-Time Radio Hour
(performed here in Lexington) with a radio audience with over a million
listeners each week.
Other major
recordings and films of his include
Walden:
The Ballad of Thoreau;
The Road;
Woodsongs I, II, and II;, Assassins in the
Kingdom;
and
Dreams of Fire.
He also
founded his own record labels, Troubadour and PoetMan Records.
The
musicology graduate students selected either audiovisual or paper formats to
concentrate on, and from the very first work session, dug into the complexity
and of this multiple-format, unorganized collection. The ten AV project students cataloged 540
items, deciphering handwriting, identifying many audio and video formats (VHS,
SVHS, Betacam, Umatic, various open reel audio and video, DAT, ADAT, XDCAM,
DVCPro, CD, and DVD), and entering standardized data into a spreadsheet. The six paper project students identified,
organized, foldered, and cataloged 12.4 cubic feet of mostly unlabeled and
loose correspondence, photographs, scripts, contracts, and business and
promotional records.
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