Lomax and handling of prisoners In this article we will explore how Lomax invites him and his fellow prisoners in this book. To prove this, I choose to choose expressions, styles, vocabulary, and stories. In general, my goal is to emphasize how attitudes and values are communicated to readers. Lomax fully explains his transition from P.O.W camp to Outram Gail. "What our prisoners actually do is to take us to a lower inner circle."
In the 1930 's, folklore John Lomax and his son Alan Lomax traveled in southern United States and recorded the music culture of the African American. As prison farms including Angola are separated from the general community, Lomaxes believes prisons have the purest African American song culture, because prisons are not affected by fashion trends. Lomaxes recorded several songs that were songs of the plantation era that began in the era of slavery. Lomaxes met Lead Belly, a famous musician in Angola
As early as the 1930s, American song collector John Lomax and his son Allen recorded a song by Lead Belly at Angola Prison in Louisiana. (Lead Belly sang some other original works for Lomaxs, including "Good Night, Irene" which later became a popular hit for Weavers Folk Band.) Many of the songs collected by Lomaxes are Black It was published in a book like People's Song. Sing with Folk Song with Lead Belly (1936): USA (1946), Become an introduction to British skis and traditional folk groups
One of the pioneering character of early blues was Huddie "Leadbelly" Ledbetter (1888 - 1949). In 1933, John and Alan Romax recorded the Liedberry songs first in prison in Louisiana. After being released from prison in 1935, John and Alan Lomax helped Leadbelly record a commercial and played in front of the northern audience. Leadbelly integrates spiritual songs, blues, folk and country music. The Encyclopedia of the Performing Arts of the Library of Congress is sung by some "Midnight Special", Lead Belly, Folklorist, John Lomax, which is published as part of this article.
The Lomax family has long worked with the Library of Congress for long. In 1933, John A. Romax built a ten-year relationship with the library when he and his son Allen (then 18 years old) departed to participate in the library's sponsorship. The first folk songs party. They visited Texas farms, prisons and rural areas together and recorded working songs, scrolls, folk songs and blues. John Romax was named "emperor's official document honorary advisor and curator" and was founded in the music department of the library in 1928. Allen became "Assistant Assistant" of the archive in 1937, and continued to provide tours and recordings to the library until 1942. Home ("Muddy Waters"), Molly Jackson 婶婶, Song House, David "Honey Boy" Edwards, Texas Gladen, Ferdinand "Jelly Roll" Morten and Woody Guthrie