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Emily Hilliard

Folklorist | Writer | Media Producer
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HazelDickens.jpg

”Making a living by the sweat of her brow”: Hazel dickens and a life of work

March 1, 2021

Informed by archival interviews, writings, correspondence, and performances by Hazel Dickens, and inspired by Jessica Wilkerson’s 2019 NPR article “A Lifetime Of Labor: Maybelle Carter At Work,” West Virginia state folklorist Emily Hilliard considers musician Hazel Dickens’s experiences as a woman engaged in a lifetime of both wage work and care work. This lived experience, as well as Hazel’s approach to music as work, was the foundation which directly informed her identity formation, inspired her songwriting, and fueled her advocacy for working people across the globe.

Read on via Smithsonian Folklife

In Music, West Virginia, Feminism, Labor Tags folklore, folk music, Hazel Dickens, women songwriters, West Virginia, Smithsonian, Smithsonian Folklife, labor, Appalachia
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Review of Dust-to-Digital's Blind Alfred Reed: Appalachian Visionary

May 21, 2020

In 2006, during his Seeger Session Tour, Bruce Springsteen added an old song from the early days of the recording industry to his live sets. He kept only one original verse, adding his own to comment on the devastation of New Orleans by Hurricane Katrina and to critique President Bush (or “president bystander” as he calls him at one show) for his subsequent inaction. In 2013, British reggae band UB40 released a regrettable version of the same song on their new album, also taking lyrical liberties, in this instance to reflect concerns over the global financial crisis. That song, “How Can a Poor Man Stand Such Times and Live,” was composed in the Jazz Age by Southern West Virginia farmer and musician Blind Alfred Reed (1880–1956). It’s impossible to know how Reed—a deeply religious, lifelong Republican whose songs were heavily critical of capitalism—would feel about these subsequent versions, but he would undoubtedly be surprised by the song’s longevity. He recorded “How Can a Poor Man?” in New York on December 4, 1929, one week after the stock market crash. He would never record again.

Read on in the Journal of American Folklore

In Academic, Folklore, Music, West Virginia Tags review, Journal of American Folklore, folk music, West Virginia, folklore
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Review of Peggy Seeger: A Life of Music, Love, and Politics by Jean R. Freedman

August 15, 2019

The first time ever I was struck by Peggy Seeger’s music was when I saw a video of her performing “The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face,” the song her husband Ewan MacColl wrote for her in 1957. In the video, Peggy is probably in her late 40s, wearing a pink t-shirt and jeans, her hair cut short in a curly pixie cut. She’s seated alone on a stage, picking arpeggios on a small parlor guitar. Her voice, like her presentation, is unadorned aside from her natural vibratro, ringing out with incredible clarity out into the dark auditorium. It’s stunning. While that performance is what initially piqued my interest in Seeger, Jean R. Freedman’s new biography, Peggy Seeger: A Life of Music, Love, and Politics, is what indulged and sustained my curiosity. The book, of interest to folk song scholars and fans of Seeger alike, offers an intimate and considered portrait, fully contextualized by Freedman’s background as an academic folklorist and informed by her thirty-year friendship with the folk singer, activist, and member of the legendary Seeger family.

Read on in the Journal of the Society for American Music

In Academic, Folklore, Music, Review, Cambridge University Pres Tags Journal of the Society for American Music, review, Peggy Seeger, folk music
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Honey from the Lion: A Companion Soundscape

December 21, 2018

“As the holidays approach, so does the time to curl up with beautiful and necessary books like Honey from the Lion, Matthew Neil Null’s debut novel from Lookout Books. The book, about a rebellion at a logging company in the West Virginia Alleghenies, is both lyrical and suspenseful, an elegy to the ecological devastation and human tragedy behind the Gilded Age.

Our solstice gift to you is an annotated soundscape for the book, expertly produced by folklorist, writer, media producer, and Ecotone contributor Emily Hilliard. Listen to the sounds of crows, trains, and fiddles and imagine yourself right into the world of Honey from the Lion.”

Read on and listen via Ecotone

In Music Tags Ecotone, soundscape, folk music
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Foreword to the New Edition of Folk Songs from the West Virginia Hills →

December 20, 2017

"Folk Songs from the West Virginia Hills and other folkloric documentation can serve as a mirror to show us the culture we have, but also what we’ve lost and gained along the way, for better or for worse. Throughout the collection, Gainer provides evidence of how folk songs are distilled democratic cultural nuggets of a community, conveying the values of its people. He declares, 'They are called folk songs because they belong to the people and not any one individual.' Folklorist Lynne McNeill says this another way: 'Group consensus shapes folklore, so folklore is a great measure of group consensus.' I, for one, am proud to live and work in a place where the group consensus is for singing."

Read on via West Virginia University Press

In Academic, Books, Folklore, History, Music, West Virginia Tags West Virginia, folk music, West Virginia University Press
Photo of the 2016 Helvetia Community Fair Parade by Gabe DeWitt

Photo of the 2016 Helvetia Community Fair Parade by Gabe DeWitt

Helvetia, a Traditional Swiss Village in the Hills of West Virginia →

July 18, 2017

"It’s not that Helvetia is inauthentic or fake—in fact, it’s quite the opposite. And to say that the presence of a Swiss community in the remote mountains of West Virginia is unlikely would deny the history and impact of the waves of immigration and relocation to central Appalachia by diverse cultural groups (there were several Swiss settlements scattered across the region in the late nineteenth century). But what makes Helvetia unusual resides not only in the cultural, historical, and social preservation of the nearly 150-year-old village but in something less tangible. There is an enchantment about the place that exudes from the hand-painted signs of coats of arms, Swiss phrases, historical markers, and the public buildings and homes adorned in Alpine gingerbread and bright floral patterns. It’s a magic that exists in the intimacy of a community whose families have been neighbors, friends, and colleagues for generations."

Read more via HUMANITIES Magazine

In Agriculture, Folklore, Craft, Food, History, Music, Travel, West Virginia Tags Humanities Magazine, National Endowment for the Humanities, West Virginia

The State Folklorist's Notebook: What Is Folklore? →

July 1, 2016

In our Spring issue, we introduced West Virginia’s new state folklorist, Emily Hilliard. Emily will be writing a regular column for GOLDENSEAL about her discoveries in West Virginia folklore.

Whenever someone asks me what I do for work, the conversation often goes something like this: I say, “I’m a folklorist.”

The questioner usually replies with something to the effect of “That’s so cool!” Then there’s a beat while he or she stops to ponder and works up the courage to ask sheepishly, “Now . . . what is that exactly?”

Read on in Goldenseal

In Folklore, Music, Food Tags Goldenseal

“Written and Composed by Nora E. Carpenter” Song Lyric Scrapbooks, Home Recordings, and Self-Documentation →

March 4, 2016

Essay in Southern Cultures' Documentary Arts Issue, Spring 2016

Read on in Southern Cultures

In Feminism, Folklore, History, Music, Academic Tags Southern Cultures, UNC
Painting by Michael Hurley

Painting by Michael Hurley

A Letter from Michael Hurley →

August 24, 2015

For a brief moment, LP released a series of 45 rpm 7-inch records under the auspices of the Lucky Peach Record Club. Installment #2 was a thematic accompaniment to our All You Can Eat issue, a disc of two anti-Monsanto songs, one by Michael Hurley and another by Wes Buckley.

Hurley is one of America’s great folk singers, with a discography that reaches back to the sixties and includes a wheelbarrow’s worth of records that have a habit of staying on the turntable once they get there. He’s also a visual artist, a painter and drawer and comic-book-maker, with a distinct and compelling style and cosmology of characters that are always on his album covers and sometimes even in his songs.

Read on in Lucky Peach

In Food, Music Tags Lucky Peach
Photo via Paradise of Bachelors

Photo via Paradise of Bachelors

The Weather Station’s Tamara Lindeman: ‘I’m Not Sure Why Music Is Still Overwhelmed By Dudes’

July 15, 2015

Canadian songwriter Tamara Lindeman’s songs each offer a vivid yet fleeting mise en scène. Her specific, detailed visuals are not opaque, but rather offer a portal for the exploration of enigmatic emotional relationships: parabolas and possibilities and perspectives. They show, don’t tell.

Lindeman, who performs under the name The Weather Station, first found her creative footing as an actor. After playing in a number of bands in Toronto, she released her first solo album All Of It Was Mine in 2011 on Canadian label You’ve Changed Records, followed by What Am I Going To Do With Everything I Know in 2014.

Read on via Bandwidth

Source: http://bandwidth.wamu.org/the-weather-stat...
In Feminism, Music
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