In the late 1920s, a state panel called the Vermont Commission on Country Life asked Helen Hartness Flanders, a well-connected socialite from Springfield, to document Vermont’s traditional music.
Before Your Time: A Green Mountain mixtape By Mike Dougherty Dec 6 2017, 3:38 PM 0 Comments Helen Hartness Flanders Courtesy Middlebury College Special Collections and Archives Before Your Time is a podcast about Vermont history. Every episode, we go inside the stacks at the Vermont Historical Society to look at an object from their permanent collection that tells us something unique about our state. Then, we take a closer look at the people, the events, and the ideas that surround each artifact. In the late 1920s, a state panel called the Vermont Commission on Country Life asked Helen Hartness Flanders, a well-connected socialite from Springfield, to document Vermont’s traditional music. Like an Alan Lomax for the Green Mountains, Flanders traveled the state with a Model T full of recording equipment, calling on everyday Vermonters to sing into her microphone. Flanders accumulated a cache of one-of-a-kind recordings that mainly captured the sounds of European settlers and their descendants. But she was just one of a long line of Vermonters who have dedicated themselves to preserving the sound of our state, believing that Vermont music tells us something about who we are. In this podcast, we talk to Middlebury College special collections curator Rebekah Irwin and performer Linda Radtke about Flanders’ collection. Plus, documentarian Mark Greenberg and Big Heavy World founder James Lockridge show that there’s more to the lineage of Vermont music than English ballads. Subscribe to Before Your Time on Apple Podcasts, Stitcher, or Google Play. See more images, complete music credits, and a transcript of this episode at beforeyourtime.org. Produced in partnership with the Vermont Historical Society and the Vermont Humanities Council. Theme music by Michael Chapman and the Woodpiles.
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