A blog sponsored by the Michigan State University Museum's Michigan Traditional Arts Program, a partnership with the Michigan Council for Arts and Cultural Affairs. Sharing news and information about the Great Lakes Folk Festival, Quilt Index, the MSU Museum's traditional arts activities, Great Lakes traditional artists and arts resources, and much more. Development of content for this blog supported by funding from the National Endowment for the Arts.
Showing posts with label Michigan Traditional Arts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Michigan Traditional Arts. Show all posts

Thursday, December 29, 2016

Introducing Two New MTAP Fieldworkers

The Michigan Traditional Arts Program (MTAP) was founded by the mission of preserving, documenting, and presenting traditional arts and folklife in Michigan. Fieldwork undertaken by MTAP staff is an integral step in staying true to our mission. We document through interviews with artists, observation of events, and collecting objects; the fieldwork data and reports are then deposited in the MTAP Research Collections which preserves the traditions documented; fieldworkers write books, articles, and blog posts and create multimedia resources like radio shows and YouTube videos to present the research to the general public. This, of course, is a simplification of all fieldwork-related activities at MTAP, but the pursuit of knowledge about traditional arts, folklife, and everyday culture in Michigan is foundational to MTAP.

I’m excited to welcome to some new members of our fieldwork team for 2016-2017. MTAP has contracted two fieldworkers, Nic Gareiss and Dave Langdon, who have some excellent areas of research planned. Both Nic and Dave are performers, practitioners, and scholars of traditional dance and music. They are deeply committed to their communities of practice and research, and care about reciprocity when undertaking fieldwork.

I wanted to introduce Nic and Dave to Great Folks blog readers because they will be writing blog posts on their fieldwork. Without further ado…


Nic Gareiss

Nic Gareiss is a professional performer, teacher, and dance researcher living in Lansing, Michigan. His interests include vernacular dance traditions from many locations, especially Appalachia, Quebec, and the Irish diaspora. Nic holds a degree in Anthropology from Central Michigan University and a MA in Ethnochoreology from the University of Limerick. He has written on the intersections of dancing bodies, gender, sexuality and nationhood. Gareiss' MA thesis based upon his ethnographic work with LGTBQ competitive Irish step dancers was the first piece of scholarship to query the experience of sexual minorities within traditional Irish dance. Other publications include “An Buachaillín Bán: Reflections on One Queer’s Performance within Traditional Irish Music & Dance” in The Meanings and Makings of Queer Dance edited by Clare Croft on Oxford University Press (June 2017) and “The Lion, The Witch, and the Closet: Heteronormative institutional research and the queering of ‘Traditions’” co-written with Aileen Dillane in Queering the Field: Sounding Out Ethnomusicology, edited by William Cheng and Gregory Barz on Oxford University Press (forthcoming). Gareiss’ present research seeks to illuminate issues of national identity, gender, and sexual orientation via ethnography and embodied practice. As a performer, Gareiss has concertized in fourteen countries and continues to tour and teach internationally, working with dance communities and presenting solo percussive dance choreography.

Michigan sustains many remarkably rich traditional dance communities throughout our state. Within these diverse communities bodies become sites of cultural practice as dancers create, transmit, theorize, and engage their heritage through their physical selves. Because of dance's corporeality, moving bodies often become politicized when the communities in which they exist are marginalized. However, dance remain a powerful and transcendent means by which tradition-bearers maintain their cultures, subvert subjugation, and both imagine and enact brighter futures. Nic's research focus lies at the intersections of traditional dance and marginality; in the ways that intangible cultural dance heritage is sustained in communities that are subject to systematic oppression due to race, indignity, national origin, disability, gender, and sexuality. Through the Michigan Traditional Arts Program, Nic hopes to bring both attention and resources to dancers in our state that may be experiencing this kind of marginalization. Whether it takes the form of African-American vogueing in Detroit, Yemeni dance in Dearborn, Appalachia clogging in Bellaire, or Indian Kathak in Midland, Nic is looking forward to helping connect Michigan State Museum to Michigan's vibrant jiving, bouncing, shuffling, gesturing tradition-bearers.


Dave Langdon

Dave Langdon is a left-handed fiddler and collector of traditional Michigan music and dance materials and recordings. He is originally from Owosso, MI, and has played the fiddle since 1977 and has been collecting since 2011. He is a long time member of East Lansing’s Pretty Shaky String Band (an old time jam open to the public) and has played upright bass with the Lansing based Scarlet Runner String Band for over 25 years. Dave worked with Karl Byarski of Kinde, MI for many months to index and organize Karl’s extensive collection of recordings of Thumb area musicians and fiddlers. He also nominated Karl for a Michigan Heritage Award, which was awarded to Karl in 2014. In recent years, Dave reinvigorated the Michigan Folklore Society (MFS) as its president. One of the goals of the MFS is to make traditional music and dance (especially fiddle music) more accessible to the public via the internet. Now retired, Dave worked as an information systems professional and manager after graduating with a B.S. in Computer Science and later earning a M.S. in Computer Science both from Michigan State University.

Dave will be looking into hammer dulcimer music in Michigan. Michigan is one of the major states for hammer dulcimer playing and is also the home of the Original Dulcimer Players Club (ODPC) Funfest held at the Osceola County Fairgrounds in Evart, MI, each year. There are several dulcimer clubs and also music jams attended by hammer dulcimer players and others. Dave will be attending several of these jams and documenting the music and musicians at these club meetings and jams. This might include making audio recordings, doing interviews, taking photos, making video, etc. The end result will be a written report of activities and findings.


I look forward to hearing about the work Nic and Dave produce and I know you will too! Got any tips for traditional artists we should interview or topics we should document? You can send them to msum.mtap@gmail.com.

Thanks to Nic and Dave for providing biographies and summaries of their research plans.


Molly McBride coordinates contract fieldworkers and undertakes her own fieldwork on traditional music and other various topics for MTAP. She is currently learning to knit. 

Thursday, March 17, 2016

#FolkloreThursday: Irish Music in Southeast Michigan

#FolkloreThursday is a growing community on Twitter where people post all sorts of folklore tidbits every Thursday.  We here at the Michigan Traditional Arts Program are joining this community today with an inaugural St. Patrick’s Day #FolkloreThursday post!

Below is a short video of Irish social dancing taken at an Irish Ceili at the Gaelic League in Detroit, Michigan, January 23, 2016. The music is provided by Mick, Michael, and Sean Gavin and the calling by Anne McCallum.



In 2014 James Madison Professor Steve Rohs undertook MTAP fieldwork on Irish music sessions in Detroit and Ann Arbor. He interviewed Mick Gavin who is a fiddler and melodeon player and has been a key tradition bearer of Irish culture, particularly music, in Southeast Michigan since settling in Detroit in the 1970s (Gavin is the melodeon player in the video above).

Mick Gavin and Siobhan McKinney at an Irish music session at the Gaelic League in Detroit, 7/30/2014. Photo from Steve Rohs. 

From Dr. Rohs’ fieldwork report:
Mick Gavin was born in Meelick, Ireland in 1945. He learned to play melodeon and fiddle from family members and from local fiddlers from Limerick, and in 1960, at age 15, his group The Delcassian Ceili Band won the Kerry Fleadh ceili competition. In 1974, Mick traveled to the United States as part of a touring Irish band. He played as a professional musician in Chicago, but soon settled in Detroit and began a flooring business which survives to this day. In the 1980s and 1990s, Mick, a seasoned session player, began to mentor and formally teach young fiddlers in the Detroit area. Like Terence McKinney [a Detroit-area uilleann piper who studied under Al Purcell], he became involved in the Detroit branch of Comhaltas Ceotiori Eireann, and many of his students won regional and All-Ireland awards on their instruments. He also promotes Irish music in Southeast Michigan, bringing international artists to local venues, participating in an annual “Crossroads Ceili” at the Ark in Ann Arbor with current and former students, and hosts the St. Patrick’s Day events at the Hellenic Cultural Center in Detroit. He was inducted into the Midwest Region Comhaltas Ceotiori Eireann Irish Music Hall of Fame in 2003. Mick currently resides in Redford Township, Michigan. 

Dr. Rohs also compiled a list of Irish music sessions in Michigan, posted below. Sessions are a great opportunity to listen to, enjoy, play and learn traditional Irish music.

Conor O’Neill’s in Ann Arbor
Sundays 7 p.m.

Ancient Order of Hibernians in Redford
Second and fourth Fridays at 8 p.m.

Detroit Irish Music Association in Ann Arbor
Thursday nights, 7:30

Gaelic League in Detroit
Wednesdays from 7:30-10:30

Cleary’s Pub in Chelsea
Second and fourth Sundays 2-4 p.m.

Chelsea Ale House in Chelsea
First and third Sundays from 2-4 p.m.

McFadden’s Pub in Grand Rapids
Sunday nights from 7-9 p.m.

London Grill Gastropub in Kalamazoo
Sunday afternoons from 4-6 p.m.

Fenian’s Irish Pub in Conklin
Wednesday nights from 7 p.m. to close

Hennessy’s Irish Pub in Muskegon
First Tuesday night of the month, 7 p.m.

Boyne District Library in Boyne
Sundays 1-3 p.m.

Bravo Zulu Brewing Company in Acme
Monday nights, 7-9 p.m.

Lil’ Bo’s Pub in Traverse City
Tuesday nights 7-9 p.m.

Stein Haus in Bay City
Tuesday nights 7-10 p.m.

Loutit District Library in Grand Haven
Third Saturday 1-3 p.m.

Midland Brewing Company in Midland
Second and fourth Wednesday nights

Stucchi’s Ice Cream in Alma

Thursday nights

Dr. Rohs' fieldwork on Irish music sessions is in the Michigan Traditional Arts Program Research Collections, MSU Museum, Accession no. 2014:58. 

Tuesday, December 29, 2015

New MTAP Video on the Masters of Harmony

Check out the new video added to Michigan Traditional Art Program’s YouTube channel! It highlights the Masters of Harmony, an a cappella Gospel group from Detroit, Michigan.  In the video we hear how the Masters of Harmony came to be and how each member started singing Gospel.




The Masters of Harmony performed recently at the 2015 GreatLakes Folk Festival.  After their GLFF performance, volunteer Dave Langdon and Molly McBride were able to sit down with the group and interview them.  Current members are Thomas Kelly, Neal Lewis, O’Bryant Walker, and David Grear.  Masters of Harmony was formed in 1952 by Thomas Kelly, who has been singing Gospel since 1926.  Since 1952, there have been many different members and sometimes four to six men.  They have performed along side Gospel music’s most prominent ensembles.

Don’t forget to subscribe to MTAP’s YouTube channel to stay up-to-date with videos we post from recent fieldwork, the Great Lakes Folk Festival, and our Research Collections!

Tuesday, December 15, 2015

What is Folklore?




Folkstreams is a wonderful online archive of documentary films made about American folklore. They recently made this short video featuring folklorist Daniel W. Patterson describing folklore. Patterson, a Kenan Professor Emeritus of English at UNC-Chapel Hill, Fellow of the American Folklore Society, and author of ten books, relates in the video that:
“People think of folklore as… a quilt on the wall, it’s a pot on the mantelpiece…it’s an old song…but actually, folklore makes you very uncomfortable.  It’s powerful.  If it’s anything at all it’s powerful because it’s what you use to survive…it comes out of struggle and difficulty.”
In Michigan, folklore is a fiddle tune passed down through generations, a pasty recipe, a style of duck decoys or pottery, a gospel shout.  And it’s also a ritual at the Michigan Womyn’s Festival, a quilt made in response to the AIDS epidemic, the refinement of a recipe at a microbrewery, the making of a Quinceañera dress, it’s improvisation in tap dancing. 

As Patterson describes in the video, folklore arises from every-day lived experiences; in the back woods of the Upper Peninsula, on the waterways winding through our state, in the auto factories speckled throughout the mitten, the convivial din of a house party, and even the careful knot in a web of lace, folklore affects and comprises our lives.  We’re always interested to hear how folklore is a part of our readers lives, so please leave a comment with a personal story or thought!

Folkstreams is a great resource to learn about traditions and folklife through videos.  They even have a few films based in Michigan.  The Michigan Traditional Arts Program is also a great resource to learn about Michigan-specific folklife.  Our YouTube channel is a great place to find short videos on contemporary traditions from recent fieldwork and archival footage from our research collections. 

Tuesday, November 24, 2015

Document Your Family Folklore This Thanksgiving


Become a folklorist this Thanksgiving holiday and document your family folklore.

Quillworker Yvonne Walker Keshick with her grandchildren at the 2015 GLFF.

Family folklore could include stories, jokes, music, rituals, games, scrapbooks, videos, recipes, and material culture. 
"For an individual family [however "family" may be defined], folklore is its creative expression of a common past. As raw experiences are transformed into family stories, expressions, and photos, they are codified in forms which can be easily recalled, retold, and enjoyed. Their drama and beauty are heightened, and the family’s past becomes accessible as it is reshaped according to its needs and desires," (Zeitlin 1982).
Lacemaking has been passed down for generations in Ron Ahren's family.
An easy way for anyone to document family folklore is to interview a relative through the StoryCorps app.


"The StoryCorps app—a free mobile application—seamlessly walks users through an interview by providing all the necessary tools for a wonderful experience. You will receive help preparing questions, finding the right environment for your conversation, recording a high-quality interview on your mobile device, sharing the finished product with friends and family, and uploading your conversation to the StoryCorps.me website. This site is a home for the recordings and also provides interviewing and editing resources. In addition, all interviews uploaded to the platform during the first year of the program will be archived at the American Folklife Center at the Library of Congress," (https://storycorps.me/about/).
Though the app has built-in questions to ask your interviewee, we suggest you make your own questions centering on family traditions.
 
What kinds of traditions does your family have for Thanksgiving?

Ask about Foodways
            What dishes do you always have at Thanksgiving?
            How do you make the dishes?
            Where does the recipe come from?
            Where do the raw ingredients come from?
            Who cooks what?
            What kind of cookware is used?
            Are there special serving dishes?
            When do you eat?

Ask about Music
            What kinds of music do you listen to during the holidays?
            When do you listen to music during the holidays?          
Does anyone in your family play music?
                        Where did they learn?

Ask about Stories
            What are the stories, tales, and myths told?
                        Where do they come from?
                        What kinds of stories are they? Humorous, cautionary, or romance?
            Who tells stories at a gathering?
            In what setting are stories told?
           
Use the Story Corps app to record and archive your interview.  Tag your interview with “MSU Museum” and your interview may be featured on the Great Folks blog! We want to hear about your folklife. 

If you need some pointers for interviewing, the Smithsonian has a free online guide available here.


Work Cited
Steve Zeitlin. A Celebration of American Family Folklore. Cambridge, MA: Yellow Moon Press, 1982, p. 2 

Photos by M. McBride.  

Friday, November 20, 2015

MSU Museum's MacDowell Named American Folklore Society Fellow

MacDowell at the Great Lakes Quilt Center of the MSU Museum
Michigan State University Museum Curator of Folk Arts Dr. Marsha MacDowell has been named a fellow of the American Folklore Society (AFS), demonstrating outstanding accomplishments and making important contributions to the field of folklore.

Established in 1960, the Fellows of the American Folklore Society are folklorists who have produced a significant number of important articles, books, and other scholarly productions or exhibitions on folklore, and have provided meritorious service to the Society and the discipline of folklore studies. In addition to her substantial record of publications and exhibitions, MacDowell has served in a number of capacities within AFS, including as elected member of the AFS executive board.
MacDowell is also a professor in MSU's Art, Art History, and Design Department as well as a core faculty member in the College of Arts and Letters Museum Studies Program, where she serves as the program's internship coordinator and teaches future museum professionals curatorial, research, field work, exhibition and civic engagement work. Her research interests include South African quilt history; traditions of patchwork covers in China; quilts and health; the history and meaning of lau hala in Hawaiian culture; and the intersection of ethnography and museums in a digital age. She is the director of the Quilt Index, an international digital repository of stories, images, and other data related to quilts and their makers.

MacDowell has curated over 50 research-based interpretive exhibitions and festival programs as Michigan State University and is founding director of the MSU Museum's Great Lakes Folk Festival, a university-community partnership. As the Coordinator of the Michigan Traditional Arts Program since 1984, she has led many projects focused on Michigan traditional and cultural heritage. 

Monday, November 2, 2015

2014 Nation Heritage Fellow Yvonne Walker Keshick Visits the MSU Museum

Yvonne Walker Keshick at the MSU Museum
Photo courtesy Kim Worthington
Yvonne Walker Keshick stopped by the MSU Museum on Friday, October 23, to see the new exhibition on Michiganders who received the very prestigious National Heritage Fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts. Yvonne was the most recent Michigander to receive a fellowship. She was recently honored, along with 2002 National Heritage Fellow Nadim Dlaikan, as a featured speaker at a 50th Anniversary Celebration for the National Endowment for the Arts and the National Endowment for the Humanities.  Photograph by Kim Worthington, Yvonne’s daughter and a good quillworker herself.