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The Association for Cultural Equity (ACE) is pleased to announce the launch of the Lomax Digital
Archive. archive.culturalequity.org provides free access to audio/visual collections compiled across
seven decades by folklorist Alan Lomax (1915–2002) and his father John A. Lomax (1867–1948), and
was supported by the National Endowment for the Humanities’ NEH Cares program.
For nearly ten years, ACE has hosted online the entirety of Alan Lomax’s photographs and tape
recordings—made throughout the US and the world between 1946 and 1991—as well as transcriptions
of his 1940s radio programs, and a selection of clips from his film and video-work of the 1970s and
1980s. The LDA offers all of this material through a totally redesigned user interface, with more
intuitive search and browse functions, as well as easy embeddability and instant social-media sharing
on the item (recording / photo / video) level.
The LDA also expands the old site exponentially through the inclusion of collections compiled by
the Lomaxes under the auspices of the Library of Congress’ Archive of Folk Song between 1933 and
1942. First and foremost, these include the entire 70 hours of their Kentucky recordings and the 39
hours of Mississippi recordings. This latter material includes the first recordings of Muddy Waters,
Honeyboy Edwards, and Sid Hemphill. Although this material has been issued in assorted iterations
over the years, the LDA makes it possible to listen to them in their entirety in their original recording
contexts. As funds become available to digitise and catalogue other collections from this period,
they will become available here. (These collections include recordings made by several of Alan's
collaborators, among them John W. Work III and Mary Elizabeth Barnicle, and are presented here
in partnership with ACE’s colleagues at the LC’s American Folklife Center.)
The catalogues are searchable and browsable by a range of taxonomies (performers, instrument,
location, genre, etc.) and every recording and image is described by extensive item-level metadata.
Nothing is left out — every microphone check and struck tuning fork is included.
Lastly, a crucial aspect of the LDA is its capacity for exhibits, which will allow for thoughtful,
context-rich explorations into specific aspects of the collections: be they instruments, locations,
traditions, performers, or themes. The inaugural presentation is “Trouble Won’t Last Always”, which
compiles the several dozen performances that comprised ACE’s daily song series of the same name,
launched in the early days of the pandemic. “Trouble” consists of recordings from across the Lomax
collections that speak to themes of loneliness, isolation, optimism, endurance, transcendence,
selected and annotated by LDA curator Nathan Salsburg, and with an introduction by Dom Flemons,
the American Songster.