Woody Guthrie
Sonny
Terry, Woody Guthrie, Elizabeth Lomax (foreground), Lilly Mae Ledford,
and Alan
Lomax play and sing folk music at a cast party for The
Martins and the Coys, 1944
Contemporary gelatin silver print from original negative
Letter
from Woody Guthrie to Alan Lomax. September 17, 1940
American Folklife Center (224.2a,b)
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Alan Lomax played an active role in the folk movement of the 1930s-1950s.
He conducted field work with his wife Elizabeth and his father,
John A. Lomax, and with other documentarians such as Zora Neale
Hurston. He made some of the first recordings and corresponded
actively with important performers such as Woody Guthrie. His correspondence
with Guthrie, for example, provided unique insight into the artist
best-known for his role as “Dust Bowl balladeer.” In
the early 1940s, Guthrie had moved to New York and was pursuing
broadcasting and recording careers, meeting artists and social
activists and gaining a reputation as a talented and influential
songwriter and performer.
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