@AlanLomaxArchive
  @AlanLomaxArchive
Alan Lomax Archive | Carriacou Shakespeare Mas combat (1991) @AlanLomaxArchive | Uploaded February 2021 | Updated October 2024, 2 days ago.
Unidentified Shakespeare Mas combatants recite various speeches from Julius Caesar, Carriacou, Grenada, February 1991. In 1991 Alan Lomax visited Carriacou for the first time in nearly 30 years to attend the Stone Feast of Sugar Adams. Adams, one of the island's most revered musicians, had died ten years earlier and tradition necessitated a day of feasting, sacrifices, and music-making to accompany the raising of his head-stone. Lomax brought along a camcorder, a cassette deck, and copies of his 1962 Carriacou recordings (including those of Sugar Adams) to share with the participants - among them local musicologist Winston Fleary and drummer and painter Canute Caliste, who had also recorded for Alan in '62. While there, Alan was also able to shoot nearly two hours of the Shakespeare Mas' - the remarkable Carnival tradition in which men dressed in outlandish Pierrot-style outfits engage in "combats": aggressively reciting speeches from Julius Caesar and thrashing one another with switches when a recitation is deemed poor or incorrect. These several hours of video recordings constitute Alan Lomax's last field recording trip. [169b.03]
Carriacou Shakespeare Mas combat (1991)Bessie Jones: No Hiding Place Down Here (1961)Black Encyclopedia of the Air 08: Aesop (1969)Hobart Smith: Railroad Bill (1959)Lonnie Pitchford plays one-string guitar in Lexington, Mississippi (1978)Dick Devall: Sitting At My Window, Sad and Lonely (1946)

Carriacou Shakespeare Mas combat (1991) @AlanLomaxArchive

SHARE TO X SHARE TO REDDIT SHARE TO FACEBOOK WALLPAPER