Commentary by Vera Hall on Rich Amerson, spiritual and secular songs, and her widowhood
Other Form of Name
Lomax, Alan, 1915-2002; Hall, Vera, 1902-1964
Identifier
T814R01; FRID (Lomax Number) 12951
Creation Date
5-1-1948
City
New York (N.Y.)
Disclaimer
Some of the images and language that appear in the digital collections depict prejudices that are not condoned by the University of Mississippi. This content is being presented as historical documentation to aid in the understanding of both American history and the history of the University of Mississippi. The University Creed speaks to our current deeply held values, and the availability of this content should not be taken as an endorsement of previous attitudes or behavior.
Description
These recordings of oral history, play songs, blues, spirituals, and stories were made in 1948 when Alan Lomax invited Vera Hall to come from her home in Livingston, Alabama, to New York City for a concert. Vera Hall's mother had been a slave, and Vera's date of birth was not recorded. Her artistry and repertoire were brought to John A. Lomax's attention by Ruby Pickens Tartt, a painter and folklorist from Livingston who introduced Vera and her cousin, Dock Reed, to him in 1937. The elder Lomax recorded her again in 1940, describing her as having 'the loveliest voice I had ever recorded.' Alan Lomax used the oral histories of Vera Hall and Dock Reed as the basis of The Rainbow Sign (New York: Duell, Sloan and Pearce, 1959), a study of African-American spirituality. After her death in 1964, Alan Lomax said: 'It is from singers like Vera Hall that all of us who love folk music in America have everything to learn. Her performances were all graced with dignity and with love. Her sense of timing and beat were perfection itself. But all this is analysis. The mystery of Vera Hall and her art, while hinted at in the recordings we will always treasure, lies buried in the state where once the stars fell.' For a summary of Vera Hall's life see Gabriel Greenberg's article, reproduced at www.alan-lomax.com. In 2005 Vera Hall was inducted into the Alabama Women's Hall of Fame.
Subject Headings (Library of Congress)
Prayer meetings; Religion; Amerson, Rich; Spirituals (Songs); Widows;Blues (Music); Blues musicians
Relational Format
audio recording
Extent
29:48
Original Collection
Alan Lomax Recordings
Rights
Media files in this collection are owned by the Association for Cultural Equity and made available solely for personal use. Copy or capture of media files is prohibited. Due to copyright concerns, the recordings in this collection can only be accessed by arrangement with the Department of Archives and Special Collections.
Comments
Vera Hall I 1948. Lomax Classification: spoken; commentary. Lomax Collection Title: Vera Hall 1948. Recording Note: Hall learned blues and other secular songs from Rich Amerson, a friend of her parents. She was a child when Rich started to come around her house and she would sit in his lap and watch him sing. She sings both spiritual and secular songs. The church tried to give her a hard time for it, but she explains that she wants to share the songs with others and teach them the words and the melodies. She says that her heart is in the spiritual songs and not in the blues. On weekends she and other church members will go to the clubs to hear music and watch people dance and have a good time. Vera believes that religion should not make one emjoy life any less. Some Saturday nights she likes to smoke, drink, play the record player and have a good time. The church leaders do not know about this or they would turn her out of the church. She first began to drink when she married Nash Riddle. She was fifteen and met Nash in Tuscaloosa on the Blue Front Street. He was a brown skinned man with a few freckles in his face, and he wrote to her parents and asked for permission to marry Vera. They wanted to see him, so he came down to Livingston. They were both very nervous, but her father gave his approval. They got married in Birmingham when Vera was 16. After they married Nash let Vera go back home for two weeks to be with her family. Nash worked at a filling station in Tuscaloosa. After she finally went to live with him, she fell in love with him and got to where she never wanted to leave him. He was soon shot and killed. The only box in the archive for this tape is a cassette tape box. This recording may have been damaged and re-recorded for preservation. Session Note: In these interviews and songs, recorded by Alan Lomax at his home in New York City, Vera Hall talks about her life and sings samples of songs. Lomax is joined by his wife Elizabeth, their daughter, and an unidentified couple, who can be heard throughout the session (editor's note). Location: Greenwich Village, Alan Lomax's Apartment (3rd. Street, New York, N.Y.)