YourList
  ARTS (441)   BUSINESS (92)   EDUCATION (36)   HUMANITIES (540)   MASSACHUSETTS (392)   SCIENCE and TECHNOLOGY (108)   SOCIAL SCIENCE (602)  
RECORD
Larry Johnson and Jack Jackson perform "John Henry"
People who watched this also watched

Interview with Buddy Guy and Junior Wells

Topper Carew interviews Blues musicians Buddy Guy and Junior Wells about their musical influences.more

Accusations against William Celester

David Boeri reports that William Celester (Deputy Superintendent, Boston Police Department) has been. . . > more

Opening sequence from "As Seen on TV"

This short excerpt from the opening sequence of "As Seen on TV" features a mime artist, Bill. . . > more
   
 

Series: Say Brother
Program: Roots Music
Episode: 318
Date: 1974-03-07
Duration: 00:01:00

Subject: African American musicians; African American singers; Blues (Music); Blues musicians
People: Jackson, John (musician); Johnson, Larry

Clip Description
Larry Johnson is a New-York-City-based blues singer and acoustic guitarist; John Jackson a Virginia-based rural blues singer, who, like Leadbelly, accompanies himself on guitar. Together they perform "John Henry" in the studio.

Program Description
Program focuses on three performers of "roots" (or blues) music, a community-based, Black art form originating in the United States. Host Topper Carew conducts a group interview with three blues musicians: Victoria Spivey (a New-York-City-based urban blues vocalist in the tradition of Bessie Smith), Larry Johnson (a New-York-City-based blues singer and acoustic guitarist), and John Jackson (a Virginia-based rural blues singer, who, like Leadbelly, accompanies himself on guitar). Program includes musical performances by each musician, including "Black Snake Blues" (Spivey), "Charlie Stone" (Johnson), "Key to the Highway" (Johnson), and "John Henry" (Jackson and Johnson). Interview segments revolve around the questions of how the musicians started playing, who their influences are, and African American musical traditions. Produced by Topper Carew. Directed by Conrad White.

Series Description
Say Brother is WGBH's longest running public affairs television program by, for and about African Americans, and is now known as Basic Black. Since its inception in 1968, Say Brother has featured the voices of both locally and nationally known African American artists, athletes, performers, politicians, professionals, and writers including: Muhammad Ali, Maya Angelou, Thomas Atkins, Amiri Baraka, Doris Bunte, Julian Bond, Stokely Carmichael, Louis Farrakhan, Nikki Giovanni, Odetta Gordon, Henry Hampton, Benjamin Hooks, Jesse Jackson, Hubie Jones, Mel King, Eartha Kitt, Elma Lewis, Haki Madhubuti, Wallace D. Muhammad, Charles Ogletree, Byron Rushing, Owusu Sadaukai, and Sonia Sanchez.

See also: http://main.wgbh.org/saybrother/programs/sb_0318

 

No transcript is available for this record.