(Julie) Loraine Wyman (October 23, 1885 – September 11, 1937) was an American
soprano
A soprano () is a type of classical female singing voice and has the highest vocal range of all voice types. The soprano's vocal range (using scientific pitch notation) is from approximately middle C (C4) = 261 Hz to "high A" (A5) = 880&n ...
, noted for her concert performances of
folk song
Folk music is a music genre that includes #Traditional folk music, traditional folk music and the Contemporary folk music, contemporary genre that evolved from the former during the 20th-century folk revival. Some types of folk music may be c ...
s, some of which she collected herself from traditional singers in field work. Paul J. Stamler has called Wyman "the first real practitioner of the urban folk revival."
[Stamler (2012:207–210)]
Life
Early family life
Her mother, Julie Moran Wyman (1860–1907) was from
Joliet, Illinois
Joliet ( ) is a city in Will County, Illinois, Will and Kendall County, Illinois, Kendall counties in the U.S. state of Illinois, southwest of Chicago. It is the county seat of Will County. At the 2020 United States Census, 2020 census, the cit ...
, near Chicago. She possessed a mezzo-soprano voice described as a "marvel"
["Says Mrs. Wyman errs: Husband of well-known contralto wants the children", ''Chicago Tribune'', 29 May 1896] and had a successful career as an opera singer.
["Walter C. Wyman secures a divorce', ']Chicago Tribune
The ''Chicago Tribune'' is a daily newspaper based in Chicago, Illinois, United States, owned by Tribune Publishing. Founded in 1847, and formerly self-styled as the "World's Greatest Newspaper" (a slogan for which WGN radio and television ar ...
', 26 July 1896
On 2 April 1880 Julie Moran married Walter C. Wyman (1850–1927), a "coal merchant", "society man", and collector and dealer in Native American anthropological artifacts. He lived in
Evanston, Illinois
Evanston ( ) is a city, suburb of Chicago. Located in Cook County, Illinois, United States, it is situated on the North Shore along Lake Michigan. Evanston is north of Downtown Chicago, bordered by Chicago to the south, Skokie to the west, Wil ...
, a suburb of Chicago.
Wyman was quite wealthy; the ''
Chicago Tribune
The ''Chicago Tribune'' is a daily newspaper based in Chicago, Illinois, United States, owned by Tribune Publishing. Founded in 1847, and formerly self-styled as the "World's Greatest Newspaper" (a slogan for which WGN radio and television ar ...
'' remarks that the couple "made their home in the Edwin E. Brown mansion, and maintained there a lavish establishment of servants, horses, and carriages."
They were prominent in Evanston social circles.
The Wymans had three children, all daughters: Florence (born 25 January 1881), Caroline (born 28 August 1882), and the youngest Loraine (born 23 October 1885 in Evanston).
Wyman's childhood was not always serene. After 1891, her parents lived separately, with Julie taking Loraine and Florence to Paris to live, leaving Caroline with the father. In 1896 Walter Wyman obtained a divorce from his wife on grounds of adultery (he also charged her with addiction to alcohol).
As part of the divorce proceedings Wyman successfully obtained custody of all three of his daughters, who joined him in Evanston. Following this there were two occasions in which the daughters fled from their father, attempting to join their mother. Julie Wyman's brother was arrested for helping them in the first of their escape attempts, and for a time after this they were placed under police watch. The ''Chicago Tribune'' later described how the mother and daughters made their final escape via New York (March 1897): they were "taken aboard of an outgoing French steamer by a launch which was in waiting in the North
.e. Hudsonriver. Thus she eluded detectives employed by her husband."
[Anonymous (1907)]
Having relocated her children to Paris, Julie Wyman fairly soon returned to North America, where she settled in Toronto and resumed her singing career; between 1898 and 1904 performances by her are recorded in Toronto, New York, Buffalo, Boston, and Cleveland. She eventually moved to Philadelphia. Julie Wyman died a suicide in 1907 in the apartment of her daughter Caroline in New York; Loraine and her older sister Florence were still living in Paris at the time.
Musical training
Amid all this disruption, Loraine Wyman grew to adulthood, mostly in Paris. She learned the French language and developed a sense of connection to France and its people—manifested in her later fundraising efforts during the First World War (see below). She also took up singing, and is reported by one source to have studied with
Blanche Marchesi
Blanche Marchesi (4 April 1863 – 15 December 1940) was a French mezzo-soprano and voice teacher best known for her interpretations of the works of Richard Wagner. She was the daughter of Mathilde Graumann Marchesi, a German voice instructor w ...
,
[Rhode Island Archive and Manuscripts Collection Online, Loraine Wyman collection, Biographical Note. On line a]
/ref> who had earlier taught her mother. More important were her studies with the celebrated cabaret singer Yvette Guilbert
Yvette Guilbert (; born Emma Laure Esther Guilbert, 20 January 1865 – 3 February 1944) was a French cabaret singer and actress of the ''Belle Époque''.
Biography
Born in Paris into a poor family as Emma Laure Esther Guilbert, Guilbert be ...
, from whom (Stamler) "she acquired a taste for French and British folksongs."
The French-Canadian folklore specialist Marius Barbeau
Charles Marius Barbeau, (March 5, 1883 – February 27, 1969), also known as C. Marius Barbeau, or more commonly simply Marius Barbeau, was a Canadian ethnographer and folklorist who is today considered a founder of Canadian anthropology. A ...
later asserted that her French training was fundamental to Wyman's artistic approach.
Miss Loraine Wyman makes us realize to what extent a rustic melody can be transformed by art while still preserving its original contour. Although American by birth, Miss Wyman is a representative of French style and taste. The discrimination, finesse, and sincerity of her interpretations relies especially on the tradition founded by Gaston Paris
Bruno Paulin Gaston Paris (; 9 August 1839 – 5 March 1903) was a French literary historian, philologist, and scholar specialized in Romance studies and medieval French literature. He was nominated for the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1901, 19 ...
and Julien Tiersot
Julien Tiersot (5 July 1857, in Bourg-en-Bresse (Rhône-Alpes) – 10 August 1936, in Paris), was a French musicologist, composer and a pioneer in ethnomusicology.
Biography
Tiersot was first keenly interested in popular French music, on which ...
and broadened by Yvette Guilbert, of whom she was a pupil.
Launching her career
In about 1909 she returned to America, settling in New York. Probably around this time she studied with a leading New York voice teacher, Frida Ashforth. By the following year, she had embarked on a concert career, in which she sang a mixture of folksongs of various origin to urban audiences. Stamler writes,
She became a popular touring concert artist, performing French and British songs in peasant costume and charming audiences and critics across the country. In 1914, the ''New York Times'' reported that she had achieved critical success as a performer in London, and in January 1916 she stood in for an ailing Guilbert at the Metropolitan Opera, to rave notices.
A reviewer for the ''Boston Transcript
The ''Boston Evening Transcript'' was a daily afternoon newspaper in Boston, Massachusetts, published from July 24, 1830, to April 30, 1941.
Beginnings
''The Transcript'' was founded in 1830 by Henry Dutton and James Wentworth of the firm of D ...
'' wrote:
Her voice, a light one, but of fine, agreeable quality and carrying power, has been carefully trained and is expressive. — Her diction is excellent. She has the great gift of humor. In her interpretation naive, pathetic or malicious songs, facial expression and significant gestures add to the effect of her well modulated voice. — There is no extravagance in her performance; she does not go too far; she knows when she has made her points and is willing to give her hearers credit for a certain amount of intelligence.
Smith (2003), reviewing the press accounts, concludes that Wyman consistently delighted her audiences and critics. For example, one review (Rochester ''Post Express'', 13 November 1912) said:
Miss Loraine Wyman gave a costume ballade recital last night before the members of the Alliance Francaise and their friends ... It is doubtful if the audience, no matter what the musical experience of its individuals may have been, has received more enjoyment than was given with a liberal hand by this young songster last night.
Performances before 1916
Wyman's New York debut was in January 1910. Later that year, she left for Europe, performing with her mentor Yvette Guilbert at the Théâtre du Gymnase in Paris in November, 1910, and again at Bechstein Hall (now Wigmore Hall
Wigmore Hall is a concert hall located at 36 Wigmore Street, London. Originally called Bechstein Hall, it specialises in performances of chamber music, early music, vocal music and song recitals. It is widely regarded as one of the world's leadin ...
) in London in June 1911. In 1912, Wyman performed at the Women's Musical Club in Toronto, where her mother had appeared twelve years earlier. By 1913 she was well enough known to be invited to perform at the White House before President Taft
William Howard Taft (September 15, 1857March 8, 1930) was the 27th president of the United States (1909–1913) and the tenth chief justice of the United States (1921–1930), the only person to have held both offices. Taft was elected pr ...
and the assembled members of the Supreme Court. In 1914, she performed in London and Paris, taking the opportunity to research more folk song material in "old monasteries and libraries" there.["Will offer folk songs of France; visitor is to give unique recital Monday at the Huntington", ''Los Angeles Times'' 2 March 1915.] Later that year, she went to perform in Chicago and Evanston, where she had not been since her childhood; a number of performances were in homes of old family friends. In 1915 Wyman crossed the continent for performances in the Los Angeles area.
Appalachian fieldwork
The early stages of Wyman's performing career coincided with a widespread awakening of interest in the folk songs
Folk music is a music genre that includes traditional folk music and the contemporary genre that evolved from the former during the 20th-century folk revival. Some types of folk music may be called world music. Traditional folk music has be ...
of the southern Appalachian mountains, where the local population—at the time quite geographically isolated—had conserved and evolved a centuries-long heritage of melody and lyrics by oral transmission across generations. Already, several state folklore societies had formed to collect and record these songs, and Olive Dame Campbell
Olive Dame Campbell (1882–1954) was an American folklorist.
Biography
Olive Dame Campbell was born Olive Arnold Dame in 1882 in Medford, Massachusetts. From a young age, education played an important role in her life, as her father was the head ...
had gathered (though not published) a fairly extensive body of material. Previously, Wyman had sung on stage only folksongs gathered by others, mostly French and British, and it is only natural that she would develop an interest in field work in such a fertile territory, fieldwork whose results would permit her to expand her performing repertoire with American material.
Thus in 1916 Wyman undertook, with her accompanist the composer Howard Brockway
Howard A. Brockway (November 22, 1870 – February 20, 1951) was an American composer.
Brockway was born on November 22, 1870 in Brooklyn, New York. He spent five years in Berlin, studying composition under Otis Bardwell Boise and piano und ...
, a six-week journey through the Cumberland Mountains
The Cumberland Mountains are a mountain range in the southeastern section of the Appalachian Mountains. They are located in western Virginia, southwestern West Virginia, the eastern edges of Kentucky, and eastern middle Tennessee, including the ...
to collect Appalachian folk songs. A contemporary reviewer described the work as follows:
Attracted to the songs by a study of their purely literary aspects as published some time ago by Professor Bradley, these two musical patriots tramped some 300 miles through the Kentucky wilds, "climbing mountains, fording streams, enduring superlative discomforts and ... rebuffs from the suspicious inhabitants, but emerging in the end with something like eighty entrancing melodic specimens in their note-books, representing both the 'lonesome tunes' and 'fast music', as they are called."[Anonymous (1917)]
Wyman and Brockway began their efforts at the Pine Mountain Settlement School
The Pine Mountain Settlement School is a historic cultural and educational institution in rural Harlan County, Kentucky. Founded in 1913 as a settlement school near Bledsoe, it now focuses on classes related to the culture of Appalachia and en ...
, where they had been invited by co-director Ethel DeLong Zande. They also worked at the Hindman Settlement School
Hindman Settlement School is a settlement school located in Hindman, Kentucky in Knott County, Kentucky, Knott County. Established in 1902, it was the first rural settlement school in America. , and ultimately journeyed through seven counties of eastern Kentucky: Knott, Harlan, Letcher Letcher may refer to:
Places
* Letcher, South Dakota
*Letcher County, Kentucky
People
*Chris Letcher, South African singer/songwriter
* Cliff Letcher (born 1952), Australian professional tennis player
*John Letcher, American lawyer and politicia ...
, Estill, Pulaski, Magoffin, and Jackson
Jackson may refer to:
People and fictional characters
* Jackson (name), including a list of people and fictional characters with the surname or given name
Places
Australia
* Jackson, Queensland, a town in the Maranoa Region
* Jackson North, Q ...
.
Concerning the delicate task of persuading the inhabitants to share their songs, Wyman wrote:
The nhabitantsseldom responded readily to our requests ... If they did not refuse pointblank, they would plead a cold or hoarseness as an excuse for not singing at once. The ruse actually worked with me for a while, but I presently came to see through it and continued to ply my arguments and pleadings. Often it was necessary to sing for them first. Then, forgetting their reserve, they would seek to correct me in some detail and present we had what we had sought, tho ghit sometimes required much persuasion to make them repeat a melody or even a phrase. Our first song we obtained from a little girl of fourteen, who, however, was so shy about singing that she consented to do it only on condition that we let her withdraw to the end of a dark hall, where she could not be seen.
]
On returning to their base in New York, Wyman and Brockway began to perform on stage the songs they had gathered, using piano accompaniments composed by Brockway. They premiered their renditions of Appalachian song at the Cort Theater
The James Earl Jones Theatre, originally the Cort Theatre, is a Broadway theater at 138 West 48th Street, between Seventh Avenue and Sixth Avenue, in the Theater District of Midtown Manhattan in New York City, United States. It was built in ...
in New York in October 1916, and per Stamler, "continu dfor the next decade to uniformly enthusiastic reviews." They also published selected songs from their fieldwork, along with Brockway's piano accompaniments, in two collections:
*''Lonesome Tunes: Folk Songs from the Kentucky Mountains'' (1916) New York: H. W. Gray.
*''Twenty Kentucky Mountain Songs'' (1920) Boston: Oliver Ditson & Co.
Sales figures of these volumes are apparently not available, but Stamler, noting their widespread appearance in library catalogs, infers that they sold well. ''Lonesome Tunes'' was reissued by its publisher in 1944, 28 years after initial publication.
The two volumes just mentioned were intended for domestic use and enjoyment, rather than specifically being contributions to the scholarly literature on folk song. Wyman later shared a large amount of her Appalachian material with the doyen of American folk song scholars, George Lyman Kittredge
George Lyman Kittredge (February 28, 1860 – July 23, 1941) was a professor of English literature at Harvard University. His scholarly edition of the works of William Shakespeare was influential in the early 20th century. He was also involved i ...
, who published some of it (properly acknowledging Wyman) in a 1917 scholarly article.
As her career continued to flourish Wyman made efforts to "give back" (as we would say today) to the Appalachian community. In 1917 she returned to Chicago to sing Appalachian folk songs in a benefit concert for the Hindman Settlement School, and served on the Advisory Board of the Pine Mountain Settlement School.
The Appalachian dulcimer
At some point, probably on her fieldwork visit to Kentucky, Wyman bought an Appalachian dulcimer
The Appalachian dulcimer (many variant names; see below) is a fretted string instrument of the zither family, typically with three or four strings, originally played in the Appalachian region of the United States. The body extends the length of ...
, which she demonstrated at the 1916 concert premiering the songs from the Kentucky fieldwork. This may have been the instrument that was depicted in the photograph of Wyman seen at right, which appeared in ''Vogue
Vogue may refer to:
Business
* ''Vogue'' (magazine), a US fashion magazine
** British ''Vogue'', a British fashion magazine
** ''Vogue Arabia'', an Arab fashion magazine
** ''Vogue Australia'', an Australian fashion magazine
** ''Vogue China'', ...
'' magazine on 1 May 1917. Wyman's dulcimer was the work of J. Edward Thomas (1850–1933), the leading builder of the time.
According to Maud Karpeles
Maud Karpeles (12 November 1885 – 1 October 1976) was a British collector of folksongs and dance teacher.
Early life and education
Maud Pauline Karpeles was born at Lancaster Gate in Bayswater, London, in 1885. She was the third of five child ...
, who did fieldwork in the Appalachians around the same time as Wyman, the Appalachian dulcimer was confined to Kentucky at the time and not widely distributed even there. It likewise seems not to have been an essential aspect of Wyman's own performances. Seeger notes that it is a low-volume instrument, more suited to home than public use. Wyman donated her dulcimer to the Bucks County
Bucks County is a county in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. As of the 2020 census, the population was 646,538, making it the fourth-most populous county in Pennsylvania. Its county seat is Doylestown. The county is named after the English ...
Historical Society at some point before 1926.
Fieldwork in Canada
In July 1918 she collected French-language folk songs in Percé, Quebec
Percé is a small city near the tip of the Gaspé Peninsula in Quebec, Canada. Within the territory of the city there is a village community also called Percé.
Percé, member of the association of Most Beautiful Villages of Quebec, is mainly a t ...
, making use of an Edison phonograph
A phonograph, in its later forms also called a gramophone (as a trademark since 1887, as a generic name in the UK since 1910) or since the 1940s called a record player, or more recently a turntable, is a device for the mechanical and analogu ...
to make recordings of her speakers. She was assisted in the fieldwork by "Mr. Adolfo Betti of the Flonzaley Quartet", who put the music into written notation. The research was published as Wyman (1920). Wyman commented in her article on the nature of folk song fieldwork:
Folk-song gathering, to be well and thoroughly accomplished, must be done slowly and deliberately, regardless of the passing of time.
The singer should not be hurried, but should be allowed to give each song as memory brings it back, with reminiscences and casual conversation. Not the least fascinating of the many phases of collecting is the sudden blooming of a seemingly barren field. On making my
preliminary inquiries at Percé I should have feared to return empty-handed from my eager quest, had I not known the elusiveness of the
folk-song singer. Some of the best songs were obtained from people who, at first, professed utter ignorance of the subject.
Her performances around the same time before members of the Montreal branch of the American Folklore Society stimulated Canadian scholars to undertake fieldwork on French Canadian folk song.
Wyman later collaborated in further French Canadian fieldwork with Marius Barbeau; Barbeau (1920) mentions an unpublished set of folksongs, "Collection Barbeau-Wyman", consisting of "60 songs with text and phonograph recording, collected at Notre-Dame-du-Portage (Témiscouata) and Saint-André ( Kamouraska). The same archive held Wyman's Percé songs.
Later life
Wyman's concertizing continued throughout the second half of the 1910s and first half of the 1920s, often in performances for charitable causes put on by the upper stratum of New York City society. During the First World War, these included benefits for the soldiers of the French Army, as well as concerts in aid of French musicians impoverished by the war.
In the first half of the 1920s Wyman frequently appeared on concert programs with the early music
Early music generally comprises Medieval music (500–1400) and Renaissance music (1400–1600), but can also include Baroque music (1600–1750). Originating in Europe, early music is a broad musical era for the beginning of Western classical m ...
specialist, harpsichordist, and pedagogue Arthur Whiting, usually in college and university settings. Wyman herself owned a harpsichord, a 1921 model built by the Gaveau
Gaveau of Paris was a French piano manufacturer. The company was established by Joseph Gabriel Gaveau in 1847 in Paris and was one of the three largest piano makers in France (after Érard and Pleyel). Its factory was located at Fontenay-sous-Bois ...
firm in France.[Deredita (2007)]
She served for a time (ca. 1922–1923) on the faculty of the Mannes School of Music
Mannes School of Music is a music conservatory in The New School, a private research university in New York City. In the fall of 2015, Mannes moved from its previous location on Manhattan's Upper West Side to join the rest of the New School cam ...
as a teacher of English and French diction; Howard Brockway was also teaching there in the piano department.
A review of one of her performances in 1924 by Olin Downes
Edwin Olin Downes, better known as Olin Downes (January 27, 1886 – August 22, 1955), was an American music critic, known as "Sibelius's Apostle" for his championship of the music of Jean Sibelius. As critic of ''The New York Times'', he ex ...
in the ''New York Times'' praised her as "an excellent musician" but also reported her as being "not in good vocal condition". No further New York performances, it appears, were subsequently reported in the ''Times''. Her last public performances for which documentation survives took place in 1925.
On 14 July 1926, Wyman married a wealthy obstetrician and medical school professor named Henry McMahon Painter (12 July 1863 – 11 March 1934), whose patients include members of prominent New York families. According to Minton, Wyman and Painter had been lovers for many years; earlier in 1926 Painter had obtained a divorce from his wife. Painter retired from medicine in 1928; Wyman moved with him to France, where they lived in Grez-sur-Loing
Grez-sur-Loing (, literally ''Grez on Loing''; formerly Grès-en-Gâtinais, literally ''Grès in Gâtinais'') is a commune in the Seine-et-Marne department in north-central France.
Sights
* The Church of Notre-Dame et Saint-Laurent ''(Church o ...
, an artist-colony village not far from Paris. They later returned to New York, where Painter died in 1934.
With her marriage Wyman disappeared entirely from public life. She died in New York 11 September 1937, aged 51.
Scholarly legacy
Loraine Wyman left a substantial scholarly library, "an extensive collection of books about folk music and folklore mostly of the British Isles, the United States and France." On her death the collection, along with other materials, passed to her older sister Florence Wyman Ivins, who in the meantime had become a well-known artist. The elder sister donated these materials to Connecticut College
Connecticut College (Conn College or Conn) is a private liberal arts college in New London, Connecticut. It is a residential, four-year undergraduate institution with nearly all of its approximately 1,815 students living on campus. The college w ...
in 1948. The scholarly books remain in the Special Collections of the Connecticut College Library. Loraine Wyman's field notes and other papers were transferred in 2004 to an archive at Brown University
Brown University is a private research university in Providence, Rhode Island. Brown is the seventh-oldest institution of higher education in the United States, founded in 1764 as the College in the English Colony of Rhode Island and Providenc ...
, where they reside today. Her Gaveau harpsichord was transferred to the Yale University Collection of Musical Instruments
The Yale Collection of Musical Instruments, a division of the Yale School of Music, is a museum in New Haven, Connecticut. It was established in 1900 by a gift of historic keyboard instruments from Morris Steinert, and later enriched in 1960 and 1 ...
. The field notes she shared with George Lyman Kittredge are preserved in Houghton Library
Houghton Library, on the south side of Harvard Yard adjacent to Widener Library, is Harvard University's primary repository for rare books and manuscripts. It is part of the Harvard College Library, the library system of Harvard's Faculty of Art ...
at Harvard University.
Influence and assessment
Loraine Wyman is an almost totally forgotten figure today. The two published accounts of her life (Lee and McNeil 2001 and Stamler 2012) are both brief and incomplete, and the flurry of interest in the 1910s in Appalachian folk music which she helped create is little remembered; nowadays when one speaks of a "folk revival" in America, this is taken to mean the later period of interest in the 1940s through 1960s, going from Pete Seeger
Peter Seeger (May 3, 1919 – January 27, 2014) was an American folk singer and social activist. A fixture on nationwide radio in the 1940s, Seeger also had a string of hit records during the early 1950s as a member of the Weavers, notably ...
to Bob Dylan
Bob Dylan (legally Robert Dylan, born Robert Allen Zimmerman, May 24, 1941) is an American singer-songwriter. Often regarded as one of the greatest songwriters of all time, Dylan has been a major figure in popular culture during a career sp ...
(for details see ''Roots revival
A roots revival (folk revival) is a trend which includes young performers popularizing the traditional musical styles of their ancestors. Often, roots revivals include an addition of newly composed songs with socially and politically aware ly ...
''). Wyman's Appalachian field work with Brockway was outshone by the far more comprehensive study of Cecil Sharp
Cecil James Sharp (22 November 1859 – 23 June 1924) was an English-born collector of folk songs, folk dances and instrumental music, as well as a lecturer, teacher, composer and musician. He was the pre-eminent activist in the development of t ...
and Maud Karpeles
Maud Karpeles (12 November 1885 – 1 October 1976) was a British collector of folksongs and dance teacher.
Early life and education
Maud Pauline Karpeles was born at Lancaster Gate in Bayswater, London, in 1885. She was the third of five child ...
, begun almost exactly at the moment Wyman and Brockway left Kentucky. Wyman and Brockway's Appalachian volumes were later denigrated by the folk song scholar D. K. Wilgus, who complained that the texts had been altered and the singers of individual songs not identified.
Nevertheless, Wyman's work was and is appreciated by various individuals. The Australian composer-pianist Percy Grainger
Percy Aldridge Grainger (born George Percy Grainger; 8 July 188220 February 1961) was an Australian-born composer, arranger and pianist who lived in the United States from 1914 and became an American citizen in 1918. In the course of a long an ...
, who had a strong interest in folk music and did field work on folk songs himself, performed the Wyman-Brockway settings in public, and noted a kind of emotional connection to the published volumes: he performed the songs in ''Lonesome Tunes'' at home with his mother (taking the vocal part on a saxophone or sarrusophone
The sarrusophones are a family of metal double reed conical bore woodwind instruments patented and first manufactured by Pierre-Louis Gautrot in 1856. Gautrot named the sarrusophone after French bandmaster Pierre-Auguste Sarrus (1813–1876), who ...
), and said of the book after her death, "in other ways, also, a most sacred relic to me".
Stamler writes:
Loraine Wyman's work demands respect. She shone a popular light on Appalachian culture, and she presented the material in concert and in books in a way that, according to all available accounts, was designed to both inform and delight her readers and listeners while treating her sources with dignity and respect. For the first practitioner of the urban folk revival, that is no small accomplishment.
List of publications by Loraine Wyman
* Brockway, Howard, and Loraine Wyman (1917) Le jardinier indifferent (Basse-Normandie). For vocal solo with piano accompaniment composed by Brockway. New York : H.W. Gray.
* Brockway, Howard, and Loraine Wyman (1918) The nightingale : Harlan Co., Kentucky. Set for four-part women's chorus (SSAA). Publisher: New York : H.W. Gray.[Source for publications: ]WorldCat
WorldCat is a union catalog that itemizes the collections of tens of thousands of institutions (mostly libraries), in many countries, that are current or past members of the OCLC global cooperative. It is operated by OCLC, Inc. Many of the OCL ...
, at worldcat.org
* Brockway, Howard, and Loraine Wyman (1918) Brother Green or The dying soldier. (Harlan County, Kentucky). Set for a capella mixed chorus with rehearsal accompaniment for piano. New York, H.W. Gray.
* Prunières, Henry (1920) G. Francesco Malipiero. Translated from the French by Loraine Wyman. ''The Musical Quarterly'' 6: 326–341.
* Wyman, Loraine, and Howard Brockway (1916) ''Lonesome Tunes: Folk Songs from the Kentucky Mountains''. New York: H. W. Gray.
* Wyman, Loraine, and Howard Brockway (1920) ''Twenty Kentucky Mountain Songs'' Boston: Oliver Ditson & Co.
* Wyman, Loraine (1920) Songs from Percé. ''Journal of American Folklore
The ''Journal of American Folklore'' is a peer-reviewed academic journal published by the American Folklore Society. Since 2003, this has been done on its behalf by the University of Illinois Press. The journal has been published since the society' ...
'', Vol. 33, No. 130 (Oct. – Dec., 1920), pp. 321–335. Available on JSTOR
JSTOR (; short for ''Journal Storage'') is a digital library founded in 1995 in New York City. Originally containing digitized back issues of academic journals, it now encompasses books and other primary sources as well as current issues of j ...
.
Notes
References
* Anonymous (1907) "Ex-opera singer a suicide", ''Chicago Tribune'' 11 November 1907.
* Anonymous (1917) Hunting the lonesome tune in the wilds of Kentucky. ''Current Opinion'', ed. by Edward Jewitt Wheeler and Frank Crane. Vol. 62, pp. 100–101. Current Literature Publishing Company. Viewable on line at Google Books
* Barbeau, Marius (1920) Veillées du bon vieux temps à la bibliothèque Saint-Sulpice, à Montréal, les 18 mars et 24 avril 1919. Montréal: G. Ducharme.
* Bergen, Tunis Garret (1915) ''Genealogies of the State of New York: A Record of the Achievements of Her People in the Making of a Commonwealth and the Founding of a Nation, Volume 2''. Lewis Historical Publishing Company. Extracts available on Google Books:
* Deredita, Laurie M. (2007) "This is a heartwarming story: About how two libraries got together to find a good home for an interesting archival collection." ''Summer Newsletter 2007 (Friends of the Connecticut College Library)''. Available on line a
* Filene, Benjamin (2000) ''Romancing the folk: Public memory and American roots music''. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press.
* Gérardot, Anne (1916) ''Fonds Nicole Marić-Haviland (1872–2012): Répertoire numérique détaillé des archives de Paul Burty Haviland, Suzanne Lalique, Nicole Marić-Haviland, et des familles Haviland et Lalique''. Limoges: Archives départementales de la Haute-Vienne. Available on line.
* Greene, James S. III (1982) “Progressives in the Kentucky Mountains: The Formative Years … Settlement School, 1913–1930”. Ph.D. dissertation, Ohio State University, ED Policy and Leadership. Available on line a
* Henry, George William, and the Committee for the Study of Sex Variants (1948) ''Sex variants: a study of homosexual patterns, with sections contributed by specialists in particular fields''. P.B. Hoeber.
* Mercer, Henry C. (1926) The dulcimers of the Pennsylvania Germans. ''A Collection of papers read before the Bucks County Historical Society, Vol. 5''. Available on line a
* Minton, Henry L. (2002) ''Departing from Deviance: A History of Homosexual Rights and Emancipatory Science in America''. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. Cited page is available on line at Google Books
* Saerchinger, César (1918) ''International Who's Who in Music and Musical Gazetteer''. New York: Current Literature Publishing Company. On line at Google Books.
* Seeger, Charles (1977) ''Studies in Musicology, 1935–1975'', viewable on line at Google Books:
* Smith, Ralph Lee and Madeline MacNeil (2001) ''Folk Songs of Old Kentucky''. Mel Bay Publications.
* Stamler, Paul (2012) Codification and revival. Chapter 12 of Scott B. Spencer (ed.) ''The Ballad Collectors of North America: How Gathering Folksongs Transformed Academic Thought and American Identity''. Scarecrow Press. Extracts available on line at Google Books:
* Whisnant, David E. (1995) ''All That Is Native and Fine: The Politics of Culture in an American Region''. UNC Press Books. Extracts available on line at Google Books:
* Wilson, Mehitable Calef Coppenhagen (1900) ''John Gibson of Cambridge, Massachusetts: And His Descendants, 1634–1899, Volume 1''. McGill & Wallace. Extracts on line at Google Books:
External links
Brown University
Archival material; includes brief biography.
Iowa Digital Library
Promotional pamphlets for Wyman's concerts with portrait images; scan of first few pages of ''Folk Songs from the Kentucky Mountains''.
Photographs of Wyman taken by Paul Haviland, Paul Burty-Haviland.
A listing of two recordings made by Wyman for Victor (no sound files)
Harvard University Museums
Caricature portrait of Loraine Wyman in peasant costume created as a Christmas card (woodcut) by her sister Florence Wyman Ivins.
{{DEFAULTSORT:Wyman, Loraine
1885 births
1937 deaths
American folk singers
American folk musicians
American music arrangers
American women musicologists
Appalachian dulcimer players
20th-century American singers
20th-century American musicologists
20th-century American women singers