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5 Documents Found
![Radio Free Dixie](images/fileicons/nodigital.png)
Date: 5/28/1965Call Number: RFW 014Format: CDProgram: Radio Free DixieCollection: Robert F. Williams!
We have no legal rights to reproduce or distribute this item!
Blues, social conditions 1890-1940s, made in UK, artists anonymous, Blues in the Mississippi Night proudly dedicated to the gallant freedom fighters resolutely struggling against US racism and imperialism
![Radio Free Dixie](images/fileicons/nodigital.png)
Date: 5/28/1965Call Number: RFW 015Format: CDProgram: Radio Free DixieCollection: Robert F. Williams!
We have no legal rights to reproduce or distribute this item!
Blues in the Mississippi Night, part 1 - all material on this CD is the same as the material on RFW 014
![Radio Free Dixie](images/fileicons/nodigital.png)
Date: 5/28/1965Call Number: RFW 016Format: CDProgram: Radio Free DixieCollection: Robert F. Williams!
We have no legal rights to reproduce or distribute this item!
Blues in the Mississippi Night, part 2 - chain gang songs, stories from former chain gang workers, some material repeated on RFW 014
![Les Chanteuses Africaines](images/fileicons/nodigital.png)
Broadcasting from the Atlanta-based WFRG station, Alicia Banks hosts her weekly radio program "Les Chanteuses Africaines: The African Female Singers featuring the Musical & Literary Voices of Black Women". In this particular recording, the show at hand is part of a special marathon of gay and lesbian themed programming at WFRG. During the course of the show, Banks addresses the intersecting issues of race, homophobia and the AIDS crisis. She also critically examines contradictions of homophobia within racially oppressed communities, and dissects the notion of the need of a singular construct of closet and coming out. Included are clips of stand-up comedy from Lea Delaria, Whoopi Goldberg and Sam Kinison, There are also songs performed by and are about LGBT people. The songs “B.D. Woman Blues” by Lucille Bogen and “The Prove It To Me Blues” by Ma Rainey remain in good audio quality, while some of the other songs included are of a poorer recording quality.
![The Weary Blues](images/fileicons/nodigital.png)
Date: 3/18/1958Call Number: FI 258Format: 1/4 7 1/2 ipsProducers: MGMProgram: Freedom Is A Constant StruggleCollection: Freedom is a Constant Struggle
Langston Hughes reciting some of his most famous blues-related poems with jazz accompaniment by leading musicians. Issued as a record album. Used in the making of the "Hughes and Blues" program series. Also, a poem recited by Lonnie Elder, "Scenes in the City."
5 Documents Found