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Image Not Available for Community Ethnography Workshop: Lao Musical Performance Introduction
Community Ethnography Workshop: Lao Musical Performance Introduction
Image Not Available for Community Ethnography Workshop: Lao Musical Performance Introduction

Community Ethnography Workshop: Lao Musical Performance Introduction

Date2014 January 24
Mediumborn digital audio
DimensionsDuration: 8 Minutes, 51 Seconds
ClassificationsInformation Artifacts
Credit LineConnecticut Cultural Heritage Arts Program collections
DescriptionAudio file from Day 2 of a two-day community ethnography workshop series held at the East-West Grille. Manola Sidara is introducing the khene and lannat (xylophone) performance.
Object number2015.196.944.12
CopyrightIn Copyright
NotesSubject Note for the Community Ethnography Workshop Series, January 23-24, 2014: CCHAP organized a two-day training workshop for Connecticut folk and traditional artists and community scholars, focusing on community documentation/oral history methods, and recording techniques and preservation. The workshops were conducted by folklorists Greg Sharrow and Andy Kolovos, educator and archivist for the Vermont Folklife Center. Ten participants came from several ethnic backgrounds, art forms, and community organizations from across Connecticut. The trainings consisted of intensive sessions in recording equipment and techniques, best practices for interviewing community resource people, ethical practices and recognition of power issues in telling other people’s stories, archiving and preservation procedures, and using the materials in programming. Day 1 was an all-day session of presentations and discussions held at the Institute for Community Research (ICR). After morning sessions at ICR, Day 2 added a site visit to a Lao restaurant, East-West Grille, owned by educator/chef Manola Sidara who also participated in the workshops. At the restaurant, workshop participants interviewed and documented musicians, cooks, and community leaders. Participants also developed plans for projects in their own communities: these included collecting native stories about place, Assyrian textile arts documentation, and Cape Verdean histories. Many written and online materials and resources were given to participants for their use, and the entire workshop was recorded. Participants reported that the experience was very rich and practical, and they gained new tools and strategies that have been very useful in framing their ideas for community arts projects. Several of the participants also attended the previous 2013 trainings in presentation methods for educational settings, and they felt that this 2014 workshop deepened that experience and their knowledge. Project participants included: Andy Kolovos - Vermont Folklife Center archivist and folklorist Greg Sharrow - Vermont Folklife Center educator and folklorist Manola Sidara - Lao dance educator, chef, and community organizer Roberta Delgado Vincent - Cape Verdean community scholar and activist Howard Phengsomphone - Lao educator and community organizer Stan Karro - Finnish American Heritage Society community organizer Florence Betgevargiz - Assyrian community textile artist Maegan BetEnvia - Assyrian community scholar Trudie Lamb Richmond - Schaghticoke educator, storyteller, and elder Candyce Testa - Mashantucket Pequot educator and storyteller Additional materials for all these artists and this event exist in the CCHAP archive. Cataloging Note: This project was made possible in part by the Institute of Museum and Library Services MA-245929-OMS-20.
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Connecticut Cultural Heritage Arts Program collection, 2015.196.849.1, Connecticut Historical S…
Candyce Testa
2014 January 24