Way Out West in Kansas

Presented By
Adam Miller

Tall tales came out of hard times and inspired many early western folk songs. The folk music of Kansas and Missouri popularized stories of steamboats, railroads, outlaws, superstitions, and natural disasters, many of the songs brought to the frontier by 19th-century settlers seeking greener pastures and other tunes arising from life experiences on the plains. They were passed down from generation to generation, and a number were documented and preserved during the Great Depression as part of the WPA’s Federal Music Project and Federal Writers Project.
 
Folk singer and autoharp virtuoso Adam Miller recalls that era, weaving a selection of songs and stories into a performance focusing on the Show-Me and Sunflower states. An accomplished folklorist and historian, Miller also is a collector who has amassed more than 5,000 traditional folk songs.
More in this series:
24
Jun
Brandon G. Kinney: The Mormon War of 1838
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15
Jul
Johnny D. Boggs - Jesse James and the Movies
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26
Aug
Douglas D. Scott - Missouri Civil War Archaeology
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9
Sep
Lori Cox-Paul - Finding Your Family in the 1940 U....
Central Library |
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Way Out West in Kansas

Date & Location
-
Details
Adults