Sold Date:
November 4, 2023
Start Date:
July 22, 2023
Final Price:
$49.95
(USD)
Seller Feedback:
2249
Buyer Feedback:
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A set of very rare 78 records from Tom Tom Records company circa 1940's. Recordings featuring Navajo, Tewa, Zuni, Taos Pueblo artists. All four records look to be in excellent condition, please check the high resolution pictures for condition. The sleeves are obviously not original.
Please see my other listing for another equally rare box set of four records from Candelario Records entitled "Indian Songs Of The Southwest".
These "Songs of the Red Men" series of records include vocals in the native
languages performed by individual singers or by choruses, and dance
songs. Most performers are accompanied by drummers and occasionally by
musicians with other native instruments.
Manuel
Archuleta, of San Juan Pueblo, was one of the first collectors of
Native American music in the United States. He formed his own record
production company, Tom Tom Records, Co., Albuquerque, New Mexico. His
label heading read "America's Original Folk Songs of the Redmen, Vocal
Documentation of Authentic Indian Songs." Additional slogans on his
records include "Manuel Archuleta Production Enterprise, Save-A-Chant
Project Series, Limited Issue." It is believed that Archuleta recorded
24 songs under this label. Archuleta worked as a U.S. Indian Service
stock and file clerk at the Albuquerque Indian School. He sang native
songs that he had learned from the old men of his village and started
collecting New Mexico Native American songs at the Indian School and
various pueblos in 1939. Archuleta's wife, Alyce Pinno of Laguna, also
worked for the Albuquerque Indian Office. Archuleta recorded Alyce's
father, George Pinno, known as one of the best song makers of his day.
Archuleta lectured at UNM and taught Indian dances and lore in the
schools. Archuleta first recorded music as a hobby, and later sold his
records.
In the 1940s Archuleta made a series of 78 rpm lps under his
Tom Tom records label. In the 1970s, Mary-Kay Co. of South El Monte,
California published some of his recordings. Archuleta realized that the
native people of New Mexico were reluctant to have him record their
songs, but once they listened to his recordings and understood that he
was helping to preserve their heritage, they began urging him to record
their songs. Archuleta captured as many authentic Native American songs
as he could, knowing that when old men die they take with them the songs
that others had failed to learn. To further this cause he donated his
recordings to the University of New Mexico. Musicologists researching
Native American songs have found Manuel Archuleta's recordings useful.
For example, in Music and Dance of the Tewa People, authors Gertrude
Prokosch Kurath and Antonio Garcia have used these recordings along with
ethnographers' film recordings, to combine transcriptions of the music
with dance glyphs