Art Rosenbaum, painter and preserver of folk music, dies at 83
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Art Rosenbaum, painter and preserver of folk music, dies at 83
In an undated image provided via Rosenbaum family, Art Rosenbaum. Rosenbaum, a painter and folk musician acclaimed for a half-century of field recordings of American vernacular music, including old-time Appalachian fiddle tunes and ritual music imported from Africa by enslaved people, died on Sept. 4, 2022, at a hospital in Athens, Ga., his adopted hometown. He was 83. Via Rosenbaum family via The New York Times.

by Richard Fausset



ATLANTA, GA.- Art Rosenbaum, a painter and folk musician acclaimed for a half-century of field recordings of American vernacular music, including old-time Appalachian fiddle tunes and ritual music imported from Africa by enslaved people, died Sept. 4 at a hospital in Athens, Georgia, his adopted hometown. He was 83.

His son, Neil Rosenbaum, said the cause was complications of cancer.

Art Rosenbaum’s passion for documenting a broad range of American musical traditions as they were passed down and performed at work camps, church gatherings and rural living rooms expanded upon the famous field recording work of the ethnomusicologist Alan Lomax. An important inspiration was Pete Seeger, another high-profile 20th-century champion of folk music. Rosenbaum wrote that Seeger had once told him, “Don’t learn from me, learn from the folks I learned from.”

Rosenbaum called it “good advice, and the kick in the rear that got me going.”

In 2007, the Atlanta-based label Dust-to-Digital released the first of two box sets of compilations from Rosenbaum’s trove, “Art of Field Recording Volume I: Fifty Years of Traditional American Music Documented by Art Rosenbaum,” which won a Grammy Award for best historical album.

The pop music website Pitchfork called the release “revelatory” and “an indispensable counterpoint to Harry Smith’s ‘Anthology of American Folk Music,’ ” a reference to the 1952 song compilation that remains a canonical touchstone for folk musicians.

Like Smith, the bohemian polymath who compiled the “Anthology,” Rosenbaum was an accomplished visual artist. As an art teacher, he spent the bulk of his career at the University of Georgia, in Athens, where his energetic paintings, often depicting the musicians he recorded, and his ideas about the democratization of culture had an influence that resonated far beyond the classroom.

Michael Stipe, the visual artist and singer with the Athens rock band R.E.M., who was a student of Rosenbaum’s in the early 1980s, said Rosenbaum’s goal “was to blur the lines between what is outsider and insider, and to bring together this untrained music and art with trained music and art, and acknowledge that each have immense power, and that they’re not that far apart.”

Arthur Spark Rosenbaum was born Dec. 6, 1938, in Ogdensburg, New York, in St. Lawrence County. His mother, Della Spark Rosenbaum, was a medical illustrator who encouraged her children’s artistic inclinations. His father, David Rosenbaum, was an Army pathologist who sometimes sang what his son described as “Northern street songs.” Arthur later recorded one of these songs, his father’s a cappella version of the ribald 18th-century Child ballad “Our Goodman,” and included it in the 2007 box set.

The family eventually moved to Indianapolis, where Rosenbaum, entranced by traditional music, absorbed the Harry Smith anthology and the contemporary folk stars of the day. In high school he won an art contest at the Indiana State Fair and spent the $25 prize money on a five-string banjo. He went on to become a preeminent expert on traditional banjo playing and tunings and to record several albums.

In the mid-1950s Rosenbaum moved to New York City, then the epicenter of the burgeoning folk revival, earning an undergraduate degree in art history and a master’s degree in fine arts from Columbia University. In the summers he worked at a resort hotel on Lake Michigan, where he began making recordings of nearby field workers from Mexico and the American South.

In 1958, Rosenbaum tracked down and recorded in Indianapolis a musician named Scrapper Blackwell, whom he described as “one of the best and most influential blues guitarists of the 1920s and ’30s.” Back in New York, as Rosenbaum was fond of recalling, a fellow roots music obsessive named Bob Dylan would pester him for any details he could muster about Blackwell’s life and playing style.

It was in New York that Rosenbaum met the artist Margo Newmark, who became his wife and lifelong collaborator. She survives him.




In addition to her and his son, Neil, a filmmaker and musician, he is survived by a sister, Jenny Rosenbaum, a writer; and a brother, Victor Rosenbaum, a concert pianist.

After eight years of teaching studio art at the University of Iowa, Rosenbaum in 1976 took a similar job at the University of Georgia’s Lamar Dodd School of Art. With Athens as a home base, he and Newmark Rosenbaum continued making field recordings, many of them in and around Georgia, and giving the musicians they met opportunities to play before new audiences.

“As these traditional musicians were identified and then brought out,” said Judith McWillie, an emerita art professor at the university, “and as there were more festivals and opportunities for them to play, people began to envision an identity for Georgia that was somewhat different from the one that it had. This was the 1970s, and coming off some extremely difficult times in the South.”

Folk music, she said, revealed a shared cultural history: “The musicians Art brought out were Black and white.”

In 1984, Rosenbaum recorded an album of stories and songs by Howard Finster, the self-taught artist, preacher and self-proclaimed “man of visions” whose work has become indelibly associated with 20th-century Georgia after its use on album covers by R.E.M. and the band Talking Heads.

He also recorded the McIntosh County Shouters, an African American group from coastal Georgia who performed the “ring shout,” which Rosenbaum described as “an impressive fusion of call-and-response singing, polyrhythmic percussion and expressive and formalized dancelike movements.” The ring shout, he asserted, was “the oldest African American performance tradition on the North American continent.”

Brenton Jordan, a member of the group, said of the Rosenbaums, “It’s their legwork that actually kind of introduced the McIntosh County Shouters to the world.” He noted that the ring shout, once on the verge of extinction, has in recent years been performed by his group in Washington at the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts and the National Museum of African American History and Culture.

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The Rosenbaums published a book on the ring shout in 1998. With drawings of the performers by Rosenbaum and photos of them by Newmark Rosenbaum, it depicts a place and a culture that seems beguilingly out of phase with modern life.

Many of Rosenbaum’s other paintings and drawings are loose allegorical works in which the old and the new clash and cohabitate, with traditional musicians sharing space on the canvas with modern-day hipsters, skateboarders and documentarians (often Rosenbaum himself).

As a painter, he was inspired by Cezanne and Max Beckmann, the German Expressionist. At times his work recalls the painting of Thomas Hart Benton, the American regionalist. Some of Rosenbaum’s works are large murals on historical themes.

Beginning in the late 1970s, Athens saw an explosion of forward-thinking rock musicians, many of whom, like Stipe, had ties to the Georgia art school. Rosenbaum’s passions always ran to traditional music, but he remained an inspiration for contemporary musicians.

Lance Ledbetter, the founder and co-director of the Dust-to-Digital label, recalled Vic Chesnutt, the brilliant, idiosyncratic Athens-based songwriter who died in 2009, speaking of Rosenbaum, quoting him as saying:

“When you move to Athens, and you hear about this guy who plays banjo and knows all of these songs, you just follow him around like a puppy dog. And I’m not the only one who did that.”

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.










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