Nick Spitzer | |
---|---|
Born | New York City, New York, U.S. |
Alma mater | |
Occupation(s) | Radio host, folklorist |
Known for | Hosting American Routes |
Nicholas R. Spitzer (born 1950 or 1951) [1] is an American radio personality and folklorist.
He has hosted the public radio show American Routes since its 1997 premiere. He was Louisiana's first State Folklorist, and the founding director of the Louisiana Folklife Program. He has also been the senior folklife specialist at the Smithsonian Institution's Center for Folklife and Cultural Heritage, [2] and a commentator and producer for NPR, CBS and ABC.
Spitzer is the editor and co-writer of numerous books, including Public Folklore and Blues for New Orleans: Mardi Gras and America’s Creole Soul. He is a professor of Anthropology and American Studies at Tulane University. [3]
Spitzer was born in New York City and raised in rural Connecticut. [4] He became interested in radio at a young age after listening to broadcasts of baseball games. [5]
He entered the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania in 1968, later graduating in 1972 with a degree in anthropology. [4] [6] He earned a doctorate in anthropology from the University of Texas at Austin, graduating in 1976. His dissertation focused on zydeco music. [4] [6]
Spitzer was hired by the Smithsonian to help plan the 1976 United States Bicentennial Festival. [7]
While a student at the University of Pennsylvania, Spitzer joined the staff of WXPN in Philadelphia in 1969. [4] He later became the station's program director. [8] He was introduced to Louisiana music while working at the radio station. [5] He later worked at WMMR from 1972-1974. [4] [8] After leaving Philadelphia, Spitzer spent time in Louisiana, where he learned more about the state's music and culture. [4]
While studying for his doctorate in Austin, Texas, he worked at KOKE-FM [9] and as a host and producer at NPR affiliate KUT-FM. [4]
In 1997, Spitzer became the host of American Routes. [1]
Spitzer moved to Baton Rouge in 1978. [4] He served as Louisiana State Folklorist from 1978 to 1985. [9] He founded the Louisiana Folklife Program and helped develop the Baton Rouge Blues Festival. He also produced a five-LP recording series on Louisiana folklife. In 1984, he organized the Louisiana Folklife Pavilion at the 1984 World’s Fair in New Orleans [2] and directed the documentary ZYDECO: Creole Music and Culture in Rural Louisiana. [4]
Spitzer left Louisiana in 1985 after he was hired by the Smithsonian Institution as a senior folklife specialist. [1]
From 1990-1997, he served as artistic director for the "Folk Masters" concert and broadcast series from Carnegie Hall and Wolf Trap; from 1992-2001, he produced the NPR broadcasts of Independence Day concerts on the National Mall. [1] [9]
Spitzer accepted a position at the University of New Orleans in 1997, [4] and was hired by Tulane University in 2008. [1]
Spitzer was diagnosed with cancer in 1979, and underwent multiple rounds of chemotherapy and stays at Baton Rouge General Hospital; he entered remission in 1980. [4]
Spitzer lived in New Orleans in the early 2000s, and lived in the Acadiana region after he was displaced by Hurricane Katrina in 2005. [7] Following the hurricane, Spitzer was vocal about the need for recovery to focus on cultural elements of New Orleans, including music and food. [10]
As of 2023, Spitzer lives in New Orleans with his wife and son. [4]
He was named the Louisiana Humanist of the Year in 2006 for his work towards cultural recovery after Hurricane Katrina.
In 2014, Spitzer received the James Williams Rivers Prize in Louisiana Studies from the University of Louisiana for his contribution to Louisiana folklore. [7]
He is a recipient of a 2023 National Heritage Fellowship awarded by the National Endowment for the Arts, which is the United States government's highest honor in the folk and traditional arts. [11] [2]
Zydeco is a music genre that was created in rural Southwest Louisiana by Afro-Americans of Creole heritage. It blends blues and rhythm and blues with music indigenous to the Louisiana Creoles, such as la la and juré. Musicians use the French accordion and a Creole washboard instrument called the frottoir.
The music of Louisiana can be divided into three general regions: rural south Louisiana, home to Creole Zydeco and Old French, New Orleans, and north Louisiana. The region in and around Greater New Orleans has a unique musical heritage tied to Dixieland jazz, blues, and Afro-Caribbean rhythms. The music of the northern portion of the state starting at Baton Rouge and reaching Shreveport has similarities to that of the rest of the US South.
Clifton Chenier, was an American musician known as a pioneer of zydeco, a style of music that arose from Creole music, with R&B, blues, and Cajun influences. He sang and played the accordion. Chenier won a Grammy Award in 1983.
The Florida Parishes, on the east side of the Mississippi River—an area also known as the Northshore or Northlake region—are eight parishes in the southeastern portion of the U.S. state of Louisiana.
Maison de Soul is a Louisiana-based Zydeco and blues record label. It was founded in 1974 in Ville Platte, Louisiana by Floyd Soileau and remains under his ownership. It is one of four record labels under Soileau's Flat Town Music Company umbrella, and combined the Flat Town labels make up "the largest body of Cajun, zydeco, and swamp music in the world". Living Blues magazine has called Maison de Soul "the country's foremost zydeco label".
Wilson Anthony "Boozoo" Chavis was an American accordion player, singer, songwriter and bandleader. He was one of the pioneers of zydeco, the fusion of Louisiana Creole and blues music developed in southwest Louisiana.
Beau Jocque was a Louisiana French Creole zydeco musician and songwriter active in the 1990s.
American Routes is a weekly two-hour public radio program that presents the breadth and depth of the American musical and cultural landscape. Hosted by Nick Spitzer, American Routes is syndicated by 225 stations, with over half a million listeners. It is produced out of New Orleans and distributed by PRX. American Routes is the most widely heard regular presence for tradition-derived and community-based music on public radio today.
Louisiana Creoles are a Louisiana French ethnic group descended from the inhabitants of colonial Louisiana before it became a part of the United States during the period of both French and Spanish rule. They share cultural ties such as the traditional use of the French, Spanish, and Creole languages and predominant practice of Catholicism.
Elemore Morgan Jr. was an American painter, photographer, and educator. He was recognized in the Southern United States as a leading contemporary landscape artist. He was a professor of art at University of Louisiana at Lafayette, from 1965 until 1998. His paintings of rice farms in Vermilion Parish have been widely exhibited, from Paris to Los Angeles.
Barry Jean Ancelet is a Cajun folklorist in Louisiana French and ethnomusicologist in Cajun music. He has written several books, and under his pseudonym Jean Arceneaux, including poetry and lyrics to songs.
Amanda Christian Amaya-Shaw is an American Cajun fiddler and singer from Mandeville, Louisiana. She was inducted into the Louisiana Music Hall of Fame in 2020.
Cajun music has its roots based in the ballads of the French-speaking Acadians of Canada, and in country music.
Roger David Abrahams was an American folklorist whose work focused on the expressive cultures and cultural histories of the Americas, with a specific emphasis on African American peoples and traditions.
Quiana Lynell is an American blues and jazz singer, arranger and songwriter.
Inez Catalon was an American Creole ballad singer, who was one of the most well-known performers of the genre known as Louisiana "home music". These are a cappella versions of ballads and love songs, drinking songs, game songs, lullabies and waltzes performed by women in the home, passed down from earlier generations to provide entertainment for the family before radio and television existed. Home music is not considered part of the public performance repertoire of Cajun and zydeco music because the songs were sung in the home by women, rather than in the dance halls of southwestern Louisiana which featured almost exclusively male performers.
The Louisiana Library Association (LLA) is a professional organization for Louisiana's librarians and library workers. It is headquartered in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. The LLA publishes The LLA Bulletin (est. 1937) and Louisiana Libraries magazine.
Joyce Marie Jackson is the James J. Parsons Endowed Professor and chair of the department of geography and anthropology at Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. A cultural anthropologist, ethnomusicologist and folklorist, she was also the director of the university's African and African American studies program from 2010 to 2016.
Alfred Mercier was a Creole doctor, poet, playwright, novelist, and philosopher. He spoke Greek, Latin, French, and Louisiana Creole. He wrote seven French novels and is considered a post-American Civil War author and contributor to the literature of New Orleans. His first novel was Le Fou de Palerme written in 1873. His works featured a broad range of topics including clerical celibacy, abortion, and slavery and its aftermath. Alfred corresponded with French scholars such as Eugène Rolland and folklorist Henri Gaidoz. He founded Athénée Louisianais in 1876 which was a cultural association. In 1887 he completed a play entitled Fortunia Drame en Cinq Actes . Alfred's half-first cousin was Creole playwright Louis Placide Canonge and his half-uncle was Jean François Canonge. His sister married French American senator Pierre Soulé and Alfred completed his biography entitled Biographie de P. Soulé, Sénateur à Washington in 1848.