Horton Barker Explained

Horton Barker
Birth Date:August 23, 1889
Birth Place:Laurel Bloomery, Tennessee
Death Date:August 12, 1973
Nationality:Appalachian
Occupation:Traditional Singer

Horton Barker (August 23, 1889 – August 12, 1973)[1] [2] was an Appalachian traditional singer.

Barker was born in Laurel Bloomery, Tennessee, USA. Blind nearly all his life, Barker learned his unusually wide repertoire at the School for the Deaf and Blind in Staunton, Virginia, as well as at folk festivals in Whitetop, Virginia.

Barker's pure-toned tenor voice earned him a bare living around the region but also brought him to the attention of folklorist Alan Lomax, who recorded Barker in 1937, and later folksinger, folksong collector, and field recorder Sandy Paton, who recorded Barker's 1962 LP Horton Barker: Traditional Singer.[3] In his early 70s when this LP was recorded, Barker still had a fine singing voice, and the record was praised for its interesting range of material, from ballads (including four Child ballads) to sacred songs "in the older rubato style."[4] This record was released on the Folkways label, catalog number FA 2362.[5]

At the age of 75, Barker appeared at the 1965 Newport Folk Festival. A brief portion of the song "Pretty Sally" from Barker's Saturday performance at that festival is featured in the 1967 documentary film Festival, directed by Murray Lerner.[6]

Horton Barker died in 1973 at the age of 83.[2]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Horton Barker. December 28, 2020.
  2. Web site: Horton Barker. 2020-10-18. IMDb.
  3. Web site: Horton Barker - Traditional Singer. Smithsonian Folkways Recordings. en-US. 2019-09-10.
  4. Kahn. Ed. July 1963. Folk Song Discography. Western Folklore. 22. 3. 223–228. 10.2307/1498746. 1498746. JSTOR.
  5. Web site: Horton Barker - Traditional Singer. 2021-02-28. Smithsonian Folkways Recordings. en-US.
  6. Mary Katherine Aldin, "Horton Barker," in booklet accompanying the 2017 Criterion Collection Blu-ray release of Festival. .