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Cantemos a La Tarde, Volume II, Songs in English , 2015, 2015-2017

 File — Box: 1, CD: 16

Scope and Content

From the Collection: Beginning in 2015, Frank McCulloch, Jr. began donating CDs with his recordings to the Center for Southwest Research, UNM Library. Included also is a copy of Frank’s personal notebook of over 200 songs and their lyrics collected from 1959-2015. These CDs have some of his favorites. He has added his own Bilingual lyrics to some of them. The CDs have songs recorded live in his studio, with Frank singing solo or Frank accompanied by his musical companions. Several are commercial albums put out by McCulloch and Sus Amigos, from Albuquerque. The amigos are McCulloch, on guitar, Luis Campos, on guitar, and Melody Mock, on violin. Jack Loeffler taped the trio in Frank’s art studio between 2006 and 2015. The trio performs annually at Nuestra Musica concerts at the Lensic Theatre in Santa Fe, Casa San Ysidro in Corrales, at numerous university and museum functions around New Mexico, and at local cafes.

The collection also contains articles about McCulloch’s teaching years, music events, landscape painting shows and his views and philosophy. Included also are examples of his contributions to other regional publications. It also has articles and a book that his father wrote, background on the family’s history, and photographs of his ancestors, Frank and his own family, and his musical associates.

McCulloch’s multicultural heritage - Hispanic, French, Irish - has influenced his choice of music. Like his paintings and poetry, many of his songs also reflect New Mexico’s history, culture and land. As a child he heard the Spanish folk music of New Mexico and Mexico. He also learned of Irish and American tunes through his father. He also studied and lived in Mexico. McCulloch wants to preserve and teach la musica de la gente, the music of the people, so it won’t be lost. Playing and singing since the 1950s, he prefers songs with emotion and meaning for the everyday man, be they about love, work or injustice. Some of the pieces in the collection date to sixteenth century Spain. He sings them like the old settlers of New Mexico would have done them.

The range of music that Frank and the group sing and play is varied. Among them are a New Mexico lullaby from Los Pastores; a tragic love song from Mexico; an Irish war protest tune; and stanzas about homeless bums and hobos suffering during the American Great Depression of the 1930s. The group also added some more contemporary renditions, such as Borderline, about Mexican immigration and Dance Me to the End of Love, in honor of Jewish musicians forced to play for their Nazi German persecutors during the Holocaust. There are also tunes about injustice and racism toward African Americans in the United States and Frank’s tribute to Martin Luther King. Another tract features Lola, composed by E. A. Tony Mares, with music by Cipriano Vigil. It was Mares' recollection of a madam from Old Town Albuquerque and her nostalgia for the community of the past. Frank also composed a corrido about an incident that happened in the history of his family and a memory song about a friend. He also wrote a song based on a poem by A.E. Housman.

It is interesting that McCulloch, Jr. also crossed paths with John Donald Robb. By the early 1960s McCulloch was playing with music groups in Albuquerque, as an early newspaper clipping in the collection attests. John Donald Robb, Dean of the College of Arts, UNM, was taping music across the state in those years. He met young McCulloch in Albuquerque and recorded about forty five of his folk songs in 1964-1965, which are in the Robb Collection at the CSWR. These can be heard on the New Mexico Digital Collection (econtent.unm.edu) under the CSWR section for John Donald Robb Field Recordings. Also included there are the melodies and the words to McCulloch’s songs, as transcribed by Robb and his students. These McCulloch songs recorded by Robb are mostly in Spanish but others are in English. Some of these same songs reappear in the CDs McCulloch gave the CSWR in 2015 and 2016. He is likely the only musician still living that Robb interviewed in his day. Today McCulloch works with the Robb Musical Trust on various projects to promote New Mexico music and the Robb archive.

The collection also contains various awards given to McCulloch for his outstanding art and music, posters for programs he starred in or participated in, and articles about him. For example, in 1981 he exhibited his paintings in the New Mexico Governor’s Gallery in the State capital. The show catalog is in the collection. He also exhibited there in 2001. That same year the Dartmouth Street Gallery, in Albuquerque, featured his work and that of twenty of his students. His life and career are portrayed well in a 2002 New Mexico Highlands University tribute to him as their distinguished alumnus. Adams State University, Alamosa, Colorado, awarded him the Premio Hilos Culturales during his folk song concert there in 2015. The award is in the collection. In addition, Frank donated a book with his thoughts and poetry assembled over the years. There is also a new edition of the book his father, Frank McCulloch, Sr., wrote on Governor Albino Perez and the 1837 Revolt in New Mexico, based on material from a descendant of Perez. This is truly an interesting and priceless collection and is but a small part of the wonderful life of this New Mexico Renaissance man.

Forms part of the John Donald Robb Archive of Southwestern Music.

Dates

  • 2015-2017

Language of Materials

From the Collection: English Spanish

Access Restrictions

The collection is open for research.

Extent

From the Collection: 1 box, 20 CDS

General

  1. 1. Dance Me to the End of Love, composed by Leonard Cohen, chant, dedicated to Jewish musicians who died in the Nazi death camps, Frank McCulloch has adapted some lyrics to Spanish, Bilingual
  2. 2. When Last I Came to Ludlow, selected from the lyrics, poetry of A.E. Housman, written during the turn-of-the-twentieth century, England, arranged to music by Frank McCulloch
  3. 3. Barbara Allen, traditional English ballad, nineteenth century, about lost love, became a favorite in the mountains of the American Southern United States
  4. 4. Blow the Candle Out, traditional early English song, sung to a jig that was considered to be quite risque
  5. 5. Say Hello to the Moon, composed by Frank McCulloch, Jr., song based on a poem written by Frank McCulloch, Jr., dedicated to a deceased friend
  6. 6. Good Morning, Mr. Railroad Man, traditional, railroad song from the 1920s
  7. 7. Dog Canyon, composed by Utah Phillips, ballad, tells true tale of a gunfight over water in Southeastern New Mexico during the 1890s, all the people named are historic, ranching
  8. 8. Little Joe, the Wrangler, traditional, ballad, composed by N. Howard Jack Thorpe, before 1908, regarded as one of the top 100 Western songs of all time, ranching, cowboy
  9. 9. When the Work's All Done This Fall, traditional, ballad, like Little Joe, the Wrangler deals with death due to a cattle stampede, one of the many hazards of life as a cowboy
  10. 10. The Cannonball, traditional, early railroad song
  11. 11. Old Paint, traditional, another old time cowboy song, probably based on an early cattle-herding tune
  12. 12. Streets of Laredo, traditional, ballad, haunting story of a dying cowboy, traced back to an earlier eighteenth century account of an English soldier dying of love and disease
  13. 13. Red River Valley, traditional, late nineteenth century, song of departure, also known as The Cowboy Love Song
  14. 14. On a Monday, composed by Lead Belly, Huddie Ledbetter, comic and tragic chant about going to jail where he had chalked up his own personal time
  15. 15. Mule Skinner Blues, traditional, was a favorite of Jimmie Rodgers, the great early blues yodeler of the 1920s and 1930s
  16. 16. Billy the Kid, traditional, recounts the well-known tale of rival factions during the Lincoln County War in Southeastern New Mexico in 1878; both this song and Dog Canyon reveal the violence that prevailed in post-Civil War New Mexico, ranching, commerce, politics
  17. 17. Down in the Valley, is still sung in the mountains of the American Southern United States, was a favorite of Burl Ives, some additional lyrics by Frank McCulloch, Jr.
  18. 18. Foggy Dew, traditional, English, Irish and Scottish folk song, considered a naughty song even into the twentieth century, was a favorite of Carl Sandburg
  19. 19. Spanish is a Loving Tongue, composed by Charlie Badger Clarke, an early cowboy poet, in 1907, beautiful lyrical theme
  20. 20. Down in the Mine, composed by Merle Travis, warns young men in the mountains of the Southern United States not to risk their fortune and lives down in the mine, mining
  21. 21. John Henry, traditional, story of a mining spike driver who died from exhaustion after winning a race with a new mechanical spike driving machine that drove drills into solid rock in a specific time, John Henry was a real man, he wanted to save the spiking jobs for his fellow miners

Creator

Repository Details

Part of the UNM Center for Southwest Research & Special Collections Repository

Contact:
University of New Mexico Center for Southwest Research & Special Collections
University Libraries, MSC05 3020
1 University of New Mexico
Albuquerque NM 87131
505-277-6451