Skip to main content

Janet Bellamy Pope, recorder, 1974

 File — Box: 4, CD: 349

Scope and Content

From the Collection: The collection consists of 591 recordings of folk songs, folklore and local histories collected by Ruben Cobos from 1944-1974 in northern New Mexico and southern Colorado. Also included in the collection are about 270 additional recordings of selected music - a few from New Mexico, many from Mexico and Latin America, and others from Spain, Europe and the U.S. The recordings vary in quality between good, fair, and poor. They contain both musical and spoken content. Most recordings are in Spanish, however, a few are in English. Others are Bilingual or represent the use of Spanglish.

The informants are mainly from New Mexico and Colorado, with a few from California, Texas and Mexico. The collections focuses heavily on spoken Spanish, with examples of poetry, riddles, proverbs, legends, anecdotes, folk tales, mysteries, prayers, nursery rhymes, games, jokes, language use, tricky words, tongue twisters, memories, local history and family history. The Spanish songs include alabados, entriegas for weddings and baptisms, inditas, corridos and ballads, pastores, posadas, love songs, folk dance music, etc. Traditions of Los Juanes and Los Manueles, Penitente morada practices, including women Penitentes, Holy Week songs and activities and the role of the church, santos and fiestas in the lives of the people are also included. There are also several lectures on folklore, music and culture by Cobos and other scholars, including Fray Angelico Chavez, Charles Briggs, Alfonso Ortiz, Arthur Leon Campa, Marta Weigle, Guadalupe Baca Vaughn, Anita Thomas and others. Included also are autobiographical accounts by Ruben Cobos and his wife Elvira.

Songs and stories about and for children, their health and education are included. Although the majority of the information is about Spanish and Hispanic traditions, the collection also provides some materials by and about non-Hispanics and the relationship between the races. A small amount of stories and songs relate to Apaches, Navajos, Pueblos, Mexicanos, African Americans, and Anglos (gringos).

Songs and stories by or about males show them in every walk of life, as rich and poor, old and young, as husbands, widowers, fathers, sons, relatives, compadres, friends, orphans, opponents, collaborators, kings, princes, commoners, giants, ranchers, cowboys, shepherds, farmers, woodcutters, shoemakers, vendors, railroaders, hunters, priests, doctors, teachers, politicians, attorneys, meteorologists, soldiers, witches, simpletons, gamblers, murderers, drunks, adulturers and thieves.

Recordings by and about women add value and perspective to the collection. Females are rich and poor, old and young, girl friends, lovers, adulteresses, wives, widows, mothers, comadres, church attendees, housekeepers for priests, nuns, princesses, queens, teachers, curanderas, cooks and witches. Some of the characters found in the collection are Cinderella, Genoveva de Brabanate, Goldilocks, Delgadina, La Llorona, Doña Cebolla, Dona Fortuna and the Virgin Mary, as well as San Antonio, San Pedro, Bartoldo, Don Cacahuate, Juan Charrasqueado, Pedro and Juan de Urdemalas, Ali Baba, Don Dinero, Tio Botitas and others.

The collection contains descriptions, traditions, local history and songs for New Mexico, Colorado, Texas, Missouri, Kansas and Mexico. There are references to the Civil War in New Mexico, the Spanish American War, World War I and World War II. Stories tell of superstitions, supernatural, unexplained phenomenon, balls of fire and light, lightening, a comet, the sun, moon, finding treasure, ghosts, devils and magic. Additional topics include traditional food and cooking, health and home remedies. Included also are stories and references to insects, animals, birds, fish and snakes, as well as floods and storms, and automobiles and airplanes.

Dates

  • 1974

Language of Materials

From the Collection: English, Spanish

Access Restrictions

The collection is open for research.

Extent

From the Collection: 13 boxes (12.25 cu. ft.)

General

Gilberto Romero, b. 1915, Walsenburg, Colorado. Begins at 00:12 and ends at 27:39. 1. Brujas (fair recording, local history, personal experience, tecolote, owl, witches, women, Spanish, codeswitching into English, Bilingual, language, the poeple would kill the owls and burn their bodies); 2. Story, El penco, old horse (fair recording, Penco is a name for a man who visits a married woman while her husband is gone, a woman turned her penco into a cabbage to hide him from her husband, when her husband got home he ate some of the cabbage, when the witch wife turned the cabbage back into a man, he was missing an arm, women); 3. Brujos (fair recording, local history, personal experience, male witches, sorcerers, curses); 4. La Llorona (fair recording, legend, there was woman who walked along the road crying, the people said it was a bird not a woman, the speaker does not believe in La Llorona but the story goes that a young woman was often heard crying at night, she cried due to a tragedy in her life - the Native Americans had attacked her home and killed her family, the woman's body was buried nearby and she would cry, a different version of La Llorona); 4. Enbrujos (fair recording, legends, local history, bewitching, possessions, possessed people, curing people of demons, witches); 5. El arbolario, herbolario, herbs, yerbas, cures, home remedies, curandera, health, medicine); 6. Home remedies (fair recording, local traditions, yerba buena); 4. El ojo (fair recording, told by Sadie Romero, b. 1930, Walsenburg, Colorado, legend, superstition, curses, speaker describes different ways in which the people would try to determine who had cursed them, mal ojo, ojo is a curse given to small beautiful children, eggs, the same person who gives the ojo must cure it).

General

Gilberto Romero, b. 1925 and Sadie Romero, b. 1930. Begins at 27:40 and ends at 34:40. Personal experience (the speaker's father was a mailman, father saw his wife turn into a coyote, witch, tells various stories of experiences with witches as animals, coyotes, horses, tecolotes, owl, local family of witches, the townspeople feared the witches, Fridays are special days for witches because they can hear people talking about them).

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