
Max Hunter, circa 1950. Photo courtesy Springfield-Greene County Library
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Max Hunter Collection
Max Hunter's
legacy preserves the musical heritage of the Ozarks. With the
advent of radio and TV, and its pervasive influence on the popular
culture, the folk patterns of the Ozarks were endangered. People no
longer had reason to sit on the porch and entertain themselves with
story and song. Thanks to the diligent work of musical folklorist
and former traveling salesman Max Hunter, a comprehensive annotated
audio archive of Ozark folk music exists to preserve and
disseminate these important recordings of our collective past.
Hunter, a native of Springfield, Missouri, housed his collection of
original recordings in the Springfield-Greene County Library. The
entire body of work has been transcribed into a series of
notebooks, also archived at the library. Hunter died in November
1999 at age 78 in Springfield.
In cooperation with Southwest Missouri State
University Department of Music, in a continued effort to preserve
and update the medium on which this priceless collection is stored,
the work was transferred to digital audiotape and from there to
compact disc in 1998. This project contains an archive of almost
1,600 Ozark Mountain folk songs, recorded between 1956 and 1972 by
Max Hunter, on a collection of 40 2-disc CD sets. The permanent
collection is housed at the Springfield-Greene County Library.
Originally submitted by: Roy Blunt, Representative (7th District).
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