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Each
year the Library of Congress chose 25 songs that at least 10 years of
age and under consideration in terms of cultural, historical or
aesthetic importance for inclusion into the National Recording Notes.
Professor
Longhair was an important figure from the music of New Orleans and
during the decades of her piano playing style has influenced many other
musicians. Recordings "Tipitina" from
1953 Longhair had just signed the National Recording notes along with
some of the first sound recordings of the 19th century.
Which also included this year is a country song that became a hit in 1968 but did not like the feminine. They
are angry with the message "Stand By Your Man," or "Keep Your Man
Couple" issued when the feminine movements are rising in America.
Library
of Congress describe that song is a satire on the weaknesses of men,
women's strength, love, loyalty and support. "However you feel about the
message that was delivered Tammy Wynette song, no denying this is
really a classic American country music.
NOTE:
The National Recordings was the result of the National Recording
Preservation Act of 2000 which aims to build a national program to
preserve the heritage of American sound recordings. The songs selected each year to the National Recording Note that because of its cultural significance.
Not
everything in the form of songs, this year's list includes the first
reproduced sound and called, "phonoautograms," including a 1953 sermon
delivered by the pastor CL Franklin Aretha Franklin's father. Long before her daughter became famous, his father is a famous recording star. Reverend Franklin was one of the priests who first recorded sermon and sell it. Which is also included in the list this year is part of the history of VOA
From 1954 until his death in 1996. Willis Conover brought jazz VOA program, broadcast music to countries where jazz is sometimes prohibited. His
interview in 1956 with musicians including Duke Ellington, Billie
Holiday, Stan Getz and others are now becoming part of the List of
National Notes Library of Congress. According to
the official Library of Congress, the taped interview was important
because it describes the famous jazz artist thinking.
Selection to the National Recording Notes this year covers the entire spectrum of music. Includes
footage of The Boswell Sisters in 1931 and The Dorsey Brothers
Orchestra including songs leading the Boswell, a combination of jazz-pop
and rock of Steely Dan's book, "Aja," comedy of Mort Sahl, and
recording of the anthem America recorded in 1908 .
The
choir sang "Take Me Out To The Ballgame" most often heard, but the
version that entered into the National Recording Notes is a version that
tells about a young female baseball fans who prefer to go to the
baseball field than to the theater.