Be
sure to attend the special session featuring Chris
Strachwitz on Saturday, March 13 at 3:30 p.m.!
Society
for American Music
2004
Honorary Member

Chris
Strachwitz
The
president of the Arhoolie Records label, folklorist
and producer Chris Strachwitz was among the most
prominent and influential champions of global roots
music; initially focusing primarily on American
traditions including the blues, Cajun, Tejano,
zydeco, country and jazz, he later branched out
to explore music from throughout the world, preserving
our shared cultural heritage for future generations
to explore. Born July 1, 1931 in Gross Reichenau,
Germany, Strachwitz relocated to the U.S. in 1947,
and began collecting 78 rpm recordings a short
time later. After first becoming obsessed with
New Orleans jazz, his interests quickly expanded
into country, gospel, and Mexican ranchera music.
While attending Pomona College during the early
1950s, Strachwitz bought his first tape recorder,
documenting radio programs and live performances
by the school jazz band; he later met record producer
Bob Geddins, learning from him how to make proper
recordings.
After
finishing up a stint in the U.S. Army, Strachwitz
settled in the Los Gatos, California area in 1956
and began a teaching career. He decided to form
his own label in 1959, the year he made his first
trip to the American South and met his idol, Lightnin'
Hopkins. Although his plans to capture Hopkins
during a live juke joint date never materialized,
Strachwitz soon made his first recordings of Mance
Lipscomb, issuing the LP Texas Sharecropper and
Songster in an edition of 250 on November 3, 1960.
The name Arhoolie was suggested by friend Mack
McCormick and inspired by "hoolie," a
word apparently synonymous with a field holler.
A subsequent research trip led to Strachwitz's
first meetings with Black Ace, Li'l Son Jackson
and Alex Moore, all of whom he recorded; he quit
teaching in 1962 and scraped out a living selling
Arhoolie releases, with interest in the label buoyed
by the folk music boom of the early 1960s.
Several
years later, in exchange for recording the "I
Feel Like I'm Fixin' to Die Rag" for Country
Joe and the Fish, Strachwitz retained 50 percent
of the song's publishing rights; its subsequent
use on the soundtrack of the film Woodstock made
him a great deal of money, with the profits funneled
into purchasing the El Cerrito, California building
which served as Arhoolie's home for the next several
decades. Strachwitz moved on to record material
by Mississippi Fred McDowell, Clifton Chenier and
Flaco Jiminez, whose Ay Te Dejo en San Antonio
LP won the label a Grammy award. Another of Arhoolie's
greatest discoveries was Michael Doucet and his
Cajun group Beausoleil, long one of the company's
best sellers. In addition to putting out dozens
of new roots music records annually, in 1976 Strachwitz
moved into other media, teaming with filmmaker
Les Blank for the documentary Chulas Fronteras.
Under Strachwitz's guidance, Arhoolie continued
to prosper throughout the years which followed,
its continuing role in the preservation of "down
home music" assured.
~
Jason Ankeny, All Music Guide