Gregg Kimball — Searching for Jimmie Strother: A Tale of Music, Murder, and Memory episode artwork

EPISODE · Mar 11, 2025 · 57 MIN

Gregg Kimball — Searching for Jimmie Strother: A Tale of Music, Murder, and Memory

from Politics and Prose Presents · host Politics and Prose

In June 1936 James Lee Strother performed thirteen songs at the Virginia State Prison Farm for famed folklorist John Lomax and the Library of Congress. Rooted in the rich soil of the Piedmont region, Strother's repertoire epitomized the Black songsters who defy easy classification. Blinded in a steel mill explosion, which only intensified his drive to connect to the world through song, Strother drew on old spirituals and country breakdowns as readily as he explored emerging genres like blues and ragtime. Biographer Gregg Kimball revives this elusive but singular talent and the creative and historical worlds in which his dramatic life unfolded.Myths surround Strother but, as Kimball reveals, the facts of Strother's life are just as compelling as the fanciful embellishments proffered by early folklorists. Musician, murderer, and beloved family member--Strother somehow played each of these roles, and more. And while the songster's comedic ditties, spirituals, and blues tunes reached a wide range of listeners (and were later covered by musicians like Pete Seeger and Jefferson Airplane), they carried a dark undercurrent that spoke directly to the experiences of Black Americans: sundown towns, Jim Crow segregation, and labor exploitation. As Kimball shows, Strother's powerful songs and remarkable, tumultuous life continue to influence and remain deeply relevant to American culture to this day.PURCHASE BOOK HERE: https://politics-prose.com/book/9780813952314?ic_referral=qjI7aOuTitu7kXQEdbKfnfInTgPB-_WpqVW-iu3-FX0wM65_SmIXUiizK9u2CYtm6Lz3ggX1Fz_3Rlm6JrrXgq2x50gXajJZX0UukVbyjJNKGb2yyQgg57H63sm0iB6ZBXsmFgGregg D. Kimball, Senior Consulting Historian for the Shockoe Institute, is a folk musician and the author of American City, Southern Place: A Cultural History of Antebellum Richmond.*recorded 2/20/2025

In June 1936 James Lee Strother performed thirteen songs at the Virginia State Prison Farm for famed folklorist John Lomax and the Library of Congress. Rooted in the rich soil of the Piedmont region, Strother's repertoire epitomized the Black songsters who defy easy classification. Blinded in a steel mill explosion, which only intensified his drive to connect to the world through song, Strother drew on old spirituals and country breakdowns as readily as he explored emerging genres like blues and ragtime. Biographer Gregg Kimball revives this elusive but singular talent and the creative and historical worlds in which his dramatic life unfolded.Myths surround Strother but, as Kimball reveals, the facts of Strother's life are just as compelling as the fanciful embellishments proffered by early folklorists. Musician, murderer, and beloved family member--Strother somehow played each of these roles, and more. And while the songster's comedic ditties, spirituals, and blues tunes reached a wide range of listeners (and were later covered by musicians like Pete Seeger and Jefferson Airplane), they carried a dark undercurrent that spoke directly to the experiences of Black Americans: sundown towns, Jim Crow segregation, and labor exploitation. As Kimball shows, Strother's powerful songs and remarkable, tumultuous life continue to influence and remain deeply relevant to American culture to this day.PURCHASE BOOK HERE: https://politics-prose.com/book/9780813952314?ic_referral=qjI7aOuTitu7kXQEdbKfnfInTgPB-_WpqVW-iu3-FX0wM65_SmIXUiizK9u2CYtm6Lz3ggX1Fz_3Rlm6JrrXgq2x50gXajJZX0UukVbyjJNKGb2yyQgg57H63sm0iB6ZBXsmFgGregg D. Kimball, Senior Consulting Historian for the Shockoe Institute, is a folk musician and the author of American City, Southern Place: A Cultural History of Antebellum Richmond.*recorded 2/20/2025

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Gregg Kimball — Searching for Jimmie Strother: A Tale of Music, Murder, and Memory

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In June 1936 James Lee Strother performed thirteen songs at the Virginia State Prison Farm for famed folklorist John Lomax and the Library of Congress. Rooted in the rich soil of the Piedmont region, Strother's repertoire epitomized the Black...

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