To make some improvements on my documentary about Spanish immigrants,"Weaving with Spanish Threads," I decided to add some music. One piece I wanted was a traditional Spanish song that the immigrants would have listened to and played after they moved to California. I found just what I wanted on a music album arranged and produced by Jenny Vincent and performed by her trio, music she found in a collection created back in the 1930s.
In tracking down the rights, I found Jenny Vincent herself. Jenny Vincent is an activist and musician, and in bygone days, played with the likes of Pete Seeger and Woody Guthrie. She is now 101, lives in New Mexico, and still jams with her musician friends every week. They come to the nursing home where she lives.
On the CD with the music I wanted, she plays the accordion but now, at age 101, that instrument is too heavy for her so she plays the piano.
Jenny Vincent came from a privileged background. As a young woman, she played classical piano. but after she became an adult, she found her passion in the workers' rights movement, and turned to playing folk songs on the accordion. She spent her life as an activist and is still deeply committed to the rights of the powerless.
Craig Smith, a writer and musician, and one of the people who gets together with her each week, has written a biography of her called Sing My Whole Life Long: Jenny Vincent's Life in Folk Music and Activism. You might want to look it up.
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We've used some of Jenny Vincent's music in our documentary, Weaving with Spanish Threads: an Immigrant's Tale, and in the trailer (HERE) for that documentary. Or if you want to listen to one of the jam sessions, go HERE and HERE.
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