Playing in the Domain Riverbend Studios
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- Historia
The podcast that highlights public domain songs and their creators, from American classical to ragtime, jazz, swing, blues and more.
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Rain and Snow
Learn about this traditional folk song and its journey from the Appalachian Mountains to the Grateful Dead's first album.
Some music clips from the Library of Congress.
Some sound effects provided by FreeSFX (freesfx.co.uk)
Riverbend Studios, Copyright 2024. -
Up on the Housetop
Learn about this traditional holiday song, which sprang from the imagination of a children's music teacher in 1864.
Some music clips from the Library of Congress.
Some sound effects provided by FreeSFX (freesfx.co.uk)
Riverbend Studios, Copyright 2023. -
Extra Measure: The Layton's (parents of pianist/composer Turner Layton)
Learn about Professor John T. Layton, longtime choir director of an historic D.C. church, and his wife
Julia Mason Layton, teacher and later activist and lecturer, who rallied for women's voting rights,
among other causes. The couple helped produce the first AME Church hymnal to have muscial notation.
Some clips from the Library of Congress. www.loc.gov
Some sound effects provided through FreeSFX (freesfx.co.uk)
Riverbend Studios, Copyright 2023. -
After You've Gone
Learn about lyricist Henry Creamer and pianist Turner Layton whose six-year collaboration produced
the classic "After You've Gone," first published in 1918.
Some clips found at the Library of Congress. www.loc.gov
Some sound effects provided by FreeSFX (freesfx.co.uk)
Riverbend Studios, Copyright 2023. -
O, Christmas Tree
Learn about this classic carol, which began as an ode to the fir tree. Penned in 1824 by an organist in Germany this song is now a beloved holiday carol in praise of the Christmas tree.
Some music clips provided through freemusicarchive.org
Some clips from the Library of Congress. www.loc.gov
Some sound effects provided by FreeSFX (freesfx.co.uk)
Riverbend Studios, Copyright 2022. -
Extra Measure: The Charleston, 1920s dance craze
Learn about The Charleston, a dance that defined the 1920s.
From its origins in the Carolina sea islands to city nightclubs and the New York stage,
this infectious dance craze spread across the world with young and old kicking up their heels. Everyone and their grandma knew how to Charleston.