This article has multiple issues. Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page. (Learn how and when to remove these messages)
|
Leonard Finseth (1911-1991) was a Norwegian-American fiddler from Mondovi, Wisconsin.[1] He was well known for playing Old-time Norwegian dance music in his community, including waltzes, reels, schottisches, and polkas.[2] He also recorded two albums: The Hills of Old Wisconsin and Scandinavian Old Time: Folk Fiddle from Wisconsin and was included in Scandinavian-American Folk Dance Music Vol. 2 and Across the Fields: Fiddle Tunes and Button Accordion Melodies.[3] Other recordings of his music can be found at the Mills Music Library in Madison, Wisconsin.
Career
editEarly life
editLeonard Finseth was born February 11, 1911, in Wisconsin. His father was a lumberjack, who emigrated from Trondheim in Norway as a young man.[4] His mother was a second generation Norwegian-American.[4] His family owned a dairy farm, where he lived for most of his life.[2]
Music
editFinseth first learned the organ from his sister as a small child.[3] He started to learn to play the fiddle at age 17, and ordered his first fiddle from a mail order catalogue.[1] He learned songs from local fiddlers, such as his uncle Ed Quall, Ingvald Syverson, and Otto Rindlisbacher.[1] While most of Finseth's music was Norwegian, he also learned songs from fiddlers across the Mid-West, including Anglo-American and Swiss music.[1] He could also play the guitar, organ, harmonica, and the violin.[2] Although Finseth could read music, he usually preferred to learn songs by ear.[2] He was also known to sometimes adapt Norwegian music traditionally played on the Hardanger fiddle for a conventional fiddle.[4]
From the mid-1970s, Finseth was closely associated with Bob Andresen, a Scandinavian-American musician, who played guitar on-stage with him, and also produced LPs of Finseth's work.[5] Bob Andresen was also the host of “Northland Hoedown,” a popular radio show in Duluth, MN, which featured regional musicians. Some of his music is also housed in the Mills Music Library in Madison, WI.[6] Andresen described Finseth's music as more authentically Norwegian than many of his contemporaries, capturing the spirit of Norwegian music, while also producing something uniquely American.[4] He also commented that Finseth's music was part of a living tradition,[4] and he always puts his own spin on old tunes through his bowing technique.[4]
Andresen received Finseth's records after his death, and sorted and labelled the records.[2] He donated the materials in June 1995 to create the Leonard Finseth Collection in the Mills Music Library.[2] The collection includes 50 reel-to-reel tapes and 34 audiocassettes, most of which were home-recordings, as well as photographs, newspaper clippings, and letters.[2]
Finseth typically played for house parties and for dances held by Norwegian-American groups like The Sons of Norway, Norden Lodge, and the Modern Woodsman,[5] but also performed in folk festivals, notably Fiddler's Fest in South Dakota, Nordic Fest in Iowa, and the Snoose Boulevard festival in Minneapolis.[3] Finseth also performed at two Festivals of American Folklife.[3] The first was in 1974 under the heading 'Old Ways in the New World.'[7] Finseth performed alongside other Norwegian-American tradition-bearers, including a harmonica player, a Hardanger fiddler, a pianist, a rosemaler, and several dancers.[7] The second time was two years later in 1976 for the Bicentennial celebration.[8] He again performed under 'Old Ways in the New World,' which switched focus to different countries each week and contrasted Old World music and crafts, with its New World counterpart.[8]
Work and Enlistment
editFinseth worked at the Eau Claire Tire plant, part of the U.S. Rubber Company, which later changed its name to Uniroyal, beginning in March 1937, but soon lost his job due to rubber shortages.[9] He enlisted in the US Navy on February 1, 1942, and was discharged October 26th, 1945.[9] Finseth described his experiences serving during World War Two in "War Clouds" in 1978.[9]
After the war, Finseth returned to his job at the tire factory and worked there for 35 years, before retiring in 1973.[9]
Finseth died on June 16, 1991.[2]
References
edit- ^ a b c d Wisconsin folklore. James P. Leary. Madison, Wis.: University of Wisconsin Press. 1998. p. 266. ISBN 978-0-299-16033-3. OCLC 472453463.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: others (link) - ^ a b c d e f g h Finseth Drammen Church Andresen Berg Berguson Bertelrud Crosley Firch Foss Fossum Gilbertson Gorges Gran Gullingsrud Halverson Halvorson Johnson Johnson Johnson Jordheim Jorgenson Kagen Lardahl Lardahl Lassek Masted McMahan Olson Olson Quall Rindlisbacher Roheim Sorenson Sorenson Storsveen Thompson Thorson Brimi-Faukstad Trio Ralph Gordon Band, Leonard Bob Willy Ole Ole Phillip Willard Francis Orville Blanche Reverend Otto Ralf Sam Vie Hal Marion Roswell Kjel Art Alan Laverne Stanley Ed Pastor Pete Arnold Evelyn Ed Otto Anund Harold Truman Alfred Sharon Arnold, Leonard Finseth, retrieved 2022-03-29
- ^ a b c d "The Leonard Finseth Collection - Collection - UWDC - UW-Madison Libraries". search.library.wisc.edu. Retrieved 2022-03-29.
- ^ a b c d e f dissertant., Rue, Anna C. From revival to remix : Norwegian American folk music and song. p. 89. OCLC 878556088.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ a b Leary, James P. (2010). Polkabilly : how the Goose Island Ramblers redefined American folk music. New York: Oxford University Press. p. 8. ISBN 978-0-19-975696-4. OCLC 1101262898.
- ^ "Robert Andresen Collection". www.library.wisc.edu. Retrieved 2022-05-09.
- ^ a b "1974 Festival of American Folklife". Smithsonian Folklife Festival. Retrieved 2022-03-29.
- ^ a b "1976 Festival of American Folklife". Smithsonian Folklife Festival. Retrieved 2022-03-29.
- ^ a b c d "War clouds - UWDC - UW-Madison Libraries". search.library.wisc.edu. Retrieved 2022-03-29.