Alabama Folklife Association
Alabama Folk
In Alabama Folk, we go deep with artists and makers who carry on traditions passed down through the generations. Through their lives, we discover the many histories, cultures, communities, and landscapes that make us Alabama folk. Produced by the Alabama Folklife Association (alabamafolklife.org).
Author
Alabama Folklife Association
Category
Podcast website
Latest episode
Oct 14, 2025
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Episodes
Let the Wood Tell the Story: Spoonmaking in Dothan 14.10.2025 28:58
Orran Scruggs makes spoons that reflect the rural life and African heritage passed down by the elder women in his family. He takes us through the process from salvaging off-cuts to following the grain to let each spoon emerge organically to the moment its true color pops. As an artist, Orran prizes moving at his own pace, self-expression, immersion, and exploration. He also uses spoons to collabor...
Never a Goodbye: Día de los Muertos in Decatur 07.10.2025 33:30
Above all, Mari Juarez and Jesse Gonzalez wanted the first Día de los Muertos celebration in downtown Decatur to be authentic: street vendors selling mole and elotes, Mexican music and dance, papel picado, and the altar with its essentials: certain colors, salt, water, fruit, marigolds, Pan de Muerto, and copal. Mari and Jesse explain the meaning of Day of the Dead, and how it showcased Latino cul...
Absolute Thrill: Dove Hunting in Alabama’s Black Belt 30.09.2025 23:03
Mike Baker, raised on a dairy farm in Hale County, grew up hunting for food. His first experience with dove hunting was gathering the birds shot by the landowner for a nickel a piece. As an adult, Mike introduced the sport to his wife, Nikki, who describes its thrills: the speed of the birds and the shot, the rush of competition, and the pride of bagging 15, especially as a woman. Yet Nikki and Mi...
From Gray Goods to Technicolor: Making Socks in Fort Payne 23.09.2025 36:08
Gina Locklear grew up in Fort Payne when it was known as the Sock Capital of the World. Then, as mills began to close, she reinvented the family business to thrive in a changed economy. Rooted in tradition, zkano socks is also creative, adaptive, sustainable, and American-made. Gina walks us through her mill history, from jumping in bins of socks as a kid to a deep appreciation for color and desig...
Let’s Ride! Horse Clubs in Macon County 16.09.2025 25:02
Kendrick Hall was raised by men who prized ingenuity, self-reliance, and persistence, all qualities he used in learning to ride, break, and train horses. He leads us into the world of horse clubs in rural Macon County, which reflect strong bonds with family, community, and the horses themselves, and seed a love of riding in the next generation. Trail rides are a mix of camaraderie and competition,...
Like a Lightning Bolt: Sacred Harp Singing in Alabama 09.09.2025 47:13
Bridge Hill Kennedy was hooked on Sacred Harp music the first time he heard it from the center of the hollow square. Over 20 years later, he takes us into the striking, singular sound and experience of Sacred Harp: a living tradition that unites singers from all walks of life in a community like no other. Bridge also walks us through a typical day at a Sacred Harp singing, including the memorial l...
Sew Their Names: Quilting Remembrance and Reconciliation in Lowndes County 12.11.2024 40:01
Descended from slaveowners and from enslaved people, Judge Susan Walker and Reverend Dale Braxton walked very different paths to Hopewell Baptist Church. Yet through their willingness to trust each other and tell the truth about the past, the two built a quilting project to honor enslaved people that brings Alabamians together to remember, grieve, sing, heal, and build something new.
A Costume Wearing a Person: Designing Mardi Gras in Alabama 05.11.2024 30:15
Jay Herring and Doug Baloy designed and built elaborate runway costumes for Mardi Gras balls in Alabama for over twenty years. Each one-of-a-kind piece grew from creativity, ingenuity, and thinking big, and came to life with their combined skills in costume and set design. Jay and Doug reflect on the artistic process, freedom of expression, the LGBTQ community, and the magic of Mardi Gras.
To Welcome the Day: Making Rangoli in Florence 29.10.2024 31:05
Amita Bhakta shares the art of rangoli from her native India with her community in Florence. Rangoli uses colorful sand patterns to express welcome, blessing, beauty, and joy, and is present in festivals across India, especially Diwali. Amita describes its Hindu roots, symbolic elements, and ephemeral nature. And she reflects on creativity, making, slowing down, and letting go.
Red Eggs and Braided Bread: Growing up Greek in Montgomery 22.10.2024 24:36
Sandra Polizos was raised in a tight-knit Greek community where the Greek Orthodox Church sat at the hub of religious, cultural, and community life. She explains the symbolism and experience of Greek Orthodox Easter, in particular its foodways, and reflects on how having Greek grandparents, schooling, language, fasting practices, and cooking skills shaped who she is today.
Under the Lion: Vietnamese Lion Dance in Bayou La Batre 15.10.2024 37:08
Charlie Tran has led Beast of the Bayou, a lion dance crew in Bayou La Batre, since age 17. He illumines lion dance history, its place at the center of Vietnamese New Year, Buddhist roots, and its many elements: blessing and community, materials and movement, drumbeat, red envelope, and the Buddha. He also reflects on recruiting and growing dancers, and the future of his hometown.
My Brooms Are Me: A Fourth Generation Broommaker in the Shoals 08.10.2024 33:29
George Jones Jr. carries on his great grandfather’s broommaking tradition on family land: growing and harvesting broomcorn, hunting sticks, hand tying, and winding brooms on 19th century equipment. Over three decades, George has evolved in his craft: blending conventional and new elements, realizing broommaking as an art, and relying on it in difficult times.
Paintin’ Mama’s Stories: Art from Life in Alabama’s Black Belt 07.11.2023 28:10
Jessie LaVon’s rural life includes seed saving, canning, and fishing, but also honky tonks, snake ceremonies, and spring tonic. Her mother championed Jessie’s artistic impulse from the first, making paints from muds and berries and stiffening canvases by boiling rabbit bones. These memories and practices, alongside a reverence for the natural world, continue to inform and infuse Jessie’s life and...
It Had a Shine to It: Making Cypress Shingles in Clarke County 31.10.2023 21:48
Roy Marks was raised in a timber culture stretching back generations that endowed him with an expansive knowledge of trees and the properties and uses of their wood, from shingles to bee boxes to mallets and froes. He details his appreciation for makers of the past and his concern for the future of the woods, transformed in his lifetime from communal hunting ground to clear cut earth.
Pupusas: A Taste of El Salvador in Northeast Alabama 24.10.2023 26:29
Flor Juares arrived in the US with years of experience preparing the foods of her native El Salvador, especially pupusas: the iconic national dish. Flor details a lifelong fascination with rural folkways and empowerment by the women around her. After decades of making pupusas for family and friends, she now shares them with hundreds at the annual Latino Festival in Rainsville.
Get a Little Sunshine in There: Pine Needle Basket Making 17.10.2023 21:15
Della Marsh stumbled into pine needle basketry as a way to use the gorgeous pine needles she encountered in Lillian, Alabama. A lifelong artist and maker, Della describes how basket making bestowed an artistic experience different than other mediums, and how she transformed this age-old tradition with color and charms, then moved beyond baskets completely.
This Is Who We Are: MOWA Choctaw Storytelling 10.10.2023 26:00
For 41 years, Laretta Weaver led MOWA Choctaw cultural education in Mobile and Washington County schools. Through storytelling, Choctaw language, beading, weaving, basket making, dancing, drumming, and pow wows, Laretta imparted cultural knowledge and pride in generations of local youth, which rippled through their adult lives and into the fabric of the whole community.
There’s No Band Like It: The Excelsior Band of Mobile 03.10.2023 28:16
Hosea London traces his journey from a musical childhood to the helm of the Excelsior: the signature band and symbol of Mobile Mardi Gras. In the band’s 140th year, Hosea reflects on balancing tradition and creativity, preserving order, character, and history, the connective power of music, and his most important role: growing the next generation of jazz musicians.
Brazilian Brigadeiro: The Sweet Life in Mobile 25.10.2022 22:13
For thirty years, Ester de Aguiar made thousands of brigadeiro, the iconic sweet of her native Brazil, for the Mobile International Festival. Ester explains how brigadeiro emerged from rural life, touching on her own family history of dairy farming, midwifery, herbal healing, and interreligious faith. She takes us step by step through making brigadeiro, which she insists anyone can do!
The Size of the World: Chair Caning in Northeast Alabama 18.10.2022 13:01
Roy Cooley describes life on a tenant farm in Northeast Alabama in the 1940's. Though we set out to talk about chair caning, Roy reveals a whole world of traditions, from beekeeping to canning to corncob battles. And he shares visceral memories like pulling a newborn puppy through a floor plank and lighting a ragball on fire for a night game.
Becoming Real: Lao Cooking and Blessing in South Alabama 11.10.2022 17:16
Gena Barragan grew up in Laos and spent her adulthood running Lao and Thai restaurants in South Alabama. She guides us through local Lao life, including foodways, temple traditions, New Year celebrations, beauty pageants, and sports. Grounded in Buddhism, Gena reflects on her father’s power as a healer and her son’s training as a monk.
Lindo y Querido: The Gift of Mexican Dance 04.10.2022 16:11
Maria Williams has taught traditional Mexican dances to generations of children in Mobile. She explains how music, dance, and colorful dresses are an intrinsic part of life and culture in Mexico. She also reflects on the unifying power of dance, as well as its ability to instill confidence, identity, pride, freedom, and generosity in her students.
Lye Soap, Herbs, and Stick Dolls: The Lifecycle of Gee’s Bend 27.09.2022 22:11
Betty Anderson grew up watching the women of Gee’s Bend move through the seasons of rural life: quilting, canning, healing with herbs, hog killing, and making jelly, lye soap, and stick dolls. In reflecting on their expertise, Betty pays homage to the local voodoo doctor, the power of communal work, and to a most intimate moment of the lifecycle: its very end.
From the Center: Indigenous Finger Weaving in Alabama 19.09.2022 25:27
Indigenous finger weaver Jonathan Davis leads us through traditional finger weaving, including how he learned from an "old school generation," makers protocols, sourcing materials, and Indigenous textile history. He explains how finger weaving reflects Creek cosmology and connects to the Green Corn Ceremony, and he looks ahead to the tradition's future.
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