Glasser, Ruth
Found in 67 Collections and/or Records:
Angélica Duchesne, Interview One, 1993-01-05
Benjamin Duchesne, Interview One, 1992-12-21
Benjamin Duchesne, Interview Two, 1992-12-21
Bobby Capó, Interview Five, 1989-02-23
Bobby Capó, Interview Four, 1989-02-23
Bobby Capó, Interview One, 1988-04-22
Bobby Capó, Interview Two, 1988-04-22
Chali Hernández, Interview One, 1988-12-05
Chali Hernández, Interview Two, 1988-12-05
Efraín Vaz, Interview One, 1989-01-04
Efraín Vaz, Interview Two, 1989-01-04
Ernesto Vigoreaux, Interview One, 1988-12-26
Ernesto Vigoreaux, Interview Three, 1988-12-26
Ernesto Vigoreaux, Interview Two, 1988-12-26
Francisco López Cruz, Interview Five, 1988-12-15
Francisco López Cruz, Interview Four, 1988-12-15
Francisco López Cruz, Interview One, 1988-12-06
Francisco López Cruz, Interview Three, 1988-12-06
Francisco López Cruz, Interview Two, 1988-12-06
Fred Mendelson, Interview One, 1989
Fred Mendelson, Interview Three, 1989-05-12
Fred Mendelson, Interview Two, 1989
Ruth Glasser Puerto Rican Music Oral History Collection
This collection consists of 40 audiocassettes containing interviews with 28 interviewees conducted by Glasser while writing her book/ dissertation, My Music is My Flag. The collection contains interviews of prominent Puerto Rican musicians, composers, music store owners, and their relatives. The interviews date from 1988 to 1993.
Irma Toro de Usera, Interview One, 1992-12-24
Irma Toro de Usera, Interview Two, 1992-12-24
Johnny Rodríguez, Interview One, 1988-12-21
Johnny Rodríguez, Interview Three, 1988-12-21
Johnny Rodríguez, Interview Two, 1988-12-21
Jorge Javariz, Interview Four, 1988-12-13
Jorge Javariz, Interview One, 1988-12-13
Additional filters:
- Type
- Archival Object 66
- Collection 1
- Subject
- Music, Puerto Rican 66
- Hispanic American musicians 6
- Labor unions -- Social aspects 6
- Racism 3
- Arts, Puerto Rican 1
- Audiocassettes 1
- Hispanic Americans --Music 1
- Musicians -- Puerto Rico 1
- Underground Music -- Puerto Rico 1 + ∧ less
About the Collections
Our collections consist of personal papers from prominent Puerto Rican artists, elected officials, social activists, writers, as well as the records of community-based organizations. Our largest collection, the Offices of the Government of Puerto Rico in the United States (OGPRUS) Records, measures approximately 2,900 cubic feet and contains an extraordinary amount of information regarding Puerto Rican migrants and the government institutions established to assist them. The collections date from the 1890s to the present, and document Puerto Rican communities in the Northeast, Midwest, Florida, California and Hawaii.