Folkways Records
Folkways Records was an independent American record label founded in 1948 by Moses Asch in New York City, with the mission of documenting "the entire world of sound" through recordings of folk music, ethnic traditions, spoken word, instructional content, and natural sounds.[1][2]
Asch, drawing from his earlier ventures like Asch Records and Disc Records, established Folkways as a non-profit-oriented enterprise that prioritized cultural preservation over commercial viability, releasing over 2,000 albums featuring artists such as Woody Guthrie, Pete Seeger, Lead Belly, and Bukka White, alongside global ethnographic field recordings and avant-garde works.[3][4]
A defining characteristic was Asch's policy of keeping every title in print indefinitely, rejecting the industry's practice of discontinuing unprofitable releases, which ensured broad accessibility to niche and educational materials until the label's sale.[3]
Following Asch's death in 1986, the Smithsonian Institution acquired Folkways in 1987, integrating its catalog into Smithsonian Folkways Recordings, which continues the founder's commitment to cultural documentation and has maintained all original releases in circulation.[1][5][6]