Elizabeth "Lisa" Kliger Music and Personal Papers, 1970-2020 | The Sousa Archives and Center for American Music
Title: Elizabeth "Lisa" Kliger Music and Personal Papers, 1970-2020
Series Number: 26/20/358
Acquired:
05/02/2025.
Volume: 5.0 cubic feet
Predominant Dates: 1970-2005
Arrangement
The collection consists of six series arranged by notable phases in Kilger's life: Series Series 1) Student, 1970-1990, Series 2) Teaching and Literary, 1978-2020, and Series 3) Musician, 1971-2011. The series are arranged in rough chronological order with the exception of physical media items.The collection is also arranged by medium, storing CDs, LPs, cassette tapes, tape reels, and paper records separately.
The collection is described at the folder level. The only records described at the item level are physical media items (CDs, LPs, cassette tapes, tape reels). Titles of plays, songs, albums, and any other artistic works are transribed in quotations or italics.
Biographical Note
Elizabeth “Lisa” Kliger was born in Evanston, Illinois in 1952 to her musically inclined parents who inspired her interests and careers. From 1970 to 1974, Kliger was an undergraduate student at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign. She earned her degree in Independent Studies in Folk Music. While studying for her undergraduate degree, she learned the banjo and sang original songs with it at the Red Herring Coffee House. In 1975 she became a freelance folklorist for Rounder Records while in Arecibo, Puerto Rico. The following year she returned to the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign for her Masters in Teaching English as a Second Language, which she completed in 1978. Kliger moved to Southern Thailand and was stationed as a Peace Corps volunteer in Songkhla. She taught university level English to Thai English teachers at Srinakharinwirot University. She often incorporated her banjo music into her teaching methods. At the end of her service, she married her longtime boyfriend Bruce Barnes and moved to Singapore in 1980. Kliger worked as a freelance writer and became an in-house editor and writer of children’s books and educational materials for FEP International Private Ltd (formerly McGraw-Hill). From 1986 to 1987, Kliger resided in Hilo, Hawaii for her husband’s job at the Mauna Kea Observatory. She attended the University of Hawaii to study music and theater. Her next destination was to New Mexico for her husband’s residence at the National Solar Observatory site in 1988. Kliger worked as a freelancer and edited books for publishing houses like Random House, Crown, Viking, and Penguin. She also began attending Denver Publishing Institute in 1989. Kliger moved to Ellensburg, Washington and continued her freelance publishing work while attending Central Washington University for musical education. At Central Washington University she began writing the musical Noodlehead! Noodlehead! is based on both the Russian poem “The Little Humpbacked Horse" and Lisa’s poem “Petya Noodlehead and the Pony of Light.” The hero of “The Little Humpbacked Horse" reminded her of her Ukrainian grandfather and inspired her own works. From 1996 to 2011 she had a variety of jobs working as an archivist, cataloger, and editor. In the most recent decade she has written for her community in Moscow, Idaho, where she composes poetry and letters to the editor.
Subjects (links to similar materials)
Administrative InformationAdiminsrative/Biographical History:
Elizabeth “Lisa” Kliger was born in Evanston, Illinois in 1952 to her musically inclined parents who inspired her interests and careers. From 1970 to 1974, Kliger was an undergraduate student at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign. She earned her degree in Independent Studies in Folk Music. While studying for her undergraduate degree, she learned the banjo and sang original songs with it at the Red Herring Coffee House. In 1975 she became a freelance folklorist for Rounder Records while in Arecibo, Puerto Rico. The following year she returned to the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign for her Masters in Teaching English as a Second Language, which she completed in 1978. Kliger moved to Southern Thailand and was stationed as a Peace Corps volunteer in Songkhla. She taught university level English to Thai English teachers at Srinakharinwirot University. She often incorporated her banjo music into her teaching methods. At the end of her service, she married her longtime boyfriend Bruce Barnes and moved to Singapore in 1980. Kliger worked as a freelance writer and became an in-house editor and writer of children’s books and educational materials for FEP International Private Ltd (formerly McGraw-Hill). From 1986 to 1987, Kliger resided in Hilo, Hawaii for her husband’s job at the Mauna Kea Observatory. She attended the University of Hawaii to study music and theater. Her next destination was to New Mexico for her husband’s residence at the National Solar Observatory site in 1988. Kliger worked as a freelancer and edited books for publishing houses like Random House, Crown, Viking, and Penguin. She also began attending Denver Publishing Institute in 1989. Kliger moved to Ellensburg, Washington and continued her freelance publishing work while attending Central Washington University for musical education. At Central Washington University she began writing the musical Noodlehead! Noodlehead! is based on both the Russian poem “The Little Humpbacked Horse" and Lisa’s poem “Petya Noodlehead and the Pony of Light.” The hero of “The Little Humpbacked Horse" reminded her of her Ukrainian grandfather and inspired her own works. From 1996 to 2011 she had a variety of jobs working as an archivist, cataloger, and editor. In the most recent decade she has written for her community in Moscow, Idaho, where she composes poetry and letters to the editor.
Lisa Kliger Acquisition Note:
Gift
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