Front cover image for America's musical life : a history

America's musical life : a history

This book tells the fascinating story of music in the United States, from the sacred music of its earliest days to the jazz and rock that enliven the turn of the millennium. Beginning with the music of Native Americans and continuing with traditions introduced by European colonizers and Africans brought here as slaves, the book reveals how this bountiful heritage was developed and enhanced in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries to produce the music we hear today. As the author points out, American musical activity has taken place in three spheres: the traditional (folk music), which emphasizes continuity and the preservation of community custom; the popular, which seeks most of all to find paying audiences; and the classical (Western art music), which places priority on the musical works themselves. We observe American music making in each of these spheres and see, for the first time, how they have continually crossed over, interacted, and combined to shape the rich tapestry of sounds of the twenty-first century. Most important, the narrative is always set in its proper historical context--we cannot, for instance, truly understand Civil War music without knowing the social and political factors that precipitated the conflict. In juggling political, social, and musical history, the author strikes a happy balance between general background and specific accounts of individual composers, performers, and pieces of music. For the earliest period, this book records activity in all domains of music. We learn of attempts by Europeans to describe the songs they heard Native Americans perform, of sacred music making among the colonists that existed side by side with secular song and dance, of Spanish Catholic missionaries who brought their own music to the New World a full century before the Pilgrims landed, of the first book printed in New England, and of the robust theater and concert life that Colonial America nourished. The nineteenth century saw commercial interests gain a strong foothold, with parlor music making money for performers and publishers, though not always for the composer. Stephen Foster wrote songs that became wildly popular while he himself was scratching out a meager living. There were idealists, such as the quirky Anthony Philip Heinrich, who moved to the "wilds" of Kentucky; show-offs, such as the enormously talented pianist Louis Moreau Gottschalk; "serious" academic composers, including John Knowles Paine at Harvard and Horatio Parker at Yale; and talented women composer/performers, including Amy Marcy Cheney, who performed and published as Mrs. H. H. A. Beach. Thrown into the mix are ethnic musics, slave songs, American musical nationalism, band music, the advent of the phonograph, Tin Pan Alley, and a host of other influences. However wide American tastes ranged before 1900, the twentieth century offered an even broader array of musical genres, encompassing blues, jazz, musicals, movie soundtracks, folk-revival music, swing, classical music, and rock, to name just a few. Musicians discussed in this section include Charles Ives, George Gershwin, Duke Ellington, the Beatles, the Roberta Martin Singers, Philip Glass--the list is almost endless. Bringing order to this cacophony, this book gives us a highly readable and informative account of this country's rich musical traditions. --Adapted from dust jacket
Print Book, English, 2001
Norton, New York, 2001
Criticism, interpretation, etc
xv, 976 pages : illustrations ; 25 cm
9780393048100, 0393048101
42397958
The First Three Centuries. The first song : Native American music
European inroads : early Christian music making
From ritual to art : the flowering of sacred music
"Old, simple Ditties" : Colonial song, dance, and home music making
Performing "By particular desire" : Colonial military, concert, and theater music
Maintaining oral traditions : African music in early America
Correcting "the harshness of our singing" : New England psalmody reformed. The Nineteenth Century. Edification and economics : the career of Lowell Mason
Singing praises : Southern and frontier devotional music
"Be it ever so humble" : theater and opera, 1800-1860
Blacks, whites, and the minstrel stage
Home music making and the publishing industry
From ramparts to romance : parlor songs, 1800-1865
Of Yankee Doodle and Ophicleides : bands and orchestras, 1800 to the 1870s
From church to concert hall : the rise of classical music
From log house to opera house : Anthony Philip Heinrich and William Henry Fry
A New Orleans original : Gottschalk of Louisiana
Two classic Bostonians : George W. Chadwick and Amy Beach
Edward MacDowell and musical nationalism
"Travel in the winds" : Native American music from 1820
"Make a noise!" : slave songs and other black music to the 1880s
Songs of the later nineteenth century
Stars, stripes and cylinders : Sousa, the band, and the phonograph
"After the ball" : the rise of the Tin Pan Alley. The Twentieth Century. "To stretch our ears" : the music of Charles Ives
"Come on and hear" : the early twentieth century
The jazz age dawns : blues, jazz and rhapsody
"The birthright of all of us" : classical music, the mass media, and the Depression
"All that is native and fine" : American folk song and its collectors
From New Orleans to Chicago : jazz goes national
"Crescendo in blue" : Ellington, Basie and the swing band
The golden age of the American musical
Classical music in the postwar years
"Rock around the clock" : the rise of rock and roll
Songs of loneliness and praise : postwar vernacular trends
Jazz, Broadway, and musical permanence
Melting pot or pluralism? : popular music and ethnicity
From accessibility to transcendence : the Beatles, rock, and popular music
Trouble girls, minimalists, and the gap : the 1960s to the 1980s
Black music and American identity