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Title: INTRODUCTION to AMERICAN POPULAR MUSIC


1
INTRODUCTION to AMERICAN POPULAR MUSIC
Benjamin Carson / Spring 2006
http//arts.ucsc.edu/faculty/Carson
syllabus /course_materials/Mus11
calendar reading assignments
/course_materials/Mus11/CALENDAR.htm
2
History of American Popular Music (in 30 minutes
or less)
3
First what do we mean by American Popular Music?
4
First what do we mean by American Popular Music?
  • American of or from the U.S.? Related to N. and
    S. America?

5
First what do we mean by American Popular Music?
  • American of or from the U.S.? Related to N. and
    S. America?
  • Popular beloved? lowest common denominator?

6
First what do we mean by American Popular Music?
  • American Music music made by and for people
    living in the U.S., or by people who feel
    strongly connected to "the American experience"

7
First what do we mean by American Popular Music?
  • American Music music made by and for people
    living in the U.S., or by people who feel
    strongly connected to "the American experience"
  • Popular Music music which is meant for wide
    distribution, usually via mass media. Any music
    which succeeds in attracting a large and varied
    audience.

8
U.S. Cultural Historyunique aspects
9
U.S. Cultural Historyunique aspects
  • American Music is music thats connected to the
    distinctive cultures of the United States in its
    history.

10
U.S. Cultural Historyunique aspects
  • American Music is music thats connected to the
    distinctive cultures of the United States in its
    history.
  • Since American cultures developed at a time of
    rapid technological change, the endurance and
    social impact of American music has been
    amplified.

11
Technology and Media
12
Technology and Media
  • The invention of the phonograph and the radio
    familiarized many Americans with music from
    remote places, and gave countless musicians new
    and more diverse audiences.

13
Technology and Media
  • The invention of the phonograph and the radio
    familiarized many Americans with music from
    remote places, and gave countless musicians new
    and more diverse audiences.
  • The marketing of music through broadcasting and
    record sales not only diversifies musical
    culture, but changes its aspirations.

14
Technology and Media
  • The invention of the phonograph and the radio
    familiarized many Americans with music from
    remote places, and gave countless musicians new
    and more diverse audiences.
  • The marketing of music through broadcasting and
    record sales not only diversifies musical
    culture, but changes its aspirations.
  • Musicians who once made music for the
    understanding of a small community, or for
    everyday ritual purposes, now often made music
    intent on engaging in a larger dialogue.

15
Technology and Media
  • The invention of the phonograph and the radio
    familiarized many Americans with music from
    remote places, and gave countless musicians new
    and more diverse audiences.
  • The marketing of music through broadcasting and
    record sales not only diversifies musical
    culture, but changes its aspirations.
  • Musicians who once made music for the
    understanding of a small community, or for
    everyday ritual purposes, now often made music
    intent on engaging in a larger dialogue.
  • Listeners were encouraged to seek to understand
    the music of landscapes and communities remote
    from their own.

16
U.S. Cultural Historyunique aspects
  • American Music is music thats connected to the
    distinctive cultures of the United States in its
    history.
  • Since American cultures developed at a time of
    rapid technological change, the endurance and
    social impact of American music has been
    amplified.

17
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18
(No Transcript)
19
(No Transcript)
20
U.S. Cultural Historyunique aspects
  • American Music is music thats connected to the
    distinctive cultures of the United States in its
    history.
  • Since American cultures developed at a time of
    rapid technological change, the endurance and
    social impact of American music has been
    amplified.
  • The history of the U.S. provides unique
    opportunities for complex (and sometimes
    troubled) diasporic mixtures of cultural
    influences.

21
Diaspora
diaspora -- the forced or coerced dispersion of a
people from a single ethnicity or heritage, into
new cultural and ethnic surroundings.
22
Diaspora
diaspora -- the forced or coerced dispersion of a
people from a single ethnicity or heritage, into
new cultural and ethnic surroundings.
  • The United States began as a colonial
    destination for Europeans who suffered
    persecution or oppression.

23
Diaspora
diaspora -- the forced or coerced dispersion of a
people from a single ethnicity or heritage, into
new cultural and ethnic surroundings.
  • The United States began as a colonial
    destination for Europeans--especially of English
    and Irish origin--who suffered persecution or
    oppression.
  • The founding of the nation coincided with the
    systematic capture of millions of people, mostly
    from West Africa, for agricultural slave labor.

24
Diaspora
diaspora -- the forced or coerced dispersion of a
people from a single ethnicity or heritage, into
new cultural and ethnic surroundings.
  • The United States began as a colonial
    destination for Europeans who suffered
    persecution or oppression.
  • The founding of the nation coincided with the
    systematic capture of millions of people from
    West Africa, for agricultural slave labor.
  • Americas rise to economic power has depended, in
    part, upon the mass immigration of working-class
    populations from almost every other part of the
    world.

25
Diaspora
diaspora -- the forced or coerced dispersion of a
people from a single ethnicity or heritage, into
new cultural and ethnic surroundings.
  • Diaspora inevitably affects culture twice once
    in the cultural transformation of the
    dispossessed, and once in the transformation of
    their new home.

26
Diaspora
diaspora -- the forced or coerced dispersion of a
people from a single ethnicity or heritage, into
new cultural and ethnic surroundings.
  • Diaspora inevitably affects culture twice once
    in the cultural transformation of the
    dispossessed, and once in the transformation of
    their new home.
  • In the mid-1800s, changes in industry and labor
    also caused large migrations of people
    (especially recent immigrants and
    African-Americans) within the U.S.

27
Diaspora affects music profoundly.
diaspora -- the forced or coerced dispersion of a
people from a single ethnicity or heritage, into
new cultural and ethnic surroundings.
  • Diaspora complicates society and human
    identity, forging
  • new ways of thinking of your place in the world.

28
Diaspora affects music profoundly.
diaspora -- the forced or coerced dispersion of a
people from a single ethnicity or heritage, into
new cultural and ethnic surroundings.
  • Diaspora complicates society and human
    identity, forging
  • new ways of viewing ones place in the world.
  • Among the most basic purposes of music is the
    expression
  • of social belonging, and cultural identity.
    Inevitably, a
  • diasporic experience causes shifts and mixtures
    of
  • musical culture.

29
United States in the 19th-century
Samuel B. Waugh's (1855) "The Bay and the Harbor
of New York"
30
Fun Facts 19th-c History
-- Louisiana Purchase (1804) -- Rise of Modern
Capitalism (1770-) steam and coal power
revolutionize transportation and
manufacturing. -- Romantic poets and
philosophers (Emerson, Thoreau, Nietzsche,
etc.) very interested in the importance of
individuality, liberty, exploration of
humanness. -- Mostly illiterate working class
very interested in getting home to eat some
gruel and get five hours' sleep. -- Rise of
the European "middle class" -- U.S. Civil War
1861-1865 New York Immigrants' Anti-Draft Riots
of 1863
31
Patterns of Settlement of theEastern U.S. in the
19th century
32
Patterns of Settlement of theEastern U.S. in the
19th century
  • Resources and land, throughout the East, are
    owned by Anglo-Americans.

33
Patterns of Settlement of theEastern U.S. in the
19th century
  • Resources and land, throughout the East, are
    owned by Anglo-Americans.
  • The majority of hard labor performed by recent
    immigrants and slaves or former slaves.

34
Patterns of Settlement of theEastern U.S. in the
19th century
  • Resources and land, throughout the East, are
    owned by Anglo-Americans.
  • The majority of hard labor performed by recent
    immigrants and slaves or former slaves.
  • Northern cities are largely segregated by class
    and race working class white immigrants (Irish,
    German), and black Americans largely separated
    from one another, both in residence and in the
    workplace.

35
Patterns of Settlement of theEastern U.S. in the
19th century
  • Resources and land, throughout the East, are
    owned by Anglo-Americans.
  • majority of hard labor performed by recent
    immigrants and slaves or former slaves.
  • Northern cities are largely segregated by class
    and race working class white immigrants (Irish,
    German), and black Americans largely separated
    from one another, both in residence and in the
    workplace.
  • Mountain villiages and rural communities were
    often integrated and relatively disinterested in
    racial and ethnic difference.

36
Timeline of Migration from Europe to the U.S.
37
First wave of immigrationto the U.S. Irish,
English,Scotch, and German.
38
Distribution of U.S. Immigration Origins
39
Euro- and Anglo- American Music in the 19th
century
40
Euro- and Anglo- American Music in the 19th
century
  • White Americans who owned property and were
    educated tended to be familiar with two kinds of
    entertainment music opera and song.

41
Euro- and Anglo- American Music in the 19th
century
  • White Americans who owned property and were
    educated tended to be familiar with two kinds of
    entertainment music opera and song.
  • Operas are stage works based on plays (sometimes
    called "librettos") the texts involve dramatic
    enactments of a fictional world.

42
Euro- and Anglo- American Music in the 19th
century
  • White Americans who owned property and were
    educated tended to be familiar with two kinds of
    entertainment music opera and song.
  • Operas are stage works based on plays (sometimes
    called "librettos") the texts involve dramatic
    enactments of a fictional world.
  • Songs are musical interpretations of poetry.

43
Euro- and Anglo- American Music in the 19th
century
  • White Americans who owned property and were
    educated tended to be familiar with two kinds of
    entertainment music opera and song.
  • Operas are stage works based on plays (sometimes
    called "librettos") the texts involve dramatic
    enactments of a fictional world.
  • Songs are musical interpretations of poetry.
  • Avoid confusing these two categores Operas
    rarely contain songs instead they contain works
    called -- arias, duets, and choruses -- sung by
    actors portraying characters.

44
Song Parlor Song and "Art" Song
45
Song Parlor Song and "Art" Song
  • Songs in 19th-century England and the U.S. were
    an major feature of popular entertainment,
    increasing in importance throughout the century.

46
Song Parlor Song and "Art" Song
  • Songs in 19th-century England and the U.S. were
    an major feature of popular entertainment,
    increasing in importance throughout the century.
  • Early-19th century composers (especially German
    and Austrian) popularized the form and made it
    "respectable" (on a par with symphonies and
    string quartets).

47
Song Parlor Song and "Art" Song
  • Songs in 19th-century England and the U.S. were
    an major feature of popular entertainment,
    increasing in importance throughout the century.
  • Early 19th-century composers (especially German
    and Austrian) popularized the form and made it
    "respectable" (on a par with symphonies and
    string quartets).
  • In the late 19th-century, the rise of the middle
    "consumer" class made songs (in the form of sheet
    music) into the world's first mass media music
    industry. These were often called "Parlor Songs."

48
Review of Week 1 diaspora
  • American Popular Music is, for purposes of this
    course, music that is made by and for U.S.
    audiences, and is intended to reach a large and
    varied audience.
  • American Popular Music is distinctive because,
    along with American cultural history itself, the
    musical styles of Americans have developed
  • during a period of complex and diasporic
    mixtures of cultural identity, and
  • during a period of rapid changes in media
    technology.
  • Many significant U.S. cultural identities are
    products of the 19th century a time when the
    industrial revolution sets off mass movements of
    people to the U.S. from all over the world.
  • This results in diaspora -- a process by which
    cultures find themselves transformed by
    unfamiliar environments, and struggling to
    maintain or reinvent their identities. Music is
    essential to cultural identity, and so diaspora
    affects music profoundly.

49
Review of Week 1 Art Song and Folk Song
  • "Songs" are musical interpretations of poetry.
  • Song can come from the "oral tradition," being
    musical performances of jokes, historical events,
    or popular stories.
  • Songs can also come from "elite" culture, written
    down by educated composers. European composers in
    the 19th century brought wider respect to songs
    as a "high" art form, making song almost as
    important as opera.
  • The first example of mass media is sheet music.
    As soon as publishers started selling written
    songs for middle-class audiences, the "song"
    medium became the earliest form of pop music.
    (Sometimes popular songs were called "Parlor
    Songs"

50
Johann Gottfried von Herder (1744-1803)
Alan Lomax (1915-2002)
Ethnomusicologist/Documentarian discovered and
archived dozens of American Folk Music Styles
Philosopher/Musicologist coined and popularized
the term "Volksmusik" (Folk Music)
51
Folk Song and "Authenticity"
authenticity the status of being the "true
source," or "origin" of a trend, style, or a form
of expression
  • German poets and writers in the early 19th
    century (Brothers Grimm, Johann Gottfried von
    Herder, and others) took a strong interest in the
    ancient (pre-Christian) roots of their cultures.
  • One of the best ways to gain insight into one's
    roots is through the exploration of
    oral-tradition music and literature, especially
    found in rural and illiterate communities.

52
Folk Song and "Authenticity"
authenticity the status of being the "true
source," or "origin" of a trend, style, or a form
of expression
  • J.G. Herder was the first to record hundreds of
    songs (in poem form, and sometimes with musical
    notes) that had been evolving in rural and
    European folk culture through several centuries
    he championed an "authentic" or "original" white
    European culture.
  • But in many cases those songs were not authentic
    -- they were in a constant process of evolution
    that we may never understand completely.

53
deadline 1
Due April 10 American Popular Music Chapter 2,
Chapter 3 pp 39-44
54
What motivates scholars like Alan Lomax (20th
century) and J.G. von Herder (late 18th c.) to
collect and record folk music?
55
African-American Diasporalate 1800s
  • Little is known about African-American folk music
    of the 19th century, because it was not often
    highly valued by those who documented
    19th-century American musical culture.
  • Freed slaves in the south, after the civil war,
    were able to bring a hidden culture and music
    "out of hiding."
  • African-American Christians began to incorporate
    some new rhythmic sensibilities, and new
    communication styles, into their religious
    services.
  • African-American songs and dances were no longer
    a taboo among white audiences, who began to
    regard them with curiosity.
  • However, racism was still an important feature of
    everyday life for African American society.
  • Many black Americans have described rural black
    culture consequently as a culture of wariness,
    and irony.

56
Chernoff, John Miller African Rhythm and
African Sensibility Aesthetics and Social Action
in African Musical Idioms. 280 p., 30 plates,
frontispiece. 1979
57
Hurston quote
  • Novelist and anthropologist Zora Neale Hurston's
    essay "Characteristics of Negro Expression,"
    describes the "absence of the concept of privacy"
    as a phenomenon that influences African American
    voices, a result of chosen and enforced communal
    living and struggle.
  • "I do not always feel colored. Even now I often
    achieve the unconscious Zora of Eatonville before
    the Hegira. I feel most colored when I am thrown
    against a sharp white background. For instance at
    Barnard...I feel my race. Among the thousand
    white persons, I am a dark rock surged upon,
    overswept by a creamy sea. I am surged upon and
    overswept, but through it all, I remain myself.
    When covered by the waters, I am and the ebb but
    reveals me again. At certain times I have no
    race, I am me. When I set my hat at a certain
    angle and saunter down Seventh Avenue, Harlem
    City, feeling as snooty as the lions in front of
    the Forty-Second Street Library, for instance. .
    . . The cosmic Zora emerges. I belong to no race
    or time, I am the eternal feminine with its
    string of beads."
  • Zora Neale Hurston, "How It Feels to Be
    Colored Me" (1928)

58
African-American Diasporalate 1800s
  • Many scholars have suggested that these features
    of American black music are related to deeply
    ingrained elements of West African heritage.
  • But African American ways of living had already
    been developing for over 200 years on this
    continent, under the deeply transformative
    circumstances of slavery and near-total
    prohibition of African language and ideas.
  • When we emphasize the "African-ness" of early
    African-American music and art forms, we run the
    risk of hearing their voices as though they were
    a unified and authentic link to some mysterious
    past. That tends to degrade the value of the
    diasporic culture, a modern culture with
    contemporary struggles, and with a people whose
    experiences are varied and individualized.

59
Minstrelsy
  • One of the most well-known early forms of
    American Music (white or black) was minstrelsy
    parody of black music, dance, and language mostly
    propogated by white entertainers.

60
Minstrelsy
  • One of the most well-known early forms of
    American Music (white or black) was minstrelsy
    parody of black music, dance, and language mostly
    propogated by white entertainers.
  • Minstrelsy is actually a large category of
    entertainment, including
  • extensive racist humor and "blackface" music, but
    also
  • ragtime players and singers, cakewalk dancers,
    and others who were influenced less crudely by
    African American styles.

61
Minstrelsy
  • One of the most well-known early forms of
    American Music (white or black) was minstrelsy
    parody of black music, dance, and language mostly
    propogated by white entertainers.
  • Minstrelsy is actually a large category of
    entertainment, including
  • extended racist jokes and "blackface" music, but
    also
  • ragtime players and singers, cakewalk dancers,
    and others who were influenced less crudely by
    African American styles.

62
Minstrelsy
  • One of the most well-known early forms of
    American Music (white or black) was minstrelsy
    parody of black music, dance, and language mostly
    propogated by white entertainers.
  • Some minstrelsy was blatant and hateful racism
    white (and sometimes black) entertainers
    ridiculing black mannerisms, in order to distance
    themselves from a culture they feared, a culture
    they wanted to identify themselves against.

63
Minstrelsy
  • One of the most well-known early forms of
    American Music (white or black) was minstrelsy
    parody of black music, dance, and language mostly
    propogated by white entertainers.
  • Some minstrelsy was blatant and hateful racism
    white (and sometimes black) entertainers
    ridiculing black mannerisms, in order to distance
    themselves from a culture they feared, or loathed
    to be connected with.
  • But some scholars have suggested that minstrel
    shows were invented by rural white musicians as a
    form of imitation and identification that had a
    political purpose

64
Minstrelsy
  • One of the most well-known early forms of
    American Music (white or black) was minstrelsy
    parody of black music, dance, and language mostly
    propogated by white entertainers.
  • Some minstrelsy was blatant and hateful racism
    white (and sometimes black) entertainers
    ridiculing black mannerisms, in order to distance
    themselves from a culture they feared, or loathed
    to be connected with.
  • But some scholars have suggested that minstrel
    shows were invented by rural white musicians as a
    form of imitation and identification that had a
    political purpose Identifying with black culture
    gave poor whites an opportunity to emphasize
    their differences from despised figures of
    authority.

65
Minstrelsy
  • One of the most well-known early forms of
    American Music (white or black) was minstrelsy
    parody of black music, dance, and language mostly
    propogated by white entertainers.
  • Some minstrelsy was blatant and hateful racism
    white (and sometimes black) entertainers
    ridiculing black mannerisms, in order to distance
    themselves from a culture they feared, or loathed
    to be connected with.
  • But some scholars have suggested that minstrel
    shows were invented by rural white musicians as a
    form of imitation and identification that had a
    political purpose Identifying with black culture
    gave poor whites an opportunity to emphasize
    their differences from despised figures of
    authority.
  • (And they may also have loved the music!)

66
MinstrelsyTwo 19th-c white artists who
appropriated African-American styles
Thomas Dartmouth Rice (1808-1960) Stephen Foster
(1828-1864)
67
MinstrelsyTwo white artists who appropriated
African-American styles
  • Thomas Dartmouth Rice (1808-1860) was a white
    entertainer who was, ironically, the first to
    popularize a notion of black American culture,
    with his character Jim Crow.

68
Thomas Dartmouth Rice (1808-1860)
69
MinstrelsyTwo white artists who appropriated
African-American styles
  • Thomas Dartmouth Rice (1808-1860) was a white
    entertainer who was, ironically, the first to
    popularize a notion of black American culture,
    with his character Jim Crow.

70
MinstrelsyTwo white artists who appropriated
African-American styles
  • Thomas Dartmouth Rice (1808-1860) was a white
    entertainer who was, ironically, the first to
    popularize a notion of black American culture,
    with his character Jim Crow.
  • Jim Crow was a fictional character created in
    Rice's minstrel shows, who made fun of the upper
    classes, and exhibited sophisticated layers of
    irony. Starr/Waterman p 19

71
MinstrelsyTwo white artists who appropriated
African-American styles
  • Thomas Dartmouth Rice (1808-1860) was a white
    entertainer who was, ironically, the first to
    popularize a notion of black American culture,
    with his character Jim Crow.
  • Jim Crow was a fictional character created in
    Rice's minstrel shows, who made fun of the upper
    classes, and exhibited sophisticated layers of
    irony. Starr/Waterman p 19
  • Rice's character was widely imitated after the
    civil war, and in some cases it came to represent
    the need to separate the lives of whites and
    blacks. Starr / Waterman p 20-21

72
MinstrelsyTwo white artists who appropriated
African-American styles
  • Thomas Dartmouth Rice (1808-1860) was a white
    entertainer who was, ironically, the first to
    popularize a notion of black American culture,
    with his character Jim Crow.
  • Jim Crow was a fictional character created in
    Rice's minstrel shows, who made fun of the upper
    classes, and exhibited sophisticated layers of
    irony. Starr/Waterman p 19
  • Rice's character was widely imitated after the
    civil war, and in some cases it came to represent
    the need to separate the lives of whites and
    blacks. Starr / Waterman p 20-21
  • The term "Jim Crow" has (even more ironically)
    come to represent segregation and rigidly
    stereotypical thinking about differences between
    blacks and whites in America.

73
STEPHEN FOSTER (1826-1864)
74
MinstrelsyTwo white artists who appropriated
African-American styles
  • Stephen Foster(1826-1864) was the first composer
    of real American popular music. His music
    represents the influence of the art song
    tradition, the Irish folk tradition, and the
    tradition of minstrelsy.

75
MinstrelsyTwo white artists who appropriated
African-American styles
  • Stephen Foster(1826-1864) was the first real
    composer of popular music. His music represents
    the influence of the art song tradition
    ("Beautiful Dreamer") on the Irish folk music
    tradition and the minstrel tradition
  • "Jeanie with the light brown hair" strongly
    reflects Irish folk sentiments about beauty and
    feminine elegance.
  • "Oh Susannah!" reflects elements of minstrelsy
    and rural folk music.

76
MinstrelsyTwo white artists who appropriated
African-American styles
  • Stephen Foster(1826-1864) was the first real
    composer of popular music. His music represents
    the influence of the art song tradition
    ("Beautiful Dreamer") on the Irish folk music
    tradition and the minstrel tradition
  • "Jeanie with the light brown hair" strongly
    reflects Irish folk sentiments about beauty and
    feminine elegance.
  • "Oh Susannah!" reflects elements of minstrelsy
    and rural folk music.

77
MinstrelsyTwo white artists who appropriated
African-American styles
  • Stephen Foster(1826-1864) was the first real
    composer of popular music. His music represents
    the influence of the art song tradition
    ("Beautiful Dreamer") on the Irish folk music
    tradition and the minstrel tradition
  • "Jeanie with the light brown hair" strongly
    reflects Irish folk sentiments about beauty and
    feminine elegance.
  • "Oh Susannah!" reflects elements of minstrelsy
    and rural folk music.
  • All Foster's songs are "Parlor songs" intended
    for middle-class consumption in mass-distributed
    sheet music form, for performance on pianos.

78
Stephen Foster Irish influence, art music
influence, and minstrelsy influence
  • Jeanie with the light brown hair
  • Jeanie's beauty is compared to pastoral and
    natural scenery, common in Irish poems. It
    idealizes the rural origins of the Irish
    diaspora.
  • Art music influence is reflected in
  • its soaring, memorable melody
  • its clear, steady, and symmetrical rhythmic
    structure.

79
Stephen Foster Irish influence, art music
influence, and minstrelsy influence
  • Jeanie with the light brown hair
  • Jeanie's beauty is compared to pastoral and
    natural scenery, common in Irish poems. It
    idealizes the rural origins of the Irish
    diaspora.
  • Art music influence is reflected in
  • its soaring, memorable melody
  • clear, steady, and symmetrical rhythmic
    structure.

80
Stephen Foster Irish influence, art music
influence, and minstrelsy influence
  • Jeanie with the light brown hair
  • Jeanie's beauty is compared to pastoral and
    natural scenery, common in Irish poems. It
    idealizes the rural origins of the Irish
    diaspora.
  • Art music influence is reflected in
  • its soaring, memorable melody
  • clear, steady, and symmetrical rhythmic
    structure.
  • Irish-Americans loved hearing tribute to their
    culture in this modern, artful style.

81
Stephen Foster Irish influence, art music
influence, and minstrelsy influence
  • Jeanie with the light brown hair
  • Jeanie's beauty is compared to pastoral and
    natural scenery, common in Irish poems. It
    idealizes the rural origins of the Irish
    diaspora.
  • Art music influence is reflected in its soaring,
    memorable melody, and its clear, steady, and
    symmetrical rhythmic structure. Irish-Americans
    loved hearing tribute to their culture in this
    modern, artful style.
  • Oh Susannah!
  • reflects African-American tradition in its
    reference to the banjo (an instrument at least
    partly connected to African origins, and commonly
    played by former slaves)
  • its plaintiff, declamatory melody, and its
    (sometimes absurd) comic lyrics reflect any
    number of folk music traditions.

82
Stephen Foster Irish influence, art music
influence, and minstrelsy influence
  • Jeanie with the light brown hair
  • Jeanie's beauty is compared to pastoral and
    natural scenery, common in Irish poems. It
    idealizes the rural origins of the Irish
    diaspora.
  • Art music influence is reflected in its soaring,
    memorable melody, and its clear, steady, and
    symmetrical rhythmic structure. Irish-Americans
    loved hearing tribute to their culture in this
    modern, artful style.
  • Oh Susannah!
  • reflects African-American tradition in its
    reference to the banjo (an instrument at least
    partly connected to African origins, and commonly
    played by former slaves)
  • its plaintiff, declamatory melody, and its
    (sometimes absurd) comic lyrics reflect any
    number of folk music traditions.

83
Stephen Foster Irish influence, art music
influence, and minstrelsy influence
  • Jeanie with the light brown hair
  • Jeanie's beauty is compared to pastoral and
    natural scenery, common in Irish poems. It
    idealizes the rural origins of the Irish
    diaspora.
  • Art music influence is reflected in its soaring,
    memorable melody, and its clear, steady, and
    symmetrical rhythmic structure. Irish-Americans
    loved hearing tribute to their culture in this
    modern, artful style.
  • Oh Susannah!
  • reflects African-American tradition in its
    reference to the banjo (an instrument at least
    partly connected to African origins, and commonly
    played by former slaves)
  • its plaintiff, declamatory melody, and its
    (sometimes absurd) comic lyrics reflect any
    number of folk music traditions.

84
Stephen Foster Irish influence, art music
influence, and minstrelsy influence
  • Jeanie with the light brown hair
  • Jeanie's beauty is compared to pastoral and
    natural scenery, common in Irish poems. It
    idealizes the rural origins of the Irish
    diaspora.
  • Art music influence is reflected in its soaring,
    memorable melody, and its clear, steady, and
    symmetrical rhythmic structure. Irish-Americans
    loved hearing tribute to their culture in this
    modern, artful style.
  • Oh Susannah!
  • reflects African-American tradition in its
    reference to the banjo (an instrument at least
    partly connected to African origins, and commonly
    played by former slaves)
  • its plaintiff, declamatory melody, and its
    (sometimes absurd) comic lyrics reflect any
    number of folk music traditions.

85
quiz what's the difference between a BEAT and
a METER?
86
Starr/Waterman Chapter 2 main points for
comprehension
  • Thomas Dartmouth Rice Minstrel Shows
  • compare early minstrelsy to post-civil war
    minstrelsy
  • Stephen Foster
  • The Birth of Popular Song and Tin Pan Alley (also
    to be discussed Wednesday 4/19)
  • Ragtime, syncopation, and black identity
  • Rise of the Phonograph
  • the first popular music records Enrico Caruso
  • schizophonia

87
Starr/Waterman Chapter 3 (pp 39-44) main points
for comprehension
  • Decline of the phonograph and the rise of radio
    (1920s and 1930s).
  • Electric recording and crooning.
  • Introduction of sound film ("talkies") and the
    dominance of Hollywood in the 1930s music
    industry -- to be discussed in lectures April
    21/24.

88
Starr/Waterman Chapter 4 main points for
comprehension
  • Tin Pan Alley's Golden Age
  • composers Irving Berlin, Richard Rodgers, Cole
    Porter, George Gershwin, Harold Arlen, Jerome
    Kern
  • Jewish immigrant culture in New York City
  • Cultivation of the first internationally popular
    songwriting style to be associated with America
    (AABA form)
  • Listen to "My Blue Heaven" (analysis pp. 68-71),
    and "April Showers" (analysis pp. 72-73)
  • first performers Al Jolson and Bing Crosby

89
slight changes in the syllabus
90
EARLY "JAZZ"African American Music in the early
1900s
91
EARLY "JAZZ"African American Music in the early
1900s
  • The famously syncopated and layered rhythms that
    were the hallmark of early jazz have many
    cultural origins
  • Latin American and Caribbean dance styles,
  • African-American ring-shouts and gospel singing
  • Anglo-American fiddle playing
  • Some patriotic French and English marching band
    music.

92
EARLY "JAZZ"African American Music in the early
1900s
  • The famously syncopated and layered rhythms that
    were the hallmark of early jazz have many
    cultural origins
  • Latin American and Caribbean dance styles,
  • African-American ring-shouts and gospel singing
  • Anglo-American fiddle playing
  • Some examples of patriotic or martial French and
    English brass band music.
  • (The Spanish American War ended in 1898, and when
    American bases were decommissioned, our military
    left behind, in New Orleans, hundreds of brass
    instruments, later bought and repaired by local
    dock and boat workers, who used them at dance
    celebrations and to accompany local folk songs.)

93
EARLY "JAZZ"African American Music in the early
1900s
  • The famously syncopated and layered rhythms that
    were the hallmark of early jazz have many
    cultural origins Latin American and Caribbean
    dance styles, African-American ring-shouts and
    gospel singing, Anglo-American fiddle playing,
    and some patriotic or martial marching band
    music.
  • These numerous cultures come together
    powerfullywithin reach of the Mississippi River
    and its tributaries, where international
    influences affected the daily lives of
    working-class black musicians.
  • New Orleans Kansas City Memphis
  • St. Louis Louisville
    Indianapolis

94
EARLY "JAZZ"African American Music in the early
1900s
  • The term "jazz," by itself, is troublesome
  • it refers to virtually any style of music
    innovated by early 20th-century African American
    entertainers.
  • Most of those styles utilize European harmony
    with a variety of international influences on
    rhythm and melody.
  • Regardless of the mixture, African Americans
    tended to be the ones performing it on tour, and
    writing it down for publication.

95
EARLY "JAZZ"African American Music in the early
1900s
  • The term "jazz," by itself, is troublesome
  • it refers to virtually any style of music
    innovated by early 20th-century African American
    entertainers.
  • RAGS CAKEWALKS BLUES "BOOGIE"
  • TWO-STEP DIXIELAND SWING
  • (and these styles are all quite different from
    one another!)
  • Most of those styles utilize European harmony
    with a variety of international influences on
    rhythm and melody.
  • Regardless of the mixture, African Americans
    tended to be the ones performing it on tour, and
    writing it down for publication.

96
EARLY "JAZZ"African American Music in the early
1900s
  • The term "jazz," by itself, is troublesome
  • it refers to virtually any style of music
    innovated by early 20th-century African American
    entertainers.
  • In spite of their differences, most of those
    styles utilize European harmony with a variety of
    international influences on rhythm and melody.
  • Regardless of the mixture, African Americans
    tended to be the ones performing it on tour, and
    writing it down for publication.

97
EARLY "JAZZ"African American Music in the early
1900s
  • The term "jazz," by itself, is troublesome
  • it refers to virtually any style of music
    innovated byearly 20th-century African American
    entertainers.
  • Most of those styles utilize European harmony
    with a variety of international influences on
    rhythm and melody.
  • Regardless of the mixture, African Americans
    tended to be the ones performing it on tour, and
    writing it down for publication.

98
EARLY "JAZZ"African American Music in the early
1900s
  • The term "jazz," by itself, is troublesome
  • it refers to virtually any style of music
    innovated by early 20th-century African American
    entertainers.
  • Most of those styles utilize European harmony
    with a variety of international influences on
    rhythm and melody.
  • Regardless of the mixture, African Americans
    tended to be the ones performing these styles,
    and writing it down for publication.

99
What is the musical feature most common in the
wide variety of early "jazz" styles?
100
W.C. Handy
W.C. Handy
(1873-1958)
101
W.C. Handy
(1873-1958)
  • born in rural Alabama
  • Middle class background
  • Self-taught trumpeter and
  • composer, highly educated
  • played in Mississippi river
  • brass bands and "minstrel
  • shows."

W.C. Handy
102
W.C. Handy
(1873-1958)
  • born in rural Alabama
  • Middle class background
  • Self-taught trumpeter and
  • composer, highly educated played in Mississippi
    river brass bands and "minstrel shows."
  • Finished college with honors, took a faculty
    position at an Alabama black college.

W.C. Handy
103
W.C. Handy
(1873-1958)
  • In the 1910s, was inspired by rural musicians
    to compose what he called a "new American music."
  • Became a composer and published hundreds of
    "blues" tunes for solo voice or for brass bands
    that he led in Memphis, Tennesee
  • His funeral procession in 1958 (New York) was
    attended by 150,000.

104
W.C. Handy
(1873-1958)
important works
Memphis Blues (1912)
inspired the "Fox Trot" dance craze
Beale St. Blues (1916)
St. Louis Blues (1919)
105
W.C. Handy
(1873-1958)
important works
Memphis Blues (1912)
inspired the "Fox Trot" dance craze
Beale St. Blues (1916)
became the quintessential example of New Orleans
Jazz
St. Louis Blues (1919)
106
W.C. Handy
(1873-1958)
important works
Memphis Blues (1912)
inspired the "Fox Trot" dance craze
Beale St. Blues (1916)
became the quintessential example of New Orleans
Jazz
St. Louis Blues (1919)
benefitted uniquely from phonograph distribution
107
St. Louis Blues and the record industry
1917 - Because of Euro-centric recording
practices in the early history of the phonograph,
the first "Jazz" record "Livery Stable Blues" was
recorded by the all-white Original Dixieland Jass
Band from New Orleans. 1919 - Gennett Record
Company tried to make records using a similar
technology to the recording giant "Victor"
records they were sued. Smaller labels such as
Okeh, Vocalian, Compo joined Gennett in defending
its claim that lateral-cut was in the public
domain. Gennett won the case in 1920. Gennett
quickly became one of the largest record
producers in the nation, and distributed African
American "blues" and "jazz" internationally. 1920
- "St. Louis Blues" happened to be in vogue
among Vaudeville performers, after a popular
singer Ethel Waters began to sing it in New York.
Because of its local importance at the moment of
Gennet records' court victory, it quickly became
one of the most widely recorded (and distributed)
songs in history.
108
St. Louis Blues and the record industry
because of its popularity, St. Louis Blues
  • inspired the "Shimmy" dance craze
  • was requested by King Edward VIII
  • from his bagpipers.
  • was performed at a royal Greek wedding
  • became the Ethiopian Military's battle
  • hymn as they resisted Italian invaders in the
  • 1930s.

109
W.C. Handy
(1873-1958)
important works
Memphis Blues (1912)
inspired the "Fox Trot" dance craze
Beale St. Blues (1916)
St. Louis Blues (1919)
benefitted uniquely from phonograph distribution
110
BASIC MUSICAL TERMS for musical time
rhythm the pattern of distribution for any
sounds in time.
tempo the speed at which rhythms progress.
duration the length of a musical note, or a span
of time
beat a unit of time of consistent duration,
occuring at about the speed that you would tap
your foot.
meter a repeating pattern of beats, usually
equal in number with each repetition.
NEAR-SYNONYMS bar, measure
111
BASIC MUSICAL TERMSfor melody
pitch a measure of how high or low a note is.
step the basic unit of melodic motion. Steps
can vary in size, but they feel like an
incremental and graduate change in pitch height.
skip a motion of two steps. Notes that are two
steps apart, but sounding at the same time,
sometimes sound good together as harmony.
leap a motion of more than two steps. Leaps in
a song melody often correspond with dramatic
feelings in the lyrics.
octave the distance between pitches at the top
and bottom of any one scale. Octaves are
"equivalent" -- if you sing a melody with
someone whose voice is higher and lower than
yours, you're likely to sing the same exact notes
but in different octaves.
112
The Blues
  • "The Blues" was originally a name, coined by
    early African American entertainers (W. C. Handy
    and Gertrude "Ma" Rainey), for a variety of rural
    African American folk styles.

113
The Blues
  • "The Blues" was originally a name, coined by
    early African American entertainers (W. C. Handy
    and Gertrude "Ma" Rainey), for a variety of rural
    African American folk styles.
  • W.C. Handy "A lean loose-jointed Negro() had
    commencced plunking a guitar beside me while I
    slept. His clothes were rags his feet peeped out
    of his shoes. His face had on it the sadness of
    the ages. As he played, he pressed a knife on the
    strings of the guitar in a manner popularized by
    Hawaiian guitarists who used steel bars. The
    effect was unforgettable.

114
The Blues
  • "The Blues" was originally a name, coined early
    African American entertainers (W. C. Handy and
    Gertrude "Ma" Rainey), for a variety of rural
    African American folk styles.
  • W.C. Handy "His song, too, struck me
    instantly...Goin' where the Southern cross' the
    Dog...the singer repeated the line three times,
    accompanying himself on the guitar with the
    weirdest music I had ever heard."
  • William Christopher Handy, Father of the Blues
    (New York Macmillan, 1941), p. 74 -- quoted in
    Elija Wald's Escaping the Delta Robert Johnson
    and the Invention of the Blues. New York Harper
    Collins, 2004, p. 8

115
The Blues
  • "The Blues" was originally a name, coined early
    African American entertainers (W. C. Handy and
    Gertrude "Ma" Rainey), for a variety of rural
    African American folk styles.
  • folklorist John Work "A girl from the
    town...came to the ten one morning and began to
    sing about the 'man' who had left her. The song
    was so strange and poignant that it attracted
    much attention. "Ma" Rainey became so interested
    that she...used the song as an encore.

116
The Blues
  • "The Blues" was originally a name, coined early
    African American entertainers (W. C. Handy and
    Gertrude "Ma" Rainey), for a variety of rural
    African American folk styles.
  • folklorist John Work "The song elicited such a
    response...that it won a special place in her
    act. Many times she was asked what kind of song
    it was, and one day she replied, in a moment of
    inspiration, 'It's the Blues -- ' ... " Ibid.
    p 11
  • she added that she heard several other singers
    perform in that way in the course of her travels,
    but the music had never been called the blues.

117
The Blues
  • "The Blues" was originally a name, coined early
    African American entertainers (W. C. Handy and
    Gertrude "Ma" Rainey), for a variety of rural
    African American folk styles.
  • In its earliest commercial form, its most
    characteristic features were
  • syncopated singing and
  • a "blues note" -- a note that falls into the
    ambiguous space between a major third (4 half
    steps) and minor third (3 half steps).

118
The Blues
  • "The Blues" was originally a name, coined early
    African American entertainers (W. C. Handy and
    Gertrude "Ma" Rainey), for a variety of rural
    African American folk styles.
  • In its earliest commercial form, its most
    characteristic features were
  • syncopated singing and
  • a "blues note" -- a note that falls into the
    ambiguous space between a major third (4 half
    steps) and minor third (3 half steps).
  • The standard blues form is AAB -- both in poetry
    and in melody a line, repeated, followed by a
    contrasting idea. The contrasting idea is often a
    "punch line."

119
deadline 2
Due April 17 Chapter 4, Chapter 5 pp
86-100 Due April 21 Chapter 5 pp
100-114 Chapter 6 pp 121-142 Info about the
origin of the song "St. James Infirmary" http//
robwalker.net/html_docs/letterthirteen.html
120
Starr/Waterman Chapter 4 main points for
comprehension
  • Tin Pan Alley's Golden Age
  • composers Irving Berlin, Richard Rodgers, Cole
    Porter, George Gershwin, Harold Arlen, Jerome
    Kern
  • Jewish immigrant culture in New York City
  • Cultivation of the first internationally popular
    songwriting style to be associated with America
    (AABA form)
  • Listen to "My Blue Heaven" (analysis pp. 68-71),
    and "April Showers" (analysis pp. 72-73)
  • first performers Al Jolson and Bing Crosby

121
Tin Pan Alley
  • Beginning in the 1880s, the 28th St. region of
    New York City became a center for a diaspora of
    Jewish refugees from Eastern Europe, who were
    victims of one of the first modern waves of
    anti-semitism.

122
Tin Pan Alley
  • Beginning in the 1880s, the 28th St. region of
    New York City became a center for a diaspora of
    Jewish refugees from Eastern Europe, who were
    victims of one of the first modern waves of
    anti-semitism.
  • Jewish men in the 19th-c were often prevented
    from entering into building and agricultural
    trades, partly because of their tendency to work
    longer hours for lower wages, and partly because
    of hatred and anti-Jewish superstitions motivated
    by Christian mythology.

123
Tin Pan Alley
  • Beginning in the 1880s, the 28th St. region of
    New York City became a center for a diaspora of
    Jewish refugees from Eastern Europe, who were
    victims of one of the first modern waves of
    anti-semitism.
  • Jewish men in the 19th-c were often prevented
    from entering into building and agricultural
    trades, partly because of their tendency to work
    longer hours for lower wages, and partly because
    of hatred and anti-Jewish superstitions motivated
    by Christian mythology.
  • Consequently, Jewish families entered into other
    businesses publishing, clerical, entertainment,
    and financial trades which were often considered
    less prestigious by whites.

124
Tin Pan Alley
  • Beginning in the 1880s, the 28th St. region of
    New York City became a center for a diaspora of
    Jewish refugees from Eastern Europe, who were
    victims of one of the first modern waves of
    anti-semitism.
  • Jewish men in the 19th-c were often prevented
    from entering into building and agricultural
    trades, partly because of their tendency to work
    longer hours for lower wages, and partly because
    of hatred and anti-Jewish superstitions motivated
    by Christian mythology.
  • Consequently, Jewish families entered into other
    businesses publishing, clerical, entertainment,
    and financial trades which were often considered
    less prestigious by whites.
  • As a result, the first Jewish immigrant
    communities arrived with a long legacy of
    expertise and tradition related to two areas
    related to popular music entertainment and
    publishing.

125
Introduction to SONG FORMS
  • Form in music is denoted by capital letters to
    indicate any basic melodic "ideas." (These are
    about the length of a spoken sentence.) A change
    from one letter to another (A to B) indicates
    contrast.
  • A prime symbol (') indicates significant
    variation, without the purpose of contrast.
  • Probably the most common form for song choruses
    in American popular music is A A B A (including A
    A B A').
  • The standard form for blues is A A B.
  • "Where'd you get those eyes" and "Always" are
    examples of another possible form A B A C.

126
From the perspective of a Western- European
musical heritage, what's unusual about a blues
note?
127
BASIC MUSICAL TERMSfor harmony
  • harmony is defined, in opposition to melody, as
    the organization of simultaneous or overlapping
    pitches. (Melody individual pitches in rhythmic
    succession)
  • A chord is a combinations of notes sounding
    together, usually stacked up by skipping every
    other note of a major or minor scale.
  • A key is a collection of chords that are all part
    of the same scale they sound like members of the
    same family.
  • chromaticism is the use of harmonies and keys in
    colorful ways, often involving movement between
    distant keys in a single melodic idea.

128
Reading assignment
plus "Ellington Refutes Cry That Swing Started
Sex Crimes" 1 1/2 pages (Downbeat Magazine,
1937) on ERes http//cruzcat.ucsc.edu (or
follow the link from our course page to --gt
Electronic Reserves http//eres.ucsc.edu --gt
Search by instructor Carson --gt Mus 11c
PASSWORD uspop
129
Mid-term review (two documents linked to the
course page)
1. Listening Review
- list of songs to listen to for form
identification - new playlist
"4_Additional_Listening" at the listening page
- find one song in each of the first two
playlists (artsong/folksong, and tin pan alley)
that are in triple meter.
  • Selected powerpoint slides with sample
    questions. (will be online starting 5 pm today)

130
Quiz What is the standardmelodic form in the
blues?
131
Early History of Mass Media (overview)
  • The earliest method of disseminating music, and
    among the most significant, is writing. (Same
    goes for recording speech and other information.)
  • Another major form of mass media is, of course,
    performaning for large audiences, which was
    common for traveling performers and performance
    groups of the 19th century, whose music often
    reached communities across the U.S. and Europe.
  • In the late 19th century, inventors like Thomas
    Edison and Alexander Graham Bell developed ways
    of recording and transmitting actual sound.

132
Sound Recording 1877-1925
  • 1877 Edison's first sound recording ("Mary had
    a little lamb") was made on a tinfoil cylinder.
    At around the same time similar recordings were
    being made by French inventor Charles Cros.
  • 1877-1889 Frank Lambert, Charles Tainter,
    Augustus Stroh, and Chichester Bell improved
    Edison's basic concept by making recordings on
    hard rubber, brass, wax, and lead, for more
    durability and portability.
  • In 1888 Emile Berliner invented the phonograph in
    its modern form a flat, round, record that could
    be mass produced and easily distributed.

133
(No Transcript)
134
Sound Recording 1877-1925
the first commercial records
  • 1890 The first jukebox, the "nickel-in-the-slot
    phonograph" was tested in San Francisco, similar
    machines were installed at major fairs and public
    parks, playing marching band tunes by John
    Phillip Sousa and parlor songs by Stephen Foster.
  • 1903 The phonograph was popularized by the
    "Victrola" company, as a home furnishing for the
    middle class, and the earliest records were made
    by Opera singers like Enrico Caruso and Fedor
    Chaliapan.
  • 1904 A British company records the first opera
    (Verdi's Ermani), on 40 disks each held about 4
    minutes of music.
  • 1908 Alan Lomax's father, John Lomax, traveled
    to rural Texas and recorded cowboy songs,
    including "Home on the Range," which quickly
    became a national favorite.

135
Sound Recording 1877-1925
the first commercial records
  • 1921 The triumph of independent record
    companies finally allows widespread commercial
    distribution of jazz records W.C. Handy's "St.
    Louis Blues" then far outsells any previous
    recording, and establishes jazz as an
    internationally known style.
  • 1925 New technologies in microphones (named
    "Der Bingle" technology, after Bing Crosby), and
    recording (electric recording vs. acoustic),
    enable singers to create new sounds
  • greater intimacy, including a natural or everyday
    quality of voice
  • more range of intensity
  • easier to control pitch and rhythm, since loud,
    operatic technique is no longer unnecessary
  • 1929 Stock market crashes, record sales and
    manufacturing take a dive radio rises from the
    ashes.

136
Electric Turntable illustration from Science
magazine, 1926
137
SWING and the "BIG BAND ERA" early developments
in the 1920s
  • The meaning of "Jazz" was transformed in the
    1920s
  • In the early 1900s, "Jazz" was a catch-all word
    for new African American styles evolving in New
    Orleans, St. Louis, Kansas City, and Memphis
    when played in New York or Chicago, it was
    considered exotic and unusual.
  • After 1921, thanks to phonograph records, radio
    shows could be "canned" and distributed for
    broadcast, or for sale, anywhere in the world. By
    the mid-1920s, jazz became the chosen
    entertainment of the urban wealthy, and it was
    the most popular kind of dance in upper-class
    hotels and clubs.
  • In the late 1920s, African American Jazz was
    beloved in France and respected as a high art
    form.
  • Jazz ould be heard in clubs in almost every
    outpost of imperialism not only in Paris and
    London but throughout Europe, as well as
    Shanghai, Hong Kong, and in cities throughout the
    middle east and in India.
  • Many African American musicians escaped U.S.
    poverty and racism to lucrative careers and
    middle-class lifestyles in Europe.

138
SWING and the "BIG BAND ERA" late 1920s origins
  • African-American bands of Bennie Moten (with
    Count Basie on piano) and Fletcher Henderson
    developed the "Kansas City Swing" style.
  • Equally important are Duke Ellington and Cab
    Calloway who developed the "Big Band" style at
    New York's Cotton Club, a venue designed for
    all-black entertainers and all-white audiences.
  • Duke Ellington's band included Coleman Hawkins,
    whose improvisation style gave the public its
    first appreciation of jazz improvisation as high
    art -- not just a willingness to modify existing
    melodies, but a style based on utterly
    spontaneous and original melodic composition.
  • Wider appreciation for jazz meant that ensembles
    were also appreciated for their compositions and
    arrangements. Duke Ellington's band traveled to
    Europe in 1934 and found that his style was
    already well-known among white audiences ther
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