Stephen Foster was America's first great songwriter. The composer of classics such as "Oh! Susanna", "Jeanie with the Light Brown Hair", "Beautiful Dreamer", "My Old Kentucky Home", "Old Folks at Home" ("Way down upon the Swanee River"), and "Camptown Races" ("Doo-dah! Doo-dah!"), Foster virtually invented popular music as we recognize it to this day. Yet by his death in 1864, at the early age of thirty-seven, he was all but forgotten. In the first biography of Foster in more than sixty years, Ken Emerson makes the man as well as his music come alive. Foster's life was riddled with contradictions. Although his songs celebrated the rural South, he scarcely set foot there, spending most of his life in Pittsburgh, the smoky cradle of America's industrial revolution. He won fame by writing blackface minstrel songs, doing what white boys from Irving Berlin to Elvis Presley to Michael Bolton have been doing ever since: mimicking black music. Yet the best of his songs transcended burnt-cork caricature and expressed a profound sympathy for African Americans that even Frederick Douglass applauded. Foster's yearning for respectability drove him to write genteel love songs, but these ballads were belied by his own broken marriage. Unable to equal the success of his earlier hits, he died a nearly penniless alcoholic on the Bowery. Doo-dah! evokes not only Foster's songs but the wide-ranging music of his era, from high opera to low dives, and it looks ahead to the ragtime, rock, and rap of our own century. It's a sweeping panorama with a cast of characters that extends from Davy Crockett to Andrew Carnegie, from America's first great classical pianist, Louis Moreau Gottschalk, to its first great proponent of Afrocentrism, Martin Delany. It was the era of industrialization; of steamboats, railroads, and the telegraph; of westward expansion and the California gold rush; and, of course, of slavery and the Civil War. Foster absorbed it all, and all of it infused his music. After Emerson's exploration of the multiple meanings of Foster's first hit song - relating it to the tragic death of Foster's sister, the catastrophic triumph of technology, and the casual cruelty of racism as well as to the writings of Whitman, Melville, Thoreau, and Mark Twain - "Oh! Susanna" will never sound the same.
William Grant Still and the Fusion of Cultures in American Music
... 475 Hummin ' to Myself ( Ronstadt ) , 390 The Hunter ( Blondie ) , 169-70 The Hunter ( Ike and Tina Turner Revue ) ... James , 183 , 185 , 186 , 192 " Honeymoon Suite , " 470 Honky Tonk Angel ( Cline , P. ) , 66 Honor ( benefit CD ) ...
RAY NANCE ( trumpet ) , JOHNNY HODGES ( alto sax ) , FLIP PHILLIPS ( tenor sax ) , EARL HINES ( piano ) , AL CASEY ... session with ( I to r ) : Flip Phillips , Oscar Pettiford , Ray Nance , Betty Roché , Sid Catlett and Earl Hines .
Surgeon's Call
I had been invited as special guest on a Jerry Douglas Christmas tour, wryly titled “Jerry Christmas.” It was an honor and a challenge for me to play with Jerry and his band of high-level musicians. But for Aimee and Tanner it was a ...
The 1920–21 series of three “Tuesday nine o'clocks” at Jenkins Art Galleries featured the Hambourg Trio along with the English baritone James Campbell-McInnes who was, like Guerrero, a new arrival on the Toronto musical scene.9 ...
In exploring the art of those who knew their instrument both as composers and as pianists, this book serves, in the words of pianist Stephen Hough, "both as a fascinating, exhaustive study of the riches of the past and as a stimulating ...
这些经历让我对剧院极其憎恶:日复一日无休止地重复同样的台词和同样的动作,还要忍受他人的任性多变。而且戏剧对人生的看法,以及它的废话连篇都令我非常厌恶。我离开了戴利,返回到位于卡耐基音乐厅的练舞房里。尽管收入不多,但我又可以穿上那件白色的希腊 ...
《瓦格纳与哲学:特里斯坦和弦》将作曲家瓦格纳的艺术生涯置于他那个时代的哲学背景中,详细而全面地研究了瓦格纳与哲学家之间的密切联系:从马克思以前的社会主义者到费尔 ...
我从来不看乐评,不关注别人的赞扬,能听到观众的好评固然值得高兴,但我更关注的是如何将自己变得更好,在下一场音乐会中发挥得更出色。△有人问我,对当今世界舞台上非常活跃的陈美有什么看法?我认为:“陈美的演奏风格是古典加流行,从古典转向流行相当容易, ...