An Introduction to America’s Music

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1

CHAPTER 6 | BLACK, WHITES, AND THE MINSTREL STAGE 141


ascending fi gure that starts the chorus (“Gwine to run all night”). The sheet
music presents the song with an accompaniment for piano, making it suitable
for home performance, but the written vocal part refl ects minstrel stage prac-
tice: the “doo-dah!” interjections in the verses are indicated to be sung by the
group, creating a call-and-response texture characteristic of African American
music, while the chorus is written in four-part vocal harmony, refl ecting the
informal vocal harmonizing of groups like the Virginia Minstrels. Even with
these features, the song also works well as a vocal solo, exhibiting the fl exibility
that helped a song attain widespread popularity in antebellum America.
Though the differences between “De Boatmen’s Dance” and “De Camptown
Races” might be understood as a matter of different composing styles, they also
refl ect changes in minstrelsy between 1843 and 1850. “De Boatmen’s Dance” rep-
resented the dominant voice of early minstrelsy: the black mask, linked with
tough, unlyrical, folklike music, that invited white listeners to mock genteel
social customs with fi erce intensity. In the next few years, however, blackface
minstrels vastly increased their audience, in part by broadening their musical
repertory. Rip-roaring comic songs like “Miss Lucy Long” and “Old Dan Tucker”
were still sung, but so were sad songs, love songs, sentimental songs, and even
opera parodies. (The opera parodies mentioned in chapter 5, The Roof Scram-
bler and Fried Shots, were both blackface burlesques.) By midcentury the noisy,
impromptu entertainments cooked up by Dan Emmett and the Virginia Min-
strels were becoming a thing of the past. Moving into the center of American
show business, minstrelsy evolved toward a more restrained kind of spectacle.

K Stephen C. Foster
(1826–1864), born near
Pittsburgh on July 4, the
nation’s fi ftieth anniversary,
wrote more songs that won
enduring popularity than any
other American songwriter of
the nineteenth century.

timing section text comments
1:19 interlude Shortened return of introduction.
1:22 verse 4 and
chorus

See dem fl yin’ on a ten mile heat,
Doo-dah doo-dah!
Round de race track, den repeat,
Oh, doo-dah-day!
I win my money on de bob-tail nag,
Doo-dah! doo-dah!
I keep my money in an old tow-bag,
Oh, doo-dah-day!
Gwine to run all night!...

Listening Guide 6.2 “De Camptown Races” STEPHEN C. FOSTER

Listen & Refl ect



  1. What can you infer from the lyrics about the song’s persona? Do you get any sense of the
    persona’s race, gender, age, economic status, educational background, lifestyle, or outlook
    on life? What specifi cs about the song create those impressions?

  2. How does this performance differ from that of “De Boatmen’s Dance” (see LG 6.1)? What
    are the musical effects of those differences?


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