An Introduction to America’s Music

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AMERICA’S MUSIC PART T WO


FROM THE CIVIL WAR THROUGH WORLD WAR I


A


fter the Civil War, the United
States entered a phase of geo-
graphic expansion, as western
territories became states; popu-
lation growth, with an attendant
increase in the size and number
of major cities; and economic development, as new
technologies spurred the nation’s industrialization.
Connected to these changes, and in contrast to the
antebellum years, America’s musical culture in the
period from the Civil War to World War I witnessed
a more pronounced separation between the three
spheres of music making. In the classical sphere,
the establishment of permanent orchestras, opera
companies, and music conservatories provided the
institutional support for new generations of skilled
composers and performers. In the popular sphere,

e By 1900, innovations in printing made colorful sheet music covers the norm for popular song
publishers.

publishers of parlor songs laid the groundwork for
a popular music industry in which sheet music, the
standard stock in trade, was eventually joined by
new products that resulted from emergent technol-
ogies: piano rolls and phonograph records. In the
traditional sphere, pioneering ethnologists created
the fi rst archives of folk music, revealing the abun-
dance of music making outside the classical and
popular marketplaces. From the music of American
Indians to the British ballads of Appalachia, and
from the Spanish songs of the Southwest to the spir-
ituals of former slaves, American folk music began
to be written down, recorded, and studied as part
of the nation’s cultural heritage. Despite this height-
ened differentiation, however, the three spheres of
classical, popular, and traditional music continued
to interact in complex and mutually enriching ways.

1891 Leopold Vincent, Alliance and Labor Songster
1892 John Philip Sousa forms the Sousa Band
1893 Alice C. Fletcher, Study of Omaha Indian Music
1896 Edward MacDowell becomes the fi rst professor
of music at Columbia University, composes Woodland
Sketches
1896 Ernest Hogan, “All Coons Look Alike to Me”
1896 Plessy v. Ferguson legalizes segregation
1896 Boston Symphony Orchestra premieres Amy
Beach’s Gaelic Symphony
1903 Will Marion Cook’s In Dahomey opens on Broadway

1909 Revision of copyright law grants composers rights
to mechanical royalties
1911 Alice C. Fletcher and Francis La Flesche, The
Omaha Tribe, a pioneering work of ethnomusicology
1914 Irene and Vernon Castle, Modern Dancing
1916 Harry T. Burleigh, Jubilee Songs of the United
States of America
1917 Cecil Sharp and Olive Dame Campbell, Folk Songs
of the Southern Appalachians
1918 Frances Densmore, Teton Sioux Music
1918 Sinbad, starring Al Jolson, opens on Broadway

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