An Introduction to America’s Music

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1
USING THE BOOK
An Introduction to America’s Music is designed to bring a rich understanding of
American music to students of multiple musical backgrounds. To that end, sev-
eral new features have been added for the second edition: 


  • The introduction includes a substantial Talking about Music section that ex-
    plains fundamental concepts with an eye toward helping students build a vocabu-
    lary for describing what they hear. Musical terms introduced throughout the
    book appear fi rst in boldface and are defi ned both in the text and in the Glossary
    located in the back of the book.

  • There are four Part Introductions, which include concise overviews of artistic,
    political, and cultural developments within each time period, as well as timelines
    placing musical events in a chronological context.

  • Each chapter ends with discussion questions and recommendations for further
    reading, listening, and viewing. A variety of sidebars offer different perspectives
    on the music and the people who make it:


As early as the 1650s European observers noted
the presence among African slaves in the West
Indies of instruments resembling both the present-
day banjo and West African antecedents. North
American accounts date back to the 1740s, and
by 1810 written references to the banjo often lack
descriptions, implying that the instrument was
familiar to most readers. In its earlier forms, the
banjo had a body made from a halved gourd, with
an animal skin stretched over the opening and from
one to six strings. Instruments of this description are
identifi ed by various names, some of which resemble
its modern name: bangil, bangar, banshaw, Creole-
bania, banjar, and bonjaw.
By the 1840s, the gourd sound chamber gave
way to a wooden rim with a metal tension hoop

The Banjo: African Origins of “America’s Instrument”

A CLOSER LOOK


and adjustable brackets much like a drum. Around
the same time, whites also began to play the banjo.
By the beginning of the twentieth century, a banjo
manufacturer could proudly state that “what the
mandolin is to Italy, and the guitar to Spain, the
banjo is to America.” That status inspired the
title of a recent history of the banjo, America’s
Instrument. An irony of history is that today the
instrument is associated almost exclusively with
white performers.

K This “Creole-bania,” made in Dutch Guyana before
1772, and now in the Rijksmuseum voor Volkenkunde,
Leiden, Holland, is made from a gourd, a sheepskin,
and gut strings.

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  • A Closer Look boxes
    center on instruments,
    technical features, and
    musical subgenres.


xviii PREFACE

SSPOTLIGHT ON HISTORYPOTLIGHT ON HISTORY

Francis Hopkinson, Music Amateur

P


erhaps the most devoted musical amateur in eighteenth-century America was Philadelphia
Pennsylvania’s finative Francis Hopkinson, the University of rst graduate, a law yer and judge
by trade, a patriot, and a signer of the Declaration of Independence. Hopkinson began playing the
harpsichord at age seventeen, in 1754, hand-copying
European songs and instrumental pieces, and by the early 1760s was good enough to join professional
musicians in concerts. As an Anglican, Hopkinson served for a time as organist of Philadelphia’s Christ
Church, taught psalmody, and compiled sacred
tunebooks for congregational singing. Music was Hopkinson’s springboard for entry into Philadel-
phia’s musical life, where, given the scarcity of pro-fessional performers, his ability and social position
made him welcome.In 1781, the last year of fi ghting in the American
Revolution, Hopkinson produced a patriotic pas-
tiche for solo singers, chorus, and orchestra called America Independent, or The Temple of Minerva, for
which he fiincluding George Frideric Handel. But his musical tted his own verses to music by others,
ambitions also reached further, into the realm of
original composition. As early as 1759 he was com-posing songs in two parts—with a keyboard accom-
paniment in which the right hand doubles the singer’s melody and the left hand supplies a simple
bass line—modeled on British songs he had copied out on his own.
For his Seven Songs for the Harpsichord or Forte Piano
(Philadelphia, 1788), dedicated to George Washing-

ton, Hopkinson wrote both words and music. A pref-atory note declares: “I cannot, I believe, be refused
the Credit of being the fiStates who has produced a Musical Composition”—a rst Native of the United
claim referring to the nation born offi1788 when the ninth state ratifi ed the Constitution cially in June
of the United States of A merica.

K Francis Hopkinson (1737–1791).

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  • Spotlight on History boxes provide addition-
    al information on individuals, institutions,
    and musical trends.


John Coltrane on His Musical Goals

M


y music is the spiritual expression of what I am—my faith,
my knowledge, my being.... When you begin to see the
possibilities of music, you desire to do something really good for
people, to help humanity free itself from its hangups.... I want to
speak to their souls.

In their own words

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  • In their own words boxes quote musi-
    cians and audience members speaking
    for themselves.


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