An Introduction to America’s Music

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1

AMERICA’S MUSIC PART ONE


FROM COLONIZATION THROUGH THE CIVIL WAR


A


lthough native peoples had been
making music in North America
for centuries before the arrival of
Europeans, the written history
of music on the North American
continent begins with documents
by European explorers and settlers. The writings
of Spanish and French missionaries describe not
only the music of indigenous peoples but also the
European-style music put to service in the efforts
to convert them to Christianity. Music in the British
colonies, meanwhile, arrived as a simple transplant
from England, but began in the course of the fi rst
century of settlement to show traits that pointed to
New World origins.
Developments in the colonies and the early
republic tell the story of musicians searching for
ways to be paid for their art without the established
institutions that supported music in the Old World.
A successful musical career such as that of Lowell
Mason demanded not only musical ability but also
an entrepreneurial spirit, business acumen, and a

e African American music formed one part of the soundscape of colonial North America. Pictured
here are present-day reenactors at Colonial Williamsburg with a reproduction of an early banjo.

fi nger on the pulse of public taste. From early in the
nation’s history, a hallmark of music in the United
States has been its active engagement with the
marketplace.
In the decades before the Civil War, American
music refl ected the diversity of American society.
Bands, orchestras, and choral societies presented
music “of the highest class,” as a Boston critic of the
time called it, to urban audiences of growing sophis-
tication. Southern slaves responded to hardship with
music rooted in their African heritage. Working-
class Northerners, many of Irish descent, adapted
that slave music and dance to create a raucous stage
entertainment, the minstrel show, that would reso-
nate through American culture for many decades to
come. Piano manufacturers and sheet music pub-
lishers catered to the tastes of a growing market for
their merchandise, and their efforts would give rise
to a popular music industry. By the end of the Civil
War, the musical culture of the United States repre-
sented the rapidly industrializing, urbanized nation
itself.

ca. 1828 “Daddy” Rice creates the character Jim Crow
1831 Thomas Hastings and Lowell Mason, Spiritual
Songs for Social Worship
1833 Founding of the Boston Academy of Music
1837 Lowell Mason begins teaching music in Boston
public schools
1842 Founding of the New York Philharmonic Society
1842 The Hutchinson Family Singers begin touring
1843 The Virginia Minstrels perform the fi rst full-
length minstrel show
1844 B. F. White and E. J. King, The Sacred Harp

1846 End of musical activities in California missions
1850 Jenny Lind’s U.S. tour, managed by P. T. Barnum
1851 Singing debut of Elizabeth Taylor Greenfi eld, “The
Black Swan”
1854 Founding of Mason & Hamlin, manufacturer of
reed organs and, later, pianos
1859 Dan Emmett introduces “Dixie” to the New York
stage
1860 A resident opera company is established in San
Francisco
1861–65 Civil War

172028_01_018-043_r2_mr.indd 19 23/01/13 9:50 AM

Free download pdf