Saturday, July 20, 2019
Southern Musical Tradition and the African Tradition Essay -- Music Mu
Southern Musical Tradition and the African Tradition                                          The second major tributary of the southern musical tradition comes  from the African continent and is the heritage import of the five million  slaves brought to North America against their will to provide the bulk of  the labor in the pre-industrial agrarian south.  Contemporary blues, while  not exclusively black music by any means, remains largely black in terms of  its leading performers and, to a lesser extent, its listening audience.   The forerunner of the modern urban blues was, however, almost exclusively  black and was completely southern and rural.  It was, and is, a music born  out of the experience of slavery and Jim Crow segregation with their  attendant poverty, alienation and suppression.  As a musical genre, this  remarkable and durable expression has an enormous relevance for the  historical development of southern music in general and the southern black  experience in particular.         Modern blues evolved out of the southern "country blues" and became an  urban phenomenon in the same social, economic and demographic processes  which urbanized black Americans during the two or three decades prior to  World War II.  Thus, an examination of the black country blues provides a  potentially fruitful vehicle for the study of southern rural culture viz a  viz the black experience.  At the very least, it provides a means for  assessing the perceptions of southern culture which were held and  articulated by a sensitive group of observers -- the bluesmen and  blueswomen of the rural south.  The  extent to which their music was  received, popularized and appreciated by their audience provides a broader  look at the hopes and drea...              ...cal  development, display similar structural and thematic content and have,  since the 1960s, begun to recognize and celebrate these commonalities.                              Works Cited:    Chapple, Steve and Reebee Garofalo.  Rock and Roll is Here to Pay.        Chicago: Nelson Hall, 1977.    Elkins, Stanley.  Slavery: A Problem in American Institutional and                Intellectual Life, 2nd ed. Chicago: U. of Chicago Press, 1968.    Morthland, John.  The Best of Country Music.  Garden City: Doubleday, 1984.    Oliver, Paul.  Savannah Syncopators: African Retentions in the Blues.        London: November Books, Limited, 1970.    Smith, M.G.  "Social and Cultural Pluralism," in Annals of the New York       Academy of Sciences 83 (January, 1957):763-777.    Van den Berghe, Pierre. Race and Racism: A Comparative Perspective, 2nd ed.        New York: Wiley, 1978.                        
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