Folk songs of the Spanish Californians
Author :
Publisher :
Page : 38 pages
File Size : 24,5 MB
Release : 1926
Category : California
ISBN :
Author :
Publisher :
Page : 38 pages
File Size : 24,5 MB
Release : 1926
Category : California
ISBN :
Author : Mina Yang
Publisher : University of Illinois Press
Page : 206 pages
File Size : 22,35 MB
Release : 2010-10-01
Category : Music
ISBN : 025209297X
What does it mean to be Californian? To find out, Mina Yang delves into multicultural nature of musics in the state that has launched musical and cultural trends for decades. In the early twentieth century, an orientalist fascination with Asian music and culture dominated the popular imagination of white Californians and influenced their interactions with the Asian Other. Several decades later, tensions between the Los Angeles Police Department and the African American community made the thriving jazz and blues nightclub scene of 1940s Central Avenue a target for the LAPD's anti-vice crusade. The musical scores for Hollywood's noir films confirmed reactionary notions of the threat to white female sexuality in the face of black culture and urban corruption while Mexican Americans faced a conflicted assimilation into the white American mainstream. Finally, Korean Americans in the twenty-first century turned to hip-hop to express their cultural and national identities. A compelling journey into the origins of musical identity, California Polyphony explores the intersection of musicology, cultural history, and politics to define Californian.
Author : Catherine Hiebert Kerst
Publisher : Univ of California Press
Page : 375 pages
File Size : 35,12 MB
Release : 2024-04-02
Category : History
ISBN : 0520391314
California Gold offers a compelling cultural snapshot of a diverse California during the 1930s at the height of the New Deal, drawing on the career of folk music collector Sidney Robertson and the musical culture of often-unheard voices. Robertson—an intrepid young woman armed only with a map, her notebooks, and the recording equipment of the time—proposed and directed a New Deal initiative, the WPA California Folk Music Project, designed to survey musical traditions from a wide range of English-speaking and immigrant communities in Northern California. In California Gold, Catherine Hiebert Kerst explores Robertson's distinctive and modern approach to fieldwork and examines the numerous ethnographic documentary materials she generated with WPA project staff to capture a cross-section of the music that people were actively performing in their communities. Kerst highlights some of the most notable songs, images, and ephemera of the collection, capturing and contextualizing the diverse musical traditions that California immigrant communities performed during the New Deal era. Kerst also foregrounds the ethnographic insights and accomplishments of a significant woman folk music collector who has received less attention than she deserves.
Author : Alice Irene Lyser
Publisher :
Page : 868 pages
File Size : 10,80 MB
Release : 1928
Category : Latin America
ISBN :
Author : Los Angeles County Public Library
Publisher :
Page : 1364 pages
File Size : 47,27 MB
Release : 1926
Category :
ISBN :
Author : Charles Haywood
Publisher :
Page : 784 pages
File Size : 47,99 MB
Release : 1961
Category : African Americans
ISBN :
Unabridged and corrected republication of the work first published by Greenberg Publisher in 1951.
Author : John O. West
Publisher : august house
Page : 326 pages
File Size : 22,23 MB
Release : 1988
Category : Social Science
ISBN : 9780874830590
Gathers riddles, rhymes, folk poetry, stories, ballads, superstitions, customs, games, foods, and folk arts of the Mexican-Americans
Author : Ellen Koskoff
Publisher : Routledge
Page : 2651 pages
File Size : 46,5 MB
Release : 2017-09-25
Category : Music
ISBN : 1351544144
This volume makes available the full range of the American/Canadian musical experience, covering-for the first time in print-all major regions, ethnic groups, and traditional and popular contexts. From musical comedy to world beat, from the songs of the Arctic to rap and house music, from Hispanic Texas to the Chinese communities of Vancouver, the coverage captures the rich diversity and continuities of the vibrant music we hear around us. Special attention is paid to recent immigrant groups, to Native American traditions, and to such socio-musical topics as class, race, gender, religion, government policy, media, and technology.
Author : Charles Haywood
Publisher : New York : Greenberg
Page : 1344 pages
File Size : 17,38 MB
Release : 1951
Category : African Americans
ISBN :
Author : Walter Aaron Clark
Publisher : Cambridge Scholars Publishing
Page : 523 pages
File Size : 29,84 MB
Release : 2019-06-20
Category : Music
ISBN : 1527536254
Transatlantic Malagueñas and Zapateados is an exploration of two fandango dances, recording the circulations of people, imagery, music, and dance across what were once the Spanish and Portuguese Empires. Although these dance-musics seem to be mirror images, the unbreachable space between them reflects the political fault-lines along which nineteenth-century musical populism and folkloric nationalism extend into present-day debates about globalization, immigration, neoliberalism, and neofascism. If malagueñas are a fantastic incarnation of Spanishness, caught like a fly in amber by their anachronistic references to a fraught imperial past, noisy and raucous zapateado dances cut toward the future. Inherently marked by European conventions of zapatos (shoes), zapateados are nonetheless shaped by Africanist and Native American footwork traditions. In these Afro-Indigenous mestizajes, not only are European aesthetic values reordered and resignified, but the Catholic catechism which indoctrinated the New World yields to alternate spiritual systems springing out of a culture of resistance to European domination.