An Alabama songbook : ballads, folksongs, and spirituals /

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Bibliographic Details
Imprint:Tuscaloosa : University of Alabama Press, ©2004.
Description:1 online resource (xxv, 299 pages) : music
Language:English
Subject:
Format: E-Resource Book
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/11207177
Hidden Bibliographic Details
Other authors / contributors:Arnold, Byron, 1901-1971.
Halli, Robert William, 1946-
ISBN:9780817387341
081738734X
0817357653
9780817357658
0817313060
9780817313067
9780817357658
Notes:Unacc. melody lines with words; additional verses printed as text.
Historical background given for each song.
Includes song references (pages 283-288) bibliographical references (p. 289-290), and indexes.
English.
Summary:A lavish presentation of 208 folksongs collected throughout Alabama in the 1940s. Alabama is a state rich in folksong tradition, from old English ballads sung along the Tennessee River to children's game songs played in Mobile, from the rhythmic work songs of the railroad gandy dancers of Gadsden to the spirituals of the Black Belt. The musical heritage of blacks and whites, rich and poor, hill folk and cotton farmers, these songs endure as a living part of the state's varied past. In the mid 1940s Byron Arnold, an eager young music professor from The University of Alab.
Other form:Print version: Alabama songbook. Tuscaloosa : University of Alabama Press, ©2004
Description
Summary:A lavish presentation of 208 folksongs collected throughout Alabama in the 1940s <br> <br> Alabama is a state rich in folksong tradition, from old English ballads sung along the Tennessee River to children's game songs played in Mobile, from the rhythmic work songs of the railroad gandy dancers of Gadsden to the spirituals of the Black Belt. The musical heritage of blacks and whites, rich and poor, hill folk and cotton farmers, these songs endure as a living part of the state's varied past.<br> <br> In the mid 1940s Byron Arnold, an eager young music professor from The University of Alabama, set out to find and record as many of these songs as he could and was rewarded by unstinting cooperation from many informants. Mrs. Julia Greer Marechal of Mobile, for example, was 90 years old, blind, and a semi-invalid, but she sang for Arnold for three hours, allowing the recording of 33 songs and exhausting Arnold and his technician. Helped by such living repositories as Mrs. Marechal, the Arnold collection grew to well over 500 songs, augmented by field notes and remarkable biographical information on the singers.<br> <br> An Alabama Songbook is the result of Arnold's efforts and those of his informants across the state and has been shaped by Robert W. Halli Jr. into a narrative enriched by more than 200 significant songs-lullabies, Civil War anthems, African-American gospel and secular songs, fiddle tunes, temperance songs, love ballads, play-party rhymes, and work songs. In the tradition of Alan Lomax's The Folk Songs of North America and Vance Randolph's Ozark Folksongs , this volume will appeal to general audiences, folklorists, ethnomusicologists, preservationists, traditional musicians, and historians.<br>
Item Description:Unacc. melody lines with words; additional verses printed as text.
Historical background given for each song.
Physical Description:1 online resource (xxv, 299 pages) : music
Bibliography:Includes song references (pages 283-288) bibliographical references (p. 289-290), and indexes.
ISBN:9780817387341
081738734X
0817357653
9780817357658
0817313060
9780817313067