Sinful Tunes and Spirituals: Black Folk Music to the Civil War

Front Cover
University of Illinois Press, 2003 - Music - 433 pages
From the plaintive tunes of woe sung by exiled kings and queens of Africa to the spirited worksongs and "shouts" of freedmen, enslaved people created expansive forms of music from the United States to the West Indies and South America. Dena J. Epstein's classic work traces the course of early black folk music in all its guises. Anchored by groundbreaking scholarship, it redefined the study of black music in the slavery era by presenting the little-known development of black folk music in the United States. Her findings include the use of drums, the banjo, and other instruments originating in Africa; a wealth of eyewitness accounts and illustrations; in-depth look at a wide range of topics; and a collection of musical examples. This edition offers an author's preface that looks back on the twenty-five years of changes in scholarship that followed the book's original publication
 

Contents

V
21
VI
30
VII
38
VIII
47
XI
55
XII
58
XIII
63
XVI
66
LII
192
LIII
197
LIV
199
LV
202
LVI
207
LVII
217
LX
229
LXI
232

XVII
68
XVIII
77
XIX
78
XX
90
XXI
100
XXIII
101
XXIV
112
XXV
120
XXVI
125
XXVII
127
XXIX
128
XXX
132
XXXI
139
XXXII
141
XXXIII
144
XXXIV
147
XXXV
155
XXXVI
161
XXXIX
164
XL
166
XLI
172
XLII
176
XLIII
181
XLIV
184
XLVIII
187
XLIX
188
L
189
LI
191
LXII
234
LXIII
239
LXIV
241
LXV
252
LXVIII
256
LXIX
260
LXX
274
LXXIII
275
LXXIV
278
LXXV
287
LXXVI
290
LXXVII
296
LXXVIII
303
LXXIX
304
LXXX
310
LXXXI
314
LXXXII
321
LXXXV
326
LXXXVI
329
LXXXVII
331
LXXXVIII
343
LXXXIX
349
XC
359
XCI
363
XCII
374
XCIII
416
Copyright

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About the author (2003)

Dena J. Epstein (1916-2013) was a retired assistant music librarian at the Joseph Regenstein Library at the University of Chicago, and a past president of the Music Library Association.

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