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  • English  (2)
  • 2025-2025
  • 2020-2024  (2)
  • 1940-1944
  • New York : Oxford University Press  (2)
  • History and criticism  (2)
  • Musicology  (2)
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  • English  (2)
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Year
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  • 1
    Book
    Book
    New York : Oxford University Press
    ISBN: 9780190461652
    Language: English
    Series Statement: Readers on American musicians series
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als The Mahalia Jackson reader
    DDC: 782.25/4092
    RVK:
    RVK:
    Keywords: Jackson, Mahalia ; African American gospel singers Biography ; Gospel singers Biography ; African Americans Music ; History and criticism ; Gospel music History and criticism
    Abstract: ""African American gospel singer Mahalia Jackson was just sixty years old when her heart finally gave out on January 27, 1972, as she lay alone in her sick bed at Little Company of Mary Hospital just south of Chicago. Obituaries faithfully recounted the best-known story lines of her unlikely career: how the power of her voice was rooted in her devout Baptist upbringing; her birth in 1911 and rise from dire poverty in Uptown New Orleans to international celebrity; a dedication to the black freedom struggle that further elevated her to the status of cultural and political symbol. Together, Jackson's voice, faith, prestige, and activism, made her at the time of her death, in the assessment of her friend Harry Belafonte, "the single most powerful black woman in the United States." Yet her reputation is also complex. Invoking the charisma of Martin and Malcolm, the persuasion of statesmen and despots, and the splendor of divas and diadems, Maceo Bowie's letter to the editor of the Chicago Defender seems to both celebrate and grapple with the substance of Jackson dynamism as a gospel singer and her consequence as an illustrious black public figure. In an editorial in the Defender following Jackson's death, E. Duke McNeil acknowledged Jackson's habitual acclaim as the "Queen of the gospel singers," while also observing: "You can almost say that Mahalia was the 'greatest' because she was the only gospel singer known everywhere." Indeed, for scholars of black gospel, the music itself is often hidden in plain sight. On the one hand, gospel voices are inescapable, audible not just within the music industry, where they have become a lingua franca for pop singers, but also in recurring representations of the black church, in the omnipresent sound of the black gospel choir, and in the personal histories of many black artists. On the other, in comparison with such genres as jazz, blues, country music, and hip hop, documentation of black gospel music, which has thrived in in-group settings, is relatively scant, leaving researchers with limited sources and largely reliant on oral history. Fortunately, the scope and coverage of Jackson's caereer produced a paper trail that enables us to study her personal and professional life while gaining insight into the black gospel field of which she was such an integral part. In compiling a wide swath of these sources on Jackson, The Mahalia Jackson Reader seeks to paint a fuller and more vivid picture of one of the most resonant musi ...
    Note: Includes bibliographical references and index
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
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  • 2
    ISBN: 9780197504642
    Language: English
    Pages: xx, 459 Seiten , Illustrationen, Notenbeispiele
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als Sheleg, Asaf, 1974 - Theological stains
    DDC: 780.89/92405694
    RVK:
    Keywords: Music History and criticism 20th century ; Music by Jewish composers History and criticism 20th century ; Jews Music ; History and criticism ; Zionism ; Zionism in literature
    Abstract: Introduction. Stains? -- Non-Biblical Tonalities -- Biblocentrism in Modern Hebrew Culture and its Operatic Undoing -- Horizontal Realizations : The Agency of Non-Western Jewish Musical Traditions in Art Music of the 1950s and '60s -- Broken Hebrewist Vessels -- Compositional Solutions (in the double sense of the word)
    Abstract: "Theological Stains traces the growth of art music in Israel from the mid twentieth century to the turn of the twenty-first. In a riveting and provocative account, Assaf Shelleg explores the theological grammar of Zionism and its impact on the art music written by emigrant and native composers grappling with biblical redemptive promises and diasporic patrimonies. Unveiling the network that bred territorial nationalism and Hebrew culture, Shelleg shows how this mechanism infiltrated composers' work as much as it triggered less desirable responses from composers who sought to realize to the non-territorial Diasporic options Zionism has renounced. In the process compositional aesthetics gets stained by the state's nationalization of the theological, by diasporism that refuses redemption, and by Jewish musical traditions that permeated inaudibly to compositions written throughout the second half of the twentieth century. Accompanying this rich and dramatic story are equivalent developments in modern Hebrew literature and poetry alongside vast and previously unstudied archival sources. The book is also lavishly illuminated with 135 music examples that render it an incisive guide to fundamental chapters in modern and late modern art music"--
    Note: Includes bibliographical references and index
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