My Melancholy Baby

My Melancholy Baby

Author: Michael G. Garber

Publisher: Univ. Press of Mississippi

Published: 2021-06-28

Total Pages: 367

ISBN-13: 1496834313

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2022 Association for Recorded Sound Collections Awards for Excellence—Certificate of Merit in the category of Best Historical Research in Recorded Rock and Popular Music Ten songs, from “Bill Bailey, Won’t You Please Come Home” (1902) to “You Made Me Love You” (1913), ignited the development of the classic pop ballad. In this exploration of how the style of the Great American Songbook evolved, Michael G. Garber unveils the complicated, often-hidden origins of these enduring, pioneering works. He riffs on colorful stories that amplify the rising of an American folk art composed by innovators both famous and obscure. Songwriters, and also the publishers, arrangers, and performers, achieved together a collective genius that moved hearts worldwide to song. These classic ballads originated all over the nation—Louisiana, Colorado, Illinois, Michigan—and then the Tin Pan Alley industry, centered in New York, made the tunes unforgettable sensations. From ragtime to bop, cabaret to radio, new styles of music and modes for its dissemination invented and reinvented the intimate, personal American love ballad, creating something both swinging and tender. Rendered by Frank Sinatra, Ella Fitzgerald, and a host of others, recordings and movies carried these songs across the globe. Using previously underexamined sources, Garber demonstrates how these songs shaped the music industry and the lives of ordinary Americans. Besides covering famous composers like Irving Berlin, this history also introduces such little-known figures as Maybelle Watson, who had to sue to get credit and royalties for creating the central content of the lyric for “My Melancholy Baby.” African American Frank Williams contributed to the seminal “Some of These Days” but was forgotten for decades. The ten ballads explored here permanently transformed American popular song.


In Search of Melancholy Baby

In Search of Melancholy Baby

Author: Vasiliĭ Aksenov

Publisher: Vintage

Published: 1989

Total Pages: 248

ISBN-13:

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This celebrated Russian emigre novelist chronicles his encounter with America; through his eyes readers see the psyche, the landscape and the cultural life of the United States. Contains a new postscript on Gorbachev.


Tunes of the Twenties, and All That Jazz

Tunes of the Twenties, and All That Jazz

Author: Robert Rawlins

Publisher:

Published: 2015-11-15

Total Pages: 294

ISBN-13: 9780996594905

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In Tunes of the Twenties author Robert Rawlins discusses each of the 250 songs included in his previous publication The Real Dixieland Book, taking readers backstage to share the intriguing stories associated with their publication and subsequent history. Anyone who holds a fascination for the era of prohibition, flappers, and speakeasies will enjoy reading about the music that went along with it.


A User's Guide to Melancholy

A User's Guide to Melancholy

Author: Mary Ann Lund

Publisher: Cambridge University Press

Published: 2021-02-25

Total Pages: 271

ISBN-13: 1108838847

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400 years after The Anatomy of Melancholy, this book guides readers through Renaissance medicine's disease of the mind.


Father Melancholy's Daughter

Father Melancholy's Daughter

Author: Gail Godwin

Publisher: Harper Collins

Published: 2001-01-01

Total Pages: 420

ISBN-13: 0380729865

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The novels of Gail Godwin are contemporary classics--evocative, powerfully affecting, beautifully crafted fiction alive with endearing, unforgettable characters. Her critically acclaimed work has placed her among the ranks of Eudora Welty, Pat Conroy, and Carson McCullers, firmly establishing Godwin as a Southern literary novelist for the ages. Father Melancholy's Daughter, is widely recognized as one of the author's most poignant and accomplished novels -- a bittersweet and ultimately transcendent story of a young girl's devotion to her father, the rector of a small Virginia church, and of the hope, dreams, and love that sustain them both in the wake of the betrayal and tragedy that diminished their family.


Jazz in Print (1859-1929)

Jazz in Print (1859-1929)

Author: Karl Koenig

Publisher: Pendragon Press

Published: 2002

Total Pages: 624

ISBN-13: 9781576470244

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This anthology was compiled to aid the scholar working on the origins and evolution of jazz. Covering materials published through 1929, it also begins with article from 1859 which do not concern jazz directly, but will serve to present a solid foundation for understanding the American music scene from which jazz developed. Chronologically listed and well-indexed, the hundreds of articles comprise, in effect, a history of jazz as it evolved. Beginning with accounts of Negro music in the pre-jazz era, continuing in an exploration of spirituals, followed by a description of ragtime, we finally learn about the development of jazz from its practitioners and informed audiences of the time.