Description
Book SynopsisThe first comprehensive examination of the early blues industry and the music it produced
Trade ReviewReceived a Certificate of Merit in the Best Music History category from the Association for Recorded Sound Collections (ARSC), 2011.
"Required reading for lovers of the blues and historians of American popular music."--
Notes"One of the most important and original books on blues to be published in the past decade."--
The Journal of Southern History, David Evans
"Muir's revealing book contributes significantly to understanding how sheet music and the pop music industry influenced the blues. An important work."--Tim Brooks, author of
Lost Sounds: Blacks and the Birth of the Recording Industry, 1890-1919"This fascinating work discusses the genesis and introduction of a minority music genre into mainstream culture in a way that is impossible to ignore, given the importance of blues connections to other genres. Essential reading for anyone interested in American popular music."--Dick Spottswood, host of
The Dick Spottswood Show on BlueGrassCountry.org and editor of
Ethnic Music on RecordsTable of ContentsAcknowledgments ix
A Word about the Music Examples xi
Introduction 1
1. The Popular Blues Industry, 1912-1920 7
2. The Identity and Idiom of Early Popular Blues 28
3. Curing the Blues with the Blues 80
4. The Blues of W. C. Handy 104
5. The Creativity of Early Southern Published Blues 141
6. Published Proto-Blues and the Evolution of the Twelve-Bar Sequence 181
Appendix: Titular Blues, 1912-1915 217
Notes 221
Major Works Consulted 243
General Index 245
Song Index 251