Description

Book Synopsis
Yiddish-speaking Jewish immigrants brought a rich heritage of musical expression to the United States. On Manhattan''s Lower East Side, a thriving Yiddish theater scene developed, and a new, distinctly Jewish American songcraft began to emerge. Mark Slobin''s ethnographic study of the music and culture of the time traces the development of Yiddish popular song in America, delving into melodies, sheet music, and printers'' iconography to bring alive a time and place that, while almost forgotten, still exercises an enormous effect on American popular culture.

Trade Review
"A well-deserved look at the musical world of immigrant Jews, who, in finding and creating an expressive medium for self-identity, helped shape and give life to American popular culture."--Ethnomusicology
"Employing the tools of the ethnomusicologist and the social historian, Slobin has produced an important and highly readable account of the formation and function of a little-studied aspect of American popular culture."--Journal of American Studies
"An excellent addition to . . . ethnomusicological studies of nontraditional music in America."--Choice

Tenement Songs

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    A Paperback by Mark Slobin


      View other formats and editions of Tenement Songs by Mark Slobin

      Publisher: MO - University of Illinois Press
      Publication Date: 1/1/1996 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780252065620, 978-0252065620
      ISBN10: 025206562X

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Yiddish-speaking Jewish immigrants brought a rich heritage of musical expression to the United States. On Manhattan''s Lower East Side, a thriving Yiddish theater scene developed, and a new, distinctly Jewish American songcraft began to emerge. Mark Slobin''s ethnographic study of the music and culture of the time traces the development of Yiddish popular song in America, delving into melodies, sheet music, and printers'' iconography to bring alive a time and place that, while almost forgotten, still exercises an enormous effect on American popular culture.

      Trade Review
      "A well-deserved look at the musical world of immigrant Jews, who, in finding and creating an expressive medium for self-identity, helped shape and give life to American popular culture."--Ethnomusicology
      "Employing the tools of the ethnomusicologist and the social historian, Slobin has produced an important and highly readable account of the formation and function of a little-studied aspect of American popular culture."--Journal of American Studies
      "An excellent addition to . . . ethnomusicological studies of nontraditional music in America."--Choice

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