- Front Matter
- 10.1017/s1752196324000130
- May 1, 2024
- Journal of the Society for American Music
- Richard Henry + 2 more
Journal of the Society for American Music (JSAM) is an international, peer-reviewed journal that explores all aspects of American music and music in the Americas. JSAM is dedicated to supporting scholarship that transcends disciplinary boundaries, cutting across historical musicology, music theory, ethnomusicology, cultural theory, and American studies. JSAM encourages international dialogue across disciplines. The journal features articles, reviews of books, recordings, and multimedia items, and explorations of special topics.
- Research Article
- 10.1017/s1752196324000014
- May 1, 2024
- Journal of the Society for American Music
- Julianne Lindberg
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- Research Article
- 10.1017/s1752196324000026
- May 1, 2024
- Journal of the Society for American Music
- John Koegel
Músicas coloniales a debate: Procesos de intercambio euroamericanos Edited by Javier Marín López. Madrid: Instituto Complutense de Ciencias Musicales, 2018. - El villancico en la encrucijada: Nuevas perspectivas en torno a un género literario-musical (siglos XV–XIX) Edited by Esther Borrego Gutiérrez and Javier Marín López. Kassel: Edition Reichenberger, 2019. - Volume 18 Issue 2
- Research Article
- 10.1017/s1752196324000087
- May 1, 2024
- Journal of the Society for American Music
- Julia Chybowski
Abstract The Ohio-based Black songwriter, Joshua Simpson, published two books of antislavery songs in the mid-nineteenth century, Original Anti-Slavery Songs in 1852 and Emancipation Car in 1854. Unlike most other known songsters, which were compilations of poetry from several authors, Simpson authored original lyrics for borrowed melodies, and he did so with extraordinary care, engaging the original song to enhance his activist messages. Employing the rhetorical practice of signification, his linkage of new lyrics with preexisting songs sometimes builds upon meaning from the original text, reusing it to add weight to the moral and political arguments against slavery. He also extends nature imagery and lyrics about the comforts of home and family in traditional ballads and contemporary sentimental songs to his new lyrics, but more often his signifying practice is ironic. He inverts the original song's sentimentality in deliberately discomforting ways that could persuade Americans to assist self-emancipating people and work toward wholescale abolition of slavery. Simpson's most radical songs talk back irreverently to the originals, especially minstrel tunes containing degrading caricatures and proslavery propaganda as well as patriotic anthems proclaiming hypocritical platitudes. Simpson did not simply write new songs; he transformed some of the most popular and beloved songs of his era, harnessing their renown to sharpen his activist messages.
- Research Article
- 10.1017/s1752196324000038
- May 1, 2024
- Journal of the Society for American Music
- George Lipsitz
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- Research Article
1
- 10.1017/s1752196324000075
- Apr 4, 2024
- Journal of the Society for American Music
- Derek Baron
Abstract This article examines the politics of music at the Carlisle Indian Industrial School, the flagship federal off-reservation boarding school for the compulsory education of Indigenous children, established in Carlisle, Pennsylvania, in 1879. By examining the music education and performance culture at the Carlisle School, this article considers the role of music both within boarding school discourses of “civilization” and in terms of the larger federal goal of dispossession of Native land. Based on original archival research and engagements with contemporary discourses in Indigenous music and sound studies, the article then considers a nationalistic comic opera titled The Captain of Plymouth performed by Native students at the Carlisle commencement exercises in 1909. It argues ultimately that, although music, dance, and expressive culture were a central concern for federal assimilationist policy, music making at Carlisle provided a groundwork for the emergence of an intertribal social formation that guided musical practices and self-determination movements of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries.
- Research Article
- 10.1017/s1752196324000099
- Mar 14, 2024
- Journal of the Society for American Music
- Luis Achondo
Abstract Andrés Segovia's repertoire—the repertorio segoviano—has crucially shaped the guitar canon. Although some guitar scholars argue that these works helped rescue the instrument from the periphery of art music, others contend that, by commissioning music from minor, conservative composers, Segovia missed the chance to request pieces from the most influential twentieth-century modernists. This article questions the conservative homogeneity of the repertorio segoviano. Focusing on Segovia's collaborations with Heitor Villa-Lobos, I argue that it contains traces of coloniality: The perpetuation of colonial domination in Latin America. The relationship between Segovia and Villa-Lobos was more contentious than the official narrative suggests—tensions stemming from their dominant personalities, divergent approaches to guitar composition, and conflicting musical ideologies. Indeed, although Segovia's stance aligned with Francoist and European conservative aesthetics, Villa-Lobos embraced a transcultural approach to music shaped by, a response to, and exertion of the coloniality of power—discrepancies that were engraved in their collaborations and ultimately the repertorio segoviano. This article ultimately foregrounds that elite composers from the periphery played an essential role in the modernization of the guitar in the twentieth century, thereby questioning historiographies that detach the instrument from the social, political, and cultural messiness of colonial difference and the coloniality of power.
- Research Article
- 10.1017/s1752196324000051
- Mar 6, 2024
- Journal of the Society for American Music
- Varun Chandrasekhar
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- Research Article
- 10.1017/s1752196323000445
- Feb 1, 2024
- Journal of the Society for American Music
- Mandy Smith
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- Research Article
- 10.1017/s1752196323000482
- Feb 1, 2024
- Journal of the Society for American Music
- Adam A Perez
An abstract is not available for this content so a preview has been provided. Please use the Get access link above for information on how to access this content.