Tin Pan Opera : Operatic Novelty Songs in the Ragtime Era
Book Details
Format
Hardback or Cased Book
ISBN-10
0195338928
ISBN-13
9780195338928
Publisher
Oxford University Press Inc
Imprint
Oxford University Press Inc
Country of Manufacture
US
Country of Publication
GB
Publication Date
Feb 3rd, 2011
Print length
344 Pages
Weight
590 grams
Dimensions
24.20 x 16.40 x 3.00 cms
Product Classification:
OperaRock & Pop musicSocial & cultural history
Ksh 8,350.00
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Tin Pan Opera explores the role of opera in comical popular songs from the ragtime era. These songs demonstrate how, for many Americans, opera stood for an elite, European culture that was coming under attack by new social forces, including immigration and new opportunities for women and African Americans.
Though the distance between opera and popular music seems immense today, a century ago opera was an integral part of American popular music culture, and familiarity with opera was still a part of American "cultural literacy." During the Ragtime era, hundreds of humorous Tin Pan Alley songs centered on operatic subjects-either directly quoting operas or alluding to operatic characters and vocal stars of the time. These songs brilliantly captured the moment when popular music in America transitioned away from its European operatic heritage, and when the distinction between low- and high-brow "popular" musical forms was free to develop, with all its attendant cultural snobbery and rebellion. Author Larry Hamberlin guides us through this large but oft-forgotten repertoire of operatic novelties, and brings to life the rich humor and keen social criticism of the era. In the early twentieth-century, when new social forces were undermining the view that our European heritage was intrinsically superior to our native vernacular culture, opera-that great inheritance from our European forebearers-functioned in popular discourse as a signifier for elite culture. Tin Pan Opera shows that these operatic novelty songs availed this connection to a humorous and critical end. Combining traditional, European operatic melodies with the new and American rhythmic verve of ragtime, these songs painted vivid images of immigrant Americans, liberated women, and upwardly striving African Americans, striking emblems of the profound transformations that shook the United States at the beginning of the American century.
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