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9780807848623 Academic Inspection Copy

Romancing the Folk

Public Memory and American Roots Music
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In American music, the notion of ""roots"" has been a powerful refrain, but just what constitutes our true musical traditions has often been a matter of debate. As Benjamin Filene reveals, a number of competing visions of America's musical past have vied for influence over the public imagination in this century. Filene builds his story around a fascinating group of characters--folklorists, record company executives, producers, radio programmers, and publicists--who acted as middlemen between folk and popular culture. These cultural brokers ""discovered"" folk musicians, recorded them, and promoted them. In the process, Filene argues, they shaped mainstream audiences' understanding of what was ""authentic"" roots music. Filene moves beyond the usual boundaries of folk music to consider a wide range of performers who drew on or were drawn into the canon of American roots music--from Lead Belly and Woody Guthrie, to Muddy Waters and Willie Dixon, to Pete Seeger and Bob Dylan. Challenging traditional accounts that would confine folk music revivalism to the 1930s and 1960s, he argues instead that the desire to preserve and popularize America's musical heritage is a powerful current that has run throughout this century's culture and continues to flow today. |Benjamin Filene examines the competing visions of America's musical past--and the cultural middlemen who shaped these visions--that have vied for influence over the public imagination in this century. This book brings to light the relationship between folk or roots music and popular culture.
Benjamin Filene is associate professor and director of public history at the University of North Carolina Greensboro.
"A learned and lively look at the development of our national music. Much of the territory covered here is overlooked in books on folk music." -- Library Journal "An important work that accurately places the idea of 'folk' and 'roots' music into a realistic context. While copiously documented and thoroughly researched, this is no stuffy academic tract. Rather, Filene's engaging style makes this a book that will be eagerly devoured by anyone with an interest in the development of American popular music." -- Creative Loafing "Benjamin Filene's fascinating study of the emergence of the idea of an American 'roots music, ' and the canonization of its iconic performers, is a lively and engaging contribution to this literature. . . . Appalachian scholars will enjoy discussions that range from the pioneering ballad collecting of Francis James Child and Cecil Sharp to the recent role of Archie Green in the creation of the Smithsonian's American Folklife Center and the NEH's Folk Arts Program." -- Journal of Appalachian Studies "A fascinating history of the shifting notions of what constitutes American folk music. . . . The folklorists, academics, bureaucrats and entrepreneurs who dominate [this] story are colorful characters, and they are joined by artists who inspire Filene to critical heights few historians approach." -- New York Times Book Review "An engaging analysis of the varied interpretations of roots or vernacular music in the 20th century." -- CHOICE "Filene's book is smart and careful and should gain a wide audience."--Journal of American History
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