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Bamboula!: The Life and Times of Louis Moreau Gottschalk
 
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Bamboula!: The Life and Times of Louis Moreau Gottschalk [Hardcover]

S. Frederick Starr (Author)
3.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)


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Book Description

January 5, 1995
Louis Moreau Gottschalk was an American original. A spellbinding piano virtuoso, he was America's first internationally recognized composer, whose "classical" works received accolades from Hector Berlioz and Victor Hugo, and whose arch-romantic melodies became for Americans the standard expressions of common emotions. Perhaps most important, his immensely popular Louisiana and Caribbean pieces--such as Danza, Pasquinade, or Bamboula--anticipated ragtime by fifty years. Indeed, the colorful and exotic textures of Gottschalk's music establish him at the head of what is today the mainstream of popular American culture.
In Bamboula!, S. Frederick Starr presents an authoritatively researched, engagingly written biography of America's first authentic musical voice. Starr paints for us a striking portrait of Gottschalk's childhood in 1830s New Orleans, a city madly devoted to music, where opera companies, music halls, fiddlers and banjo-pickers, church choirs, and Army bands all contributed to what Starr calls "the most stunning manifestation of Jacksonian democracy in the realm of culture to be found anywhere in America." We meet Gottschalk's African-American nurse Sally, who regaled him with the creole songs, legends, and lore of her native Haiti, which would inform some of his finest music. We travel with Gottschalk to Paris, where he was a sensation, playing in fashionable salons for the likes of Lamartine, Gautier, and Dumas; and we join his flight from the Revolution of 1848 to a town north of Paris, where he composed his first great works--Bamboula, La Savane, Le Bananier, and Le Mancenillier--all published over the name "Gottschalk of Louisiana." Starr describes Gottschalk's successful return to New York City in the early 1850s, where he enjoyed a degree of popularity never before accorded to an American performer or composer, becoming our first homegrown concert idol. But Starr also examines the life-long struggle between the Catholic Gottschalk and earnest Protestant champions of "serious" music, a battle that pitted the austere values of northern Europe against the brighter sensibilities of Paris, Louisiana, and the West Indies.
Based on extensive research, including hundreds of letters written by Gottschalk (in French, Spanish, and English) which are used here for the first time, Bamboula! illuminates an exotic but tragic life, as well as one of the most democratic phases of American cultural life, a world of bustling impresarios and America's first bohemian circle. A major biography in every sense, it will help reestablish Gottschalk's place in American musical history.

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Gottschalk, the first significant American composer, packed an incredible amount into his 40-year lifespan (1829-1869). Born in New Orleans to an Anglo-German-Jewish father and a French-Haitian mother, he straddled two worlds as a musician: the European, with its great cultural heritage (Chopin congratulated Gottschalk at an early concert) and the popular folk traditions of his native Louisiana-and later of Cuba and much of Latin America. He was a remarkable showman, dazzling audiences with his coruscating displays, often improvising at the keyboard; disappointingly little of his enormous output was written down, and much of what was has been lost. As Gottschalk journeyed indefatigably-to Paris, to Switzerland, back to his birthplace, then New York City, Boston, Cuba, Puerto Rico, California, Peru, Chile, Argentina and Brazil, making and losing fortunes-hysterical audiences and press panegyrics followed him; so, occasionally, did scandal, perhaps inevitable for a man whose impact can be compared to that of Michael Jackson today. Was Gottschalk a great composer or merely a marvelous pianist and phenomenal showman? Judgment must be made on so few pieces: Bamboula, a riot of rhythmic color, the lavishly scored symphony A Night in the Tropics, the Grande Tarantelle for piano and orchestra, a few lugubrious salon pieces, the sprightly arrangements that form the popular ballet Cakewalk. In this magisterial biography, Starr, former president of Oberlin College, makes an eloquent case for Gottschalk as the first great musical democrat, a man who might well have changed the course of American music had he lived longer. He also, with a wealth of colorful detail, brings the musical and cultural life of half a dozen countries in the mid-19th century vividly before the reader. Starr's book, like all fine biographies, instructs, entertains and offers infinite food for thought. Illustrations not seen by PW.
Copyright 1994 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Booklist

Although Starr draws on his subject's own writings in constructing the most extensive chronicle of the short life of America's first great touring pianist, Louis Moreau Gottschalk (1829-69) wrote little about himself per se. We can only speculate about what he felt, though his immensely popular music often expressed his mood. He was born in New Orleans, studied piano and composition in Paris in his second decade, and embarked on a career as virtuoso pianist and composer in his third. His need to earn enough from concerts throughout the U.S., the Caribbean, and Latin America to support his mother and siblings governed his life. He learned quickly that music containing quotations from folk tunes, dances, national anthems, and operas attracted the largest audiences. Most of his piano pieces were, in fact, improvisations, and many have been lost, for only when the public demanded sheet music did he commit them to paper. An academic approach to its subject, Starr's work is fascinating, nevertheless, for its coverage of Gottschalk's competitors and collaborators as well as the travails of an itinerant musician. Alan Hirsch

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 608 pages
  • Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA; Second edition edition (January 5, 1995)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0195072375
  • ISBN-13: 978-0195072372
  • Product Dimensions: 9.4 x 6.5 x 1.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 2.2 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 3.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,069,960 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

6 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
3.3 out of 5 stars (6 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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12 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Interesting, well-researched, insightful. Read it., August 12, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Bamboula!: The Life and Times of Louis Moreau Gottschalk (Hardcover)
One doesn't have to read far into S. Frederic Starr's biography of Louis Moreau Gottschalk to learn three things. First, that the author pursued more leads and sifted through more material than anyone else thus far in the search for information about this musical legend. Second, that Mr. Starr just adores Gottschalk's music and wishes you would, too. And third, that it's a darn shame there aren't more editors in the publishing business these days. Overall an illuminating and enjoyable book, Bamboula! covers more details about Gottschalk's concert programs and love for his mother than is perhaps necessary, but one can only admire the biographer's persistance in researching and writing this book. His descriptions of the musical institutions and leaders of the middle of the last century, particularly, reveal much about our musical tastes today. The material might perhaps have been conveyed more effectively with fewer adjectives, but that's a stylistic quibble. A major flaw, though, is the lack of a discography. Mr. Starr refers to several compositions of Gottschalk's, noting that certain performances of them are inadequate. But how is the reader to judge - or to enjoy any of this marvelous music - if there is no guide to what is available on recordings? Readers of this type of semi-scholarly book are more likely to buy a CD than to order a score and analyze it, aren't they? Anyway, I recommend this book to anyone who wishes to learn more about music and culture in 19th-century America.
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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Facinating examination of a most underrated composer, January 13, 2000
This review is from: Bamboula!: The Life and Times of Louis Moreau Gottschalk (Hardcover)
If you've listened to just ONE Gottschalk composition, then you're ready to travel to the 19th century Louisana Bayou and follow young Louis Moreau to Europe and South America. This book is a detailed and engaging look at one of the world's most underrated composers and performers; one who undertood the importance of getting into communication with the audience. BOBMAKAROWSKI@HOTMAIL.COM
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Fine work, couple of negatives, November 28, 2003
By A Customer
This review is from: Bamboula!: The Life and Times of Louis Moreau Gottschalk (Hardcover)
Starr's research as other reviewers have mentioned was done well. Starr gives fine historical background to the many places Gottschalk lived. Details of the composer's life also are explained in specifics. My fault with this work-from a pianist point of view, is the author gives no insight to how Gottschalk became one of the five greatest pianists of the 19th century, in same ranks with Chopin, Listz, Thalberg. Starr makes no effort to show how Gottschalk practiced, and how he could keep up his incredible technique stills while traveling so much. He descibes Gottschalk's early training in Paris, but after that barely mentions how Gottschalk took his piano skills to the highest in world. Another problem I had is the author often went into little depth on how Gottschalk composed. Some of his great works are given a passing sentence and left at that, with little, and often no musical analysis of any piece. In fact, one won't find a musical staff in the whole book. One of his finest little caprices "Suis Moi" ("Follow Me"), isn't even listed in the book. I understand the composer wrote over 100 pieces, depth cannot be given to too many, but essentially there was none of this for any piece-say for except a couple.
Some of this might stem from the biographer himself not being a pianist, and not a composer (at least one of any distinction). Perhaps Starr lacked the neccessary insight for more musical opinions, or perhaps too much of Gottschalk's life is still relatively unknown. I'll perhaps give a pass to author on the latter point, and give book 4 stars because it is the best biography on him yet written.
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