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Singing Cowboys and Musical Mountaineers: Southern Culture and  the Roots of Country Music
 
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Singing Cowboys and Musical Mountaineers: Southern Culture and the Roots of Country Music [Paperback]

Bill C. Malone (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)

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Book Description

Mercer University Lamar Memorial Lectures September 1, 2003
In this slim, lively book our foremost historian of country music recalls the lost worlds of pioneering fiddlers and pickers, balladeers and yodelers. As he looks at "hillbilly" music's pre-commercial era and its early popular growth through radio and recordings, Bill C. Malone shows us that it was a product not only of the British Isles but of diverse African, German, Spanish, French, and Mexican influences.

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Editorial Reviews

Review

"Goes a long way toward filling a bothersome hole in American musical history."--Sing Out!


"So succinct and well-documented, all the reader can do is believe it."--Lexington Herald-Leader


"This book shows not only the work of a master scholar, but also that of one attuned to the myths, the hopes, and the yearnings of ordinary people."--Journal of Southern History


Singing Cowboys and Musical Mountaineers is a very enlightening read regarding the roots of Country music and provides the definitive explanation and history of the connection between Country music (southern folk music) and cowboy hats."--Midwest Book Review


“The last word on the history of country music remains Malone.”--Canon


"Provides great insight into country music and southern culture."--Southern Historian


"This book is good enough that readers can only want more."--Journal of American History


"A very enlightening read."--BookPleasures.com

From the Publisher

Our foremost historian of country music recalls the lost worlds of pioneering fiddlers and pickers, balladeers and yodelers.

Winner of the Ray and Pat Browne Award, Popular Culture Association


Product Details

  • Paperback: 168 pages
  • Publisher: University of Georgia Press (September 1, 2003)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0820325511
  • ISBN-13: 978-0820325514
  • Product Dimensions: 8.1 x 6.4 x 0.5 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 8.5 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #769,976 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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13 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Cross-Cultural Influences on "Old Time" Music, February 15, 2001
By 
Michael Cala (Staten Island, New York USA) - See all my reviews
For those interested in the history of the music they play or listen to - specifically country, bluegrass and old time - Singing Cowboys and Musical Mountaineers is a detailed and lively introduction to the beginnings of popular American music.

Subtitled, "Southern Culture and the Roots of Country Music," Singing Cowboys analyzes American musical currents across three centuries. Beginning in pre-Colonial America, the book moves rapidly forward to the "industrialization" of country music in the 1920's that reached its apogee in contemporary Nashville.

By demonstrating how rural and urban Americans entertained themselves musically, author Bill C. Malone deftly debunks stubborn linear-inheritance theories of musical transmission. Using countless examples, he shows how American popular music has always had multiple influences.

Favorite tunes like "Coo Coo" or "Shortnin' Bread" did not descend in a straight, "pure" line from slavery. Instead, Malone underscores the significance of close-quarters housing and labor among poor whites and blacks in the 19th century. Despite overt racism, such proximity was particularly common in the south, and forged an active and ongoing interchange of style and repertoire among both groups.

The author also makes a strong case for how music was routinely "traded" between these groups and the professional minstrel troupes performing throughout the big cities and backwaters of 19th century America.

For those who feel that many of our reels and hornpipes remain intact from the British Isles of earlier centuries, this book suggests amalgamating factors not commonly addressed in theories of Celtic or Anglo-Saxon musical influences on American southern music.

Of particular importance to the perpetuation of American folk musical traditions was the Civil War. Men from all over the country circulated songs and playing styles - especially fiddle and 5-string banjo. When soldiers returned home after the war, they brought these musical influences with them.

Underscoring the role of war in cultural transmission, the author points out that American men also went to war in 1775, 1812, 1846, 1898 and 1917.

Where the book really shines, though, is in its analysis of the transition of rural music, performed largely by amateurs and "part-timers," into a multibillion dollar industry. Pivotal to this change was technology. Radio and tape recording were critical factors without which no popular music could have grown to the degree that country music did in the 1930's.

Unfortunately for posterity, there are no eyewitness descriptions of actual playing technique and tunings from earlier centuries. And of course no recordings were made until the first decade of this century. However, banjo players like "Uncle" Dave Macon, born in the 19th century, may have represented somewhat accurate glimpses of these earlier styles in their performances.

Field recordings of rural musicians were made primarily in the American southeast - and most often in the Appalachians. This seeming regional bias was primarily one of convenience: This region was easily accessible from large eastern metropolitan centers -- New York, Philadelphia, Atlanta - that housed the academics who ventured out with tape recorders to "discover" rural music and musicians.

Malone's thoughtful annotations to each chapter of Singing Cowboys and Musical Mountaineers are a Who's Who listing the significant contributions of ethnomusicologists, historians and field recordists to music preservation. Some of those early pioneers mentioned include Bascom Lamar Lunsford, John and Alan Lomax, Cecil Sharp, and Francis Child and, more recently, Ralph Rinzler, Mike Seeger, Norm Cohen and others.

Other musical forms discussed include shape note singing, Child ballads, Tex-Mex conjunto music, German fiddling, Scottish fiddle and bagpipers, the banjo craze of the 1890s, Bill Monroe's inspired creation of bluegrass and the phenomenon of singing cowboys.

Much attention is paid throughout to the powerful role of minstrelsy in transmitting music from rural "amateurs" to professionals and back again. Pop music, after all, has always influenced rural players' musical choices and styles just as much as "mountain music" affected professional performers.

One amusing anecdote from the book highlights the frequent confusion of "genuine" traditional music with commercial recordings:

"At a conference on traditional music held in Chapel Hill, North Carolina, in April 1989, ballad singer Doug Wallin presented a short program of songs he had learned growing up in that citadel of old time music, Madison County, North Carolina, where Cecil Sharp had found his richest repository of traditional ballads.

"After reverently announcing that he would perform a song he learned from his mother, Berzilla, Wallin...launched into 'After the Ball,' the monster pop hit from 1896 written by Charles K. Harris. The story and lyrics were basically as Harris had written them, but the modal melody and style were Wallin's. Some of the eminent folklorists in attendance sat in embarrassed or stunned silence." [END OF BOOK QUOTE]

Ultimately, the commercialization of country music created its own influences. Song pluggers and the media would help sustain powerful fantasies, created in the 18th and 19th centuries, of rugged individuals, hillbillies, rubes, singing cowboys and lone mountaineers as enduring American cultural stereotypes.

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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Detailed History About The Roots Of Country Music, July 8, 2007
By 
Chris Luallen (Nashville, Tennessee) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)    (REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Singing Cowboys and Musical Mountaineers: Southern Culture and the Roots of Country Music (Paperback)
This book is divided into three chapters : 1) Southern Rural Music in the 19th Century 2) Popular Culture and the Music of the South 3) Mountaineers and Cowboys: Country Music's Search For Identity.

The first two chapters are largely devoted to explaining one of Malone's central ideas - that old time country music did not appear as a pure descendent of an Anglo-Saxon/Celtic heritage. But was rather, like nearly all American music, a product of multiple influences. These included German hymns, French cotillions and, perhaps most importantly, black blues and gospel songs. Also the early country classics of the Carter Family and others weren't always pure folk songs. Malone explains how, much to my disappointment, many came from Northern Tin Pan Alley commercial songwriters. For instance, "Mid The Green Fields of Virginia" was actually written by a New Yorker who had never even set foot in Virginia. Other popular entertainment, such as the minstrel shows and the travelling medicine shows, also played a major role in providing new material to rural Southern musicians.

The third chapter deals with country music's fascination with two types of cultural symbols - the cowboy and the mountaineer. The first big stars of country music were Jimmy Rodgers and the Carter Family. Rodger's adopted the image of the cowboy - a tough, masculine rounder who rambled about in search of wild women and good times. The Carter Family, in contrast, were seen as wholesome mountain folks who embodied the traditional virtues of home and hearth. These country musicians were popular not only with their fellow Southerners but also with urban Northerners who liked to romanticize America's rapidly vanishing days of simple family farms and wide open frontiers. Malone goes on to describe many other cowboy icons, from Bob Wills to Willie Nelson, and how they came to symbolize freedom and independence to the American public. The mountaineer influence also remained strong, with a multitude of Appalachian born perfomers such as Loretta Lynn, Dolly Parton and Ricky Skaggs. But while the cowboy hat and boots remained in fashion. The mountainer's image as a hillbilly in overalls tended to become the subject of cornpone humor such as on the Hee Haw television show.

Malone has a top flight knowledge of country's musical and cultural roots. This book is a terrific read for anyone wanting to learn more on the subject
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5.0 out of 5 stars Enlightening Explanation of Southern Music's Origins, November 27, 2008
This review is from: Singing Cowboys and Musical Mountaineers: Southern Culture and the Roots of Country Music (Paperback)
When it comes to tracing the roots of American music, there's just no place like the South: jazz, rhythm & blues, rock & roll, gospel - most music that comes with a "made in America" stamp originated south of the Mason-Dixon line. And while the world obviously owes a huge musical debt to African-Americans for their contributions in the aforementioned genres, what we now call "Country" music primarily evolved from the souls and throats of white rural southerners. It is these singers - and their songs - that are the focus of Bill C. Malone's "Singing Cowboys and Musical Moutaineers."

Malone's first concern is to precisely define white rural southern music, especially that which was sung in the 19th century South (just before this music was discovered by the rest of the world). Was it - as early 20th century British musicologist Cecil Sharpe wanted to believe - merely a twangy re-definition of ancient British ballads? Sharpe collected hundreds of Appalachian songs that were clearly traceable to the British Isles, but as Malone points out in "Singing Cowboys," Sharpe was in the South specifically looking for this connection. He found it in spades but because the other songs he surely heard echoing through the mountains didn't concern his thesis, he simply ignored them.

There was much to ignore. Country music has many primary sources, and although Malone claims that a detailed history of the genre is nigh impossible, he does a masterful job of describing most of its influences in fascinating detail. British ballads, black spirituals, minstrel show songs (most of their composers ironically Northern), German bands and hymns all had a major role in shaping the white folk music of 19th century America. Rural southerners were very catholic in their love for music: a good tune was a good tune, whether it originated in ancient Britain or at the desk of a contemporary New York composer.

By far the most fascinating aspect of Malone's book is hinted at in its title and answers this question: why did Country singers such as Hank Williams, Johnny Cash and Alan Jackson -- who all hailed from the southeast - dress as though they had been raised on a Texas ranch? Simple: our national hunger for symbols. Before the cowboy singer took over as Country music's mascot in the 1930's, he was the mountain man of the 1920's, romanticized by novels and the "Great War" hero, Alvin "Tennessee Mountain Boy" York, which exemplified a rural, unfettered, Anglo-Saxon America for an increasingly urban and immigrant-heavy America. It was primarily the Carter family and Bradley Kincaid whose performances first personified this mountain personality; their success paved the way for many other southern musicians of the era to cash in on the hunger for the quintessential American symbol.

However, when reports of aberrant behavior and oppression from coal companies began to trickle out of the Appalachians, along with the proliferation of vaudeville acts that degenerated the mountain man's vigorous image into a ridiculous caricature (think "The Beverly Hillbillies"), the cowboy - whose manly persona and limitless freedom was being popularized in countless films and dime novels -- became the preeminent and permanent symbol of Country music. The actual canon of authentic cowboy songs is much smaller than the amount of folk songs originally from the eastern south, but an image is an image and the singing cowboy is here to stay.

"Singing Cowboys and Musical Mountaineers" is a very enlightening read regarding the roots of Country music and provides the definitive explanation for the ubiquitous connection between Country music and cowboy hats.




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