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Chapter Two “Old, Simple Ditties” : Secular Music in the Colonies and Early Republic.

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Presentation on theme: "Chapter Two “Old, Simple Ditties” : Secular Music in the Colonies and Early Republic."— Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter Two “Old, Simple Ditties” : Secular Music in the Colonies and Early Republic

2 (Public) Concert Music
Chiefly European performers - Benefit concerts - Subscription concerts Advertisements (see following slide) Programs – Variety and Length! (textbook, p. 54 & next slide) - full ensembles, solos, etc. - vocal solos, glees, opera arias, etc.

3 Concert in Salem, MA (21 Jan 1809)
MUH Music in the United States 10/7/2019 Concert in Salem, MA (21 Jan 1809) DAY 8 (16 Sep 19)

4 Theater Advertisement (1787)

5 London Handbill Covent Garden (entertainment district)
Play and “opera” Cf. textbook, p. 55

6 MUH 3633 - Music in the United States
Theater Music 10/7/2019 U.S. Theater based on London Musical Formats include: Ballad opera (ex. Gay, Beggar’s Opera, 1728) - The Beggar's Opera (scene) Pasticcio (ex. Arne, Love in a Village, 1791) - "The Traveller Beknighted" Comic opera (ex. S. Arnold, The Children in the Wood, 1795) Henry Bishop, Clari, or the Maid of Milan (1823) - “Home, Sweet Home” (John Howard Payne, lyrics) "Home, Sweet Home" DAY 8 (16 Sep 19)

7 “How Sweet the Sound” : Sacred Music in the New Republic
Chapter Three “How Sweet the Sound” : Sacred Music in the New Republic

8 Reminders Psalmody – Puritan sacred music
“Lining Out” vs. “Regular singing” 1720s – Symmes, Mather, et al. (“Ancient Music” = older, European) Singing Schools Wm. Billings, et al. Tunebooks – music instruction & part songs

9 Daniel Read (1757-1836) “Sherburne”
The American Singing Book (1785) Sets text of Nahum Tate (Luke 2: 8-15) "Sherburne" by Daniel Read ( ) [LG 3.1, p. 59] Preference for “open” harmonies, etc. “Fuging tune” – simple imitative entries (not a European “Bach” fugue) Widely disseminated into 19th & 20th Centuries

10 Reform (early 1800s) Concerns over secular sound in US churches
Reformers push for “Ancient music” [meaning…] “Proper” (old) European tunes (and in style) - The Middlesex Musical Society… (1807) [Reform] Tunebooks using European sources - The Salem Collection… (1805) Edification [reformers] vs. Praise [congregation] Second Great Awakening (1780s-1830s) - Camp Meetings (and singing)

11 Andrew Law (1749-1821) American Psalmody reformer Emphasis on:
European models (US & British equal) Treble melody w/ “correct” harmonization New “patent notes” for music-reading Musical primer: containing the rules of psalmody...[1793] Beginning of “Shape Notes”

12 MUH 3633 - Music in the United States
“Shape Note” Singing 10/7/2019 Southern Highlands (Textbook map, p. 62) Little & Smith, Easy Instructor… (1798) - four shapes – fa so la mi Will God Forever Cast Us Off (Mear), p. 24 Southern hymnodists - publish folk hymns w/ religious texts - numerous books & editions (each favored by different groups) The Sacred Harp (1844) – multiple reprints, editions w/ varying contents DAY 8 (16 Sep 19)

13 MUH 3633 - Music in the United States
Shape Note Singing 10/7/2019 DAY 8 (16 Sep 19)

14 MUH 3633 - Music in the United States
Shape Note Singing 10/7/2019 DAY 8 (16 Sep 19)


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