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Segregating Sound: Inventing Folk and Pop Music in the Age of Jim Crow

  • Author: Miller, Karl
A cultural exploration and, in part, a polemic, Segregating Sound is at once a social history, musical history, business history and an intellectual history. . . . Miller is an engaging writer... More…

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$38.00

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Contents

  • Acknowledgments vii
  • Introduction 1
  • 1. Tin Pan Alley on Tour: The Southern Embrace of Commercial Music 23
  • 2. Making Money Making Music: The Education of Southern Musicians in Local Markets 51
  • 3. Isolating Folk, Isolating Songs: Reimagining Southern Music as Folklore 85
  • 4. Southern Musicians and the Lure of New York City: Representing the South from Coon Songs to the Blues 121
  • 5. Talking Machine World: Discovering Local Music in the Global Phonograph Industry 157
  • 6. Race Records and Old-Time Music: The Creation of Two Marketing Categories in the 1920s 187
  • 7. Black Folk and Hillbilly Pop: Industry Enforcement of the Musical Color Line 215
  • 8. Reimagining Pop Tunes as Folk Songs: The Ascension of the Folkloric Paradigm 241
  • Afterword: "All Songs is Folk Songs" 275
  • Notes 283
  • Bibliography 327
  • Index 351