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Lost Sounds: Blacks and the Birth of the Recording Industry, 1890-1919

  • Author: Brooks, Tim
An act of cultural reclamation--the great lost heroes of black performance

Book

$45.25

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Contents

  • CoverTitle PageCopyright PageContentsPrefaceAcknowledgmentsIntroduction: Lost, Stolen, or Strayed?PART ONE: George W. Johnson, the First Black Recording Artist
  • 1. The Early Years
  • 2. Talking Machines!
  • 3. The Trial of George W. JohnsonPART TWO: Black Recording Artists, 1890-
  • 994. The Unique Quartette
  • 5. Louis "Bebe" Vasnier: Recording in Nineteenth-Century New Orleans
  • 6. The Standard Quartette and South before the War
  • 7. The Kentucky Jubilee Singers
  • 8. Bert Williams and George Walker
  • 9. Cousins and DeMoss
  • 10. Thomas CraigPART THREE: Black Recording Artists, 1900- 190911. The Dinwiddie Quartet
  • 12. Carroll Clark
  • 13. Charley Case: Passing for White?
  • 14. The Fisk Jubilee Singers and the Popularization of Negro Spiriituals
  • 15. Polk Miller and His Old South QuartettePART FOUR: Black Recording Artists, 1920- 1516. Jack Johnson
  • 17. Daisy Tapley
  • 18. Apollo Jubilee Quartette
  • 19. Edward Sterling Wright and the Poery of Paul Laurence Dunbar
  • 20. James Reese Europe
  • 21. Will Marion Cook and the Afro-American Folk Song Singers
  • 22. Dan Kildare and Joan Sawyer's Persian Garden Orchestra
  • 23. The Tuskegee Institute Singers
  • 24. The Right QuintettePART FIVE: Black Recording Artists, 1916- 1925. Wilbur C. Sweatman: Disrespecting Wilbur
  • 26. Opal D. Cooper
  • 27. Noble Sissle and Eubie Blake
  • 28. Ford T. Dabney: Syncopation over Broadway
  • 29. W. C. Handy
  • 30. Roland Hayes
  • 31. The Four Harmony Kings
  • 32. Broome Special Phonograph Records
  • 33. Edward H. Boatner
  • 34. Harry T. Burleigh
  • 35. Florence Cole-Talbert
  • 36. R. Nathaniel Dett
  • 37. Clarence Cameron WhitePART SIX: Other Early Recordings
  • 38. Miscellaneous RecordingsAppendix: Caribbean and South American RecordingsNotesSelect CD DiscographyBibliographyIndex