
This Is The First-ever Historical Study Across All Musical Genres In Any American Metropolis. Detroit In The 1940s-60s Was Not Just The Capital Of The Twentieth Century For Industry And The War Effort, But Also For The Quantity And Extremely High Quality Of Its Musicians, From Jazz To Classical To Ethnic. The Author, A Detroiter From 1943, Begins With A Reflection Of His Early Life With His Family And Others, Then Weaves Through The Music Traffic Of All The Sectors Of A Dynamic And Volatile City. Looking First At The Crucial Role Of The Public Schools In Fostering Talent, Motor City Music Surveys The Neighborhoods Of Older European Immigrants And Of The Later Huge Waves Of Black And White Southerners Who Migrated To Detroit To Serve The Auto And Defense Industries. Jazz Stars, Polka Band Leaders, Jewish Violinists, And Figures Like Lily Tomlin Emerge In The Spotlight. Shaping Institutions, From The Ford Motor Company And The United Auto Workers Through Radio Stations And Motown, All Deployed Music To Bring Together A City Rent By Relentless Segregation, Policing, And Spasms Of Violence. The Voices Of Detroit's Poets, Writers, And Artists Round Out The Chorus.
This book investigates how the diverse musical landscape of mid-twentieth-century Detroit functioned as a social and institutional force within a rapidly industrializing and segregated metropolis. Mark Slobin, an ethnomusicologist and Detroit native, utilizes a blend of personal memoir and historical analysis to examine the intersection of labor, migration, and artistic expression. He argues that music served as a critical mechanism for community building and identity formation amidst the city's volatile industrial environment.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts recognize this work as a significant contribution to urban ethnomusicology for its unique synthesis of personal narrative and historical documentation. Readers frequently note the accessible yet scholarly tone, which effectively bridges the gap between academic research and local history.
Page Count:
0
Publication Date:
1900-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press,
ISBN-10:
0190882115
ISBN-13:
9780190882112
No comments yet. Be the first to share your thoughts!