1. PERSONAL STATEMENTI am interested in the topic of Bessie Smith, her music, herself as a symbol of the Southern Rebel, and how her death was used to draw attention to the issue of segregation in the South and what the reality of the story actually was. Bessie Smith helped to advance the jazz era by singing the blues and exploring themes of black identity, gender, and sexuality through the
Blacks in Blues Music Biographer Lawrence Jackson wrote that author Ralph Ellison was exposed to the blues and classical music from an early age, eventually playing the trumpet and pursuing a degree in music at Tuskegee (McLaren Pp). When he moved to New York to pursue his writing career, Ellison was exposed to the musical developments in jazz and often attended the Apollo Theater, the Savoy Ballroom, and Cafe Society Downtown,
Black Southerner’s World in the US Before Civil Rights Part 1 A Conversation with Amari Baraka A I agree that blues is a non-diatonic music and does slur and slide the notes, which is the style that came from West Africa—but I also think that the blues is more than just that. There are a lot of things happening in blues and a lot of different styles that are incorporated into it,
Black Entertainment and Sports Institutions/Organizations in Atlanta, GA 1880s to the early 1900s -- "African-Americans in Atlanta were entertained by traveling minstrel companies and local orchestras which performed at social events held at the first Odd Fellows Hall, located on Piedmont Avenue. Atlanta University offered musically talented students, including James Weldon Johnson, brother of J. Rosamond Johnson, who entertained throughout the city during the late 1890s" (Mason, Jr. 10). Circa 1900 --
Davis, Angela. Y. Blues, Legacy and Black Feminism. New York: Random House, 1999. Angela Y. Davis was one of the founding mothers of the radical Black feminist and civil rights movement. Her participation in these movements was not simply vocal and intellectual, but profoundly political, as well. Angela Y. Davis was brought to trial for her supposed activities against the federal government of the United States during the 1960's. However, a
Music and cultural traditions are quintessential aspects of American life. This essay will explore the relationship between experience and suffering. Our discussion will examine the life and work of Bessie Smith and the Native American custom of "vision quest." The conclusion of the essay will illustrate how suffering creates good blues musicians while vision quest reveals the future so that "the blues" can be avoided. The Blues and Vision Quest You gotta
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