Image for Long Lost Blues : Popular Blues in America, 1850-1920

Long Lost Blues : Popular Blues in America, 1850-1920

Part of the Music in American Life series
See all formats and editions

Mamie Smith's 1920 recording of ""Crazy Blues"" is commonly thought to signify the beginning of commercial attention to blues music and culture, but by that year more than 450 other blues titles had already appeared in sheet music and on recordings.

In this examination of early popular blues, Peter C.

Muir traces the genre's early history and the highly creative interplay between folk and popular forms, focusing especially on the roles W.

C. Handy played in both blues music and the music business.

Long Lost Blues exposes for the first time the full scope and importance of early popular blues to mainstream American culture in the early twentieth century.

Closely analyzing sheet music and other print sources that have previously gone unexamined, Muir revises our understanding of the evolution and sociology of blues at its inception.

Read More
Special order line: only available to educational & business accounts. Sign In
£89.60 Save 20.00%
RRP £112.00
Product Details
University of Illinois Press
0252034872 / 9780252034879
Hardback
06/01/2010
United States
280 pages, 31 black & white photographs, 98 music examples, 9 tables
178 x 254 mm, 739 grams