Midcentury America; Life in the 1850's

Midcentury America; Life in the 1850's
Author: Carl Bode
Publisher:
Total Pages: 266
Release: 1972
Genre: History
ISBN:

Through his selection and organization of, and commentary on, the documents and illustrations in this anthology Carl Bode gives his readers a vivid picture of American civilization and popular culture of the 1850s. The twenty-eight selections from contemporary documents and thirty illustrations are divided into seven sections covering various aspects of the American experience--the character of the people and country, home life, work, education, religion, pleasures of life, and slavery. Americans in the 1850s, the documents show, were worse off physi­cally and better off mentally than they are today. They felt more secure because they had more absolutes than we do today. Men in the earlier era trusted in God and in the great social institutions of church, family, school, and country. Yet the 1850s were by no means a bucolic interlude before the Civil War, as Bode makes clear, and the revealing look at the period given here is both rich and rewarding.

Memphis Music

Memphis Music
Author: Tim Sharp
Publisher: Arcadia Publishing
Total Pages: 132
Release: 2007
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780738544113

Surveys the people, music, and events that contributed to the rich musical life that emerged in Memphis, Tennessee, against the backdrop of the Civil War and yellow fever in the nineteenth century. Original.

Scribner's Magazine

Scribner's Magazine
Author: Edward Livermore Burlingame
Publisher:
Total Pages: 818
Release: 1910
Genre: American periodicals
ISBN:

Strong on Music

Strong on Music
Author: Vera Brodsky Lawrence
Publisher: University of Chicago Press
Total Pages: 892
Release: 1995-12-18
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 9780226470115

In this second volume of Strong on Music, Vera Brodsky Lawrence carries into the 1850s her landmark account of the nineteenth-century New York music scene. Using music entries from George Templeton Strong's famous journals—most published here for the first time—as a point of departure, Lawrence provides a vivid portrait of a vibrant musical culture. Each chapter presents one year in the musical life of New York City, with Lawrence's extensive commentary enriched both by excerpts from Strong's diaries and a lavish selection of little-known music criticism and comment from the period. The reviews, written by an often truculent, sometimes venal tribe of music journalists, cover the entire world of music—from opera to barrel organ, salon to saloon. In this New York, operas performed by renowned artists are parodied by blackface minstrels; performances of the Philharmonic Society are drowned by the raucous chatter of flirtatious adolescents, who turn concerts into a noisy singles' hangout; and irate critics trash the first performances of Verdi operas, calling the plots indecent and the scores noisy and unmelodic. In this volatile atmosphere, a native musical culture is born; its whose first faltering efforts are dubiously received, and the first American composers begin to emerge.