Program - The Society for American Music
Transcription
Program - The Society for American Music
Association for Recorded Sound Collections & The Society for American Music 2004 Conference March 10 - 14th Cleveland, Ohio Cleveland, Ohio 1 2004 Conference Association for Recorded Sound Collections & Society for American Music March 10-14, 2004 Cleveland, Ohio 2 ARSC-SAM Conference 2004 ����� �� ������������ ������������������ Dear Members of SAM and ARSC, On behalf of the Department of Music at Case I’d like to welcome you to Cleveland, to the cultural institutions of University Circle, and to our University. We are excited to be hosting your joint annual meeting, and we are especially looking forward to your campus visit on Friday. The Case Department of Music offers unique opportunities for both intensive liberal arts education within a first-class research institution and fine conservatory training in the context of our Joint Program with the Cleveland Institute of Music. ���������������������� We offer B.A. programs in performance, �������������������������� ��������������������������������������� music history, audio recording, theory, early music performance practices, and ���������������������������������� general musicianship, as well as a B.S. in ��������������������� music education. On the graduate level, we offer specialties in the fields of musicology, ��������������������� music education, and early music ������������������������ performance practices, with M.A., D.M.A, �������������������������������������� and Ph.D. degree programs available. ������������������������������������� Situated on beautiful University Circle, ��������������������������������� we are neighbors and partners to CIM, the ������������������������������� Cleveland Orchestra, the Cleveland Museum ��������������������������������� of Art, and the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame ������������������������������������ and Museum. Embracing both tradition �������������������������������������� and innovation, we are beneficiaries of and ������������������������������������� contributors to one of the richest cultural ����������������������������������� environments in the country. � � � ��������������� � ��������������������������� ������������������������������ ����������������������� ������������������� ������������������������������� ������������������� ������������������������ �������������� ��������������������� Cleveland, Ohio The members of our faculty look forward to seeing old friends and making new acquaintances during your time in Cleveland. By all means don’t hesitate to be in touch if you have any special needs, or just to say hello. Warmly, Georgia J. Cowart Associate Professor and Chair Department of Music Case Western Reserve University 3 Greetings, friends and colleagues! On behalf of the Association for Recorded Sound Collections, it is a pleasure to welcome you all to Cleveland. I am particularly excited to be back with many SAM friends. The last SAM meeting I was able to attend was the 1991 meeting in Hampton, Virginia, and I have missed the stimulating and thoroughly academic conference atmosphere. This meeting, years in the planning, represents the culmination of many hours of work on the part of many people for both organizations. We all owe a great thanks to Local Arrangements chairs Bill Klinger (ARSC) and Mary Davis (SAM), Program Chairs Louise Spear (ARSC) and Rob Walser (SAM), Conference Managers Brenda Nelson-Strauss (ARSC) and Jim Hines (SAM), and to SAM’s Executive Director, Mariana Whitmer. Putting together such a complex yet rich four-and-a-half days is no small task. I hope that members of both SAM and ARSC will be able to enjoy the different cultures of each other’s meetings. The joint sessions will bring us together to discuss topics of mutual interest, and these discussions should certainly spill out into the halls and exhibits area. ARSC attendees will no doubt find it difficult to choose among so many meetings (we typically do not have simultaneous sessions), and SAM folks may be surprised at the breadth of experiences and backgrounds that ARSCers bring, and the depth of knowledge that this represents. The city of Cleveland provides a stimulating backdrop for this meeting! We should all discover why, in the words of Ian Hunter, “Cleveland Rocks!” Jim Farrington President, Association for Recorded Sound Collections 4 ARSC-SAM Conference 2004 2004 ARSC Board of Directors President Jim Farrington First Vice President / President Elect Brenda Nelson-Strauss Second Vice President / Program Chair Louise Spear Secretary Esther Gillie Treasurer Steven I. Ramm Executive Director Peter Shambarger Members-at-Large Vincent Pelote and David Seubert Cleveland, Ohio 5 T he Association for Recorded Sound Collections is a non-profit organization that promotes the preservation and study of sound recordings in all formats and fields of music and speech. The Association is dedicated to serving the needs of the sound archiving and collecting communities in specialized areas of interest and activity, through its publications, annual conferences and the work of its many committees. Founded in 1966, the Association for Recorded Sound Collections (ARSC) is a non-profit organization dedicated to research, study, publication, and information exchange surrounding all aspects of recordings and recorded sound. With over one thousand members from twenty-three countries, the organization is comprehensive in scope and reflects the interests and concerns of its members, including:collectors, dealers, appraisers, archivists, librarians, historians, musicians, students, discographers, reviewers, media producers and recording engineers. Through publications, grants and awards, conferences, and the work of its committees, the Association provides a forum for the development and dissemination of discographic information in all fields and periods of recording and in all sound media. In addition, ARSC works to encourage the preservation of historical recordings, to promote the exchange and dissemination of research and information about them, and to foster an increased awareness of the importance of recorded sound as part of any cultural heritage For more information about ARSC, visit http://www.arsc-audio.org/ 6 ARSC-SAM Conference 2004 Welcome to the Annual Conference of the Society for American Music! We are delighted to be meeting with the Association for Recorded Sound Collections and hope you will take the opportunity to sample concerts, lectures, and group discussions from the programs of both organizations. Our two societies represent worlds that are closely related yet sporadically intersecting, so this conference provides a wonderful opportunity to forge new connections. We are also pleased to name Chris Strachwitz of Arhoolie Productions as SAM’s Honorary Member for 2004. Through his recordings and films, Strachwitz has documented an extraordinary array of American vernacular traditions. Join us on Saturday at 3:30 for a special session with him, which will provide an overview of his achievements. Other highlights of the conference include: · a trip Thursday evening to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum · the launching of “The SAM History Project” on Saturday at 12:30–an ongoing oral history designed to chronicle the founding of our society As we work to endow SAM’s future, we have arranged a seminar on planned giving, which will be led by our representative from Merrill Lynch, on Thursday at 5:45p.m. Hearty thanks are due to Case Western Reserve University and the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum, which are official sponsors of our conference; to Mary Davis, Chair of the Local Arrangements Committee; Robert Walser, Chair of the Program Committee; Mariana Whitmer, Executive Director of SAM, and all those who have worked diligently to make this event a reality. I encourage those of you who are long-standing SAM members to extend a hand and welcome the newcomers and students in our midst. Most of all, enjoy the intellectual stimulation, exchange of information, and generosity of spirit that make our conferences so distinctive. Carol J. Oja President Society for American Music Cleveland, Ohio 7 Society for American Music BOARD OF TRUSTEES Officers Carol Oja (Harvard University), president Michael Broyles (Pennsylvania State University), president-elect Ron Pen (University of Kentucky), vice president R. Allen Lott (Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary), secretary George Keck (Ouachita Baptist University), treasurer Members at Large George Boziwick (New York Public Library) Mary DuPree (University of Idaho) Denise Von Glahn (The Florida State University) Josephine Wright (College of Wooster) Susan Key (San Francisco Symphony) Gayle Murchison (New Orleans, LA) Members at Large Elect Vivian Perlis (Yale University School of Music) Wayne Shirley (Durham, New Hampshire) 8 ARSC-SAM Conference 2004 Mission of the Society for American Music T o stimulate the appreciation, performance, creation and study of American music in all its diversity, and the full range of activities and institutions associated with that music. “America” is understood to embrace North America, including Central America and the Caribbean, and aspects of its cultures everywhere in the world F ounded and first named in honor of Oscar Sonneck (1873–1928), early Chief of the Music Division in the Library of Congress and pioneer scholar of American music, the Society for American Music is a constituent member of the American Council of Learned Societies. It is designated as a tax-exempt organization, 501(c)(3), by the Internal Revenue Service. Conferences held each year in the early spring give members the opportunity to share information and ideas, to hear performances, and to enjoy the company of others with similar interests. The Society publishes three periodicals. American Music, a quarterly journal, is published for the Society by the University of Illinois Press. Contents are chosen through review by a distinguished editorial advisory board representing the many subjects and professions within the field of American music. The Society for American Music Bulletin is published three times yearly and provides a timely and informal means by which members communicate with each other. The annual Directory provides a list of members, their postal and email addresses, telephone and fax numbers. Each member lists current topics or projects which are then indexed, providing a useful means of contact for those with shared interests. Annual dues are $65 for individuals, $32 for retirees and students, $20 for spouses or partners, and $82 for institutions. Membership applications can be sent to Society for American Music, Stephen Foster Memorial, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA 15260. For more information visit our web site at <http://www.American-Music.org>. Cleveland, Ohio 9 GENERAL CONFERENCE INFORMATION Transportation Transportation to off-site events, the Thursday evening reception at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum and the excursion to University Circle on Friday afternoon will be provided free of charge. Please check at the conference registration desk for information on schedule and pick up locations. Saturday Banquet Tickets are required for this event. You should also have a marker indicating your entrée preference. Additional tickets are available from the SAM registration desk until Friday at 12:00. Interest Groups Interest Groups are a vital part of the Society for American Music. Their programs are designed to allow members to interact with others of like interests, sharing ideas and information, but are open to all conference attendees. Interest Group sessions are planned entirely by the groups themselves. Some feature guest speakers or performers, others will have informal discussions. Blue Dots Small blue dots on name tags signify first-time attendees. Introduce yourself and welcome them to the conference. If you are a first-timer, please come to the reception on Friday morning ???(Rio Salado) to meet our board and committee chairs. Silent Auction All are welcome to participate in the SAM Silent Auction. This conference-long event serves as an important fund-raiser for the Society for American Music, presently helping to fund student travel and lodging for our conferences. Books, music, recordings, sheet music, and other materials are donated by conference attendees and exhibitors. If you have brought materials, bring them any time to the exhibit room. Then take some time to peruse the offerings and write your bids on the sheets attached. You may overbid any bid on the sheet in full dollar amounts. The auction closes during the reception on Saturday afternoon. You may pick up your winnings later that evening (after dinner) or on Sunday morning. Exhibits The Exhibit Room is one of the liveliest spots at SAM conferences, housing commercial exhibits, display of member publications, and the Silent Auction. Books, recordings, software, and other materials will be on display and available for sale. Please drop in and thank the vendors for attending our conference while you examine the materials that they have on display. Exhibitors this year include: A-R Editions University of Illinois Press Harmonie Park Press University of Tennessee Press Indiana University Press University Press of Mississippi Oxford University Press W. W. Norton & Company Scarecrow Press Wesleyan University Press The Scholar’s Choice 10 ARSC-SAM Conference 2004 Special Thanks Thank you to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum for inviting us for a private tour of the Rock Hall. Thank you to Case Western Reserve Univesrsity for sponsoring a special reception on Friday afternoon and welcoming us to their city. Acknowledgments Many thanks for the support of Conference Staff ARSC Program Committee: Louise Spear (The GRAMMY Foundation), chair; Sam Brylawski (Library of Congress), Nathan Georgitis (University of Oregon) ARSC Local Arrangements Committee: Bill Klinger, chair SAM Program Committee: Rob Walser (University of California, Los Angeles), chair, Larry Starr, Beth Levy, Leonora Saavedra, David Neumeyer, Judy Tsou SAM Local Arrangements Committee: Mary Davis (Case Western Reserve University), chair; Dana Gooley, David Kay, Charlotte Newman, Christine Dorey, Denise Seachrist, Sarah Tomasewski SAM Silent Auction chair, Dianna K. Eiland SAM Conference Manager, James R. Hines Cleveland, Ohio 11 Wednesday afternoon; Thursday morning THE CONFERENCE SCHEDULE Unless otherwise indicated, all sessions and events will take place at the Renaissance Cleveland Hotel. All ARSC sessions will occur in the Gold Room. The four rooms for SAM sessions are: Bush, Humphrey, Severance, and Van Aken. WEDNESDAY, March 10 9:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m. 9:00 a.m.-4:45 p.m. 2:00-6:00 p.m. 6:00-8:00 p.m. 8:00-10:00 p.m. ARSC Board Meeting ARSC Pre-Conference Workshop SAM Board Meeting Exhibitor set-up, Registration open ARSC-SAM Welcome Reception THURSDAY MORNING, March 11 7:30 a.m. 8:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m. 8:30-9:00 a.m. SAM Interest Group Council Mtg Exhibits ARSC-SAM Welcome and Opening Remarks Gold ARSC 9:00-10:15 a.m. U-S Phonograph Company: Cleveland and Beyond Gold Chair: SAMUEL BRYLAWSKI, Library of Congress 9:00-9:30 a.m. U-S Phonograph Company: The Cleveland Firm That Dared to Challenge Edison and Columbia BILL KLINGER, Chardon, Ohio 9:30-10:15 a.m. Recording Music and Experiences: J. Louis von der Mehden, Jr., at the New York Studio of the U-S Phonograph Company PHILIP C. CARLI, Rochester, New York SAM 9:00-10:30 a.m. Session 1a Nostalgic Treatments of Composers Severance Chair: JOSÉ ANTONIO BOWEN, Georgetown University Schubert on Broadway: Why He Never Married, Why the “Unfinished” Remained So 12 ARSC-SAM Conference 2004 Thursday morning (and Why We Should Listen to This Story) WYNN T. YAMAMI, New York University The Pianist as Cultural Icon: Contributions from American Popular Theater IVAN RAYKOFF, New School University, Washington Dream Analysis: Erich Wolfgang Korngold’s Weaving of Music, Speech, and Visuals in Warner Brothers’ A Midsummer Night’s Dream NATHAN PLATTE, University of Michigan Musical Traditions and Dialogues in the Lone Star State Session 1b Bush Chair: JAMES GRIER, University of Western Ontario “Honking on One Note”: The Texas Tenor Sound and Its Challenge to Jazz Discourse TRAVIS JACKSON, University of Chicago “Only the Lonely”: Roy Orbison’s Sweet West Texas Style ALBIN ZAK, University of Michigan Blues and Routes in Texas PAUL ANDERSON, University of Michigan Session 1c Van Aken Asian-American Representations Chair: DAVID FRANCIS URROWS, Hong Kong Baptist University Negotiating “Looking Relations” in San Francisco’s Chinese Opera Theaters NANCY YUNHWA RAO, Florida International University If It’s Asian American, Can It Be Bad? Politics, Aesthetics, and the Music of Glenn Horiuchi LOREN KAJIKAWA, University of California, Los Angeles Asian-American Violinists: Race, Gender, and Class in Classical Music Today MAIKO KAWABATA, SUNY, Stony Brook ARSC 10:30 a.m.-12:00 p.m. Discography in the 21st Century Gold Chair: GARRETT BOWLES, San Diego, California 10:30-10:45 a.m. Brian: A Relational Database Application for Discographers NOAL COHEN, Montclair, New Jersey Cleveland, Ohio 13 Thursday afternoon 10:45-12:00 noon Discography in the Digital Age—Numerical Obsession Meets Mathematical Algorithm DAVID J. DIEHL, Texas State Technical College SAM 10:45-11:45 am Session 2a 1939: Fostering European-American Music Severance Chair: IVAN RAYKOFF, New School University, New York Secret Rooms, Borrowed Pianos, and Les plus grands musicians du moment: Gaby Casadesus, Lucie Delécluse, and Franco-American Musical Exchange During the Second World War KENDRA LEONARD, Loveland, Ohio Thwarting the Path to Permanence: Civic Sponsorship and the Legacy of West Virginia’s FMP Orchestras TRAVIS D. STIMELING, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Session 2b Music and Teen Girls Bush Chair: MAIKO KAWABATA, SUNY, Stony Brook Vinyl Communion: The Record as Ritual Object in Girls’ Rite-of-Passage Films ROBYNN J. STILWELL, Georgetown University She’s All That? Gender, Cultural Capital, and the Teen Movie Soundtrack THEO CATEFORIS, Carleton College Session 2c SAM Interest Group: Gospel/Hymn Session 2d SAM Interest Group: Twentieth Century Van Aken Humphrey Defining American Music DAVID NICHOLLS, University of Southampton SAM 12 noon-12:45 p.m. Session 3a INTERVIEW-RECITAL Session 3b PERFORMANCE Severance HALIM EL-DABH in Conversation with DENISE A. SEACHRIST Bush John Philip Sousa and the Art Song JULIA GRELLA, Graduate Center, CUNY, and JOHN GRAZIANO, City University of New York 14 ARSC-SAM Conference 2004 Thursday afternoon Session 3c Interest Group: Popular Music Van Aken Nearly Famous, Really: Jane Scott’s Half-Century as Cleveland’s Reigning Rock Critic JANE SCOTT, Cleveland, Ohio PHILIP A. TODD, Oklahoma Baptist University, Moderator 12:00 NOON SAM Membership Committee Meeting Humphrey 12:00-1:00 p.m. ARSC Lunch THURSDAY AFTERNOON ARSC-SAM 1:00-3:00 p.m. Session 4d Music Downloading and File Swapping Gold Chair: JAMES FARRINGTON, Eastman School of Music 1:00-1:30 p.m. Unauthorized File Sharing--Academic Perspectives and Universities’ Responsibilities CHARLES E. PHELPS, University of Rochester 1:30-2:00 p.m. Unauthorized File-Sharing and the RIAA MITCH GLAZIER, Recording Industry Association of America 2:00-2:30 p.m. File Sharing--The Impact on Artists: The Recording Academy’s Response MARC DICCIANI, National Advocacy Committee, National Academy of Recording Arts & Sciences 2:30-3:00 p.m. Open Forum with speakers and audience SAM 1:00-3:00 p.m. Session 4a John Philip Sousa: A Sesquicentennial Severance Chair: THOMAS L. RIIS, University of Colorado, Boulder Revaluation John Philip Sousa: The Marine Band Years CAROLYN BRYANT, Bethesda, Maryland Making the Band: David Blakely, Patrick Gilmore, Theodore Thomas, and the Formation of the Sousa Band PATRICK WARFIELD, Georgetown University Cleveland, Ohio 15 Thursday afternoon Sousa’s The Liberty Bell and His Anomalous Quicksteps JONATHAN ELKUS, University of California, Davis About Our Official National March PAUL E. BIERLEY, Westerville, Ohio Session 4b The Musical World of Halim El-Dabh Bush Chair: CECILIA SUN, University of California, Los Angeles Halim El-Dabh and the Columbia-Princeton Electronic Music Center DENISE A. SEACHRIST, Kent State University, Trumbull Campus Halim El-Dabh and African Pianism AKIN EUBA, University of Pittsburgh Orchestra Ethiopia 1963-75: Halim El-Dabh, Catalyst for Music Innovation and Preservation CYNTHIA TSE KIMBERLIN, Music Research Institute Halim El-Dabh’s Opera Flies (1970-71) DAVID BADAGNANI, Kent State University Session 4c Sexuality Van Aken Chair: ROBYNN J. STILWELL, Georgetown University “Little Red Corvette”: Make-Out Mobile or Celestial Chariot? Religious Imagery and Sexual Perversity in the Music of Prince GRIFFIN WOODWORTH, University of California, Los Angeles Bernstein’s Mass Appeal: Eclecticism, Omnivorism, Dirty Laundry, Musical Knowledge NADINE HUBBS, University of Michigan The Birds and the Squirrels: Finding David Diamond in Copland’s “Dickinson Songs” COLIN ROUST, University of Michigan Gay Culture-Making and the Underground Cabaret Record in Los Angeles MITCHELL MORRIS, University of California, Los Angeles ARSC 3:15-5:30 p.m. Cleveland and the Wider World Chair: ESTHER GILLIE, University of Illinois 3:15-4:00 p.m. North Coast Jingles: The Career of a Commercial Composer in Cleveland AMY WOOLEY, The College of William and Mary 16 ARSC-SAM Conference 2004 Thursday afternoon -- Friday morning 4:00-4:45 p.m. The Cleveland-Chicago Nexus in Rhythm and Blues Recording in the Post World War II Era ROBERT PRUTER, Lewis University 4:45-5:30 p.m. Polka, and Why It’s Good for You DICK K. SPOTTSWOOD, Silver Spring, Maryland, JOE OBERAITIS, Orlando, Florida, and LAURIE GOMULKA PALAZZOLO, Farmington, Michigan SAM 3:15-4:00 p.m. Session 5a Severance Performance The Music of Sousa’s Cornet Soloists CRAIG B. PARKER, Kansas State University Session 5b Bush Performance “It Don’t Mean a Thing If It Ain’t Got That Swing”: The Evolution of Swing Dancing RENÉE CAMUS, Adelphi, Maryland SAM 4:15-5:45 p.m. Session 6a Musical Theater Severance Chair: RAYMOND KNAPP, University of California, Los Angeles "You’re Doin’ Fine, Oklahoma!”: The Making of an Icon, 1943-1950 KATHERINE L. AXTELL, Eastman School of Music Brecht on Broadway: Kurt Weill’s Love Life (1948) in a Comparative Study with Stephen Sondheim’s Assassins (1991) LARA HOUSEZ, University of Western Ontario Rodgers and Hart’s All Points West and Its Legacy FELIX COX, University of Wisconsin, Whitewater Session 6b Black Female Jazz Performers and Musical Identity Bush Chair: MARTHA MOCKUS, SUNY Stony Brook “A Paradox in the Hubbub of Swing”: Maxine Sullivan and Black Musical Identity in the Swing Era PATRICK BURKE, Washington University in St. Louis Cleveland, Ohio 17 Friday morning Don’t Fence Me In!: The Effects of Race and Gender on the Shaping of the Image of Black Women Jazz Instrumentalists TAMMY KERNODLE, Miami University of Ohio The Many Voices of Sarah Vaughan ELAINE M. HAYES, University of Pennsylvania Session 6c New York Experimentalism Van Aken Chair: NADINE HUBBS, University of Michigan A Big Noise for More to Hear: Bang on a Can and the Art of Audience Building MARGARET MARTIN, SUNY Stony Brook Resisting the Airport: Bang on a Can Performs Brian Eno CECILIA SUN, University of California, Los Angeles Downtown Overtones: Glenn Branca, Rhys Chatham, and the Art of the Guitar CAROLINE O’MEARA, University of California, Los Angeles 5:45-7:00 p.m. SAM Planning for the Future: A Seminar on Planned Giving President's Suite PETER THOMPSON, Merrill Lynch 5:45-7:00 p.m. SAM Brass Band Rehearsal 5:45-6:45 p.m. Shape note singing Severance CRAIG PARKER, Coordinator Bush RON PEN, Coordinator Thursday Evening ARSC-SAM Excursion 6:45 p.m. 7:00-10:00 p.m. 9:45 & 10:00 p.m. Buses to Rock Hall Reception, Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum--reception and tour Buses return to hotel FRIDAY MORNING, March 12 7:30-8:30am 8:00am-12:00pm 18 Reception for New Members Exhibits ARSC-SAM Conference 2004 Friday morning ARSC-SAM Session 8:30-10:00 a.m. Session 7a Recording the History of Folk and Traditional Music Gold Presented by the SAM Folk/Traditional Music Interest Group Chair: RON PEN, University of Kentucky Panelists: RONALD COHEN, Indiana University NW; KIP LORNELL, The George Washington University; CHRIS STRACHWITZ, Arhoolie Records; and DICK SPOTTSWOOD, WAMU-FM Radio. SAM 8:30 - 10:00 a.m. Session 7b Film, Stage, and Tin Pan Alley Severance Chair: W. ANTHONY SHEPPARD, Williams College “Is He Charlie Chaplin?”: Cinematic Impersonation and Song on the American Stage SCOTT D. PAULIN, Princeton University Has Anybody Here Seen Kelly? Tin Pan Alley and Early Film Practices DANIEL GOLDMARK, University of Alabama “I Think I’ve Got It!”: Tin Pan Alley Songwriters Through the Hollywood Lens JENNIFER R. JENKINS, Columbia College Chicago Session 7c The Avant Garde in California and New York Bush Chair: CATHERINE PARSONS SMITH, University of Nevada, Reno John Cage and Narratives of American History BENJAMIN PIEKUT, University of California, San Diego Lou Harrison and the Aesthetics of Revision LETA MILLER, University of California, Santa Cruz Morton Feldman’s Existential Rhetoric and the Authoring of Avant-Garde Identity BRETT BOUTWELL, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign ARSC 10:15 a.m.-12:30 p.m. Personalities in American Music Gold Chair: LES WAFFEN, National Archives and Records Administration 10:15-11:00 a.m. Rediscoverng George W. Johnson, The First African America Recording “Star” TIM BROOKS, Greenwich, Connecticut Cleveland, Ohio 19 Friday afternoon --Friday evening 11:00-11:45 a.m. Harry Belafonte and His Global Carnival CARY GINELL, Origin Jazz Library, Thousand Oaks, California 11:45-12:30 p.m. Carmichael’s Hoagy: The Hidden Complexity Behind the Homespun Persona SUZANNE MUDGE, Indiana University SAM 10:45-12:45am Session 8a The “Deep Structures” of Charles Ives: Mental, Environmental, and Sentimental Severance Chair: CHARLES HIROSHI GARRETT, University of Michigan Antimodernism, “The Celestial Railroad,” and the “Comedy” of Charles Ives KARA ANNE GARDNER, University of San Francisco Sylvan in the City: The Everyday Eternal in “Central Park in the Dark” DENISE VON GLAHN, Florida State University Memory, Form, and Invention in Charles Ives’s Fourth Violin Sonata THOMAS L. RIIS, University of Colorado, Boulder Charles Ives’s Simulacrum of Mental Life in Music STUART FEDER, New York City Session 8b Jazz Now Bush Chair: WILLIAM KENNEY, Kent State University Negotiating National Identity Among American Jazz Musicians in Paris DAVID AKE, University of Nevada, Reno Swing and Sehnsucht: Jazz After Postmodernism DALE CHAPMAN, Mount Allison University The Changing Standard of Jazz DANA GOOLEY, Case Western Reserve University Who Plays the Tune in “Body and Soul”? JOSÉ ANTONIO BOWEN, Georgetown University Session 8c 19th Century Topics Van Aken Chair: JOHN GRAZIANO, City University of New York 20 ARSC-SAM Conference 2004 Saturday morning “Woefully Out of Place”: Gottschalk in the Gilded Age STEVEN BAUR, Occidental College Amy Beach and Robert Browning: Two Artists of One Mind? ADRIENNE FRIED BLOCK, Graduate Center, the City Univ of New York Appropriation and Reappropriation From Slave Song to Neo-Nazi Propaganda ANGELA D. HAMMOND, University of Kentucky Confronting the Stereotypes, Confounding Cultural Hierarchy: An Unexplored Web of American Musical Life, 1876-1880 KATHERINE K. PRESTON, College of William and Mary Session 8d SAM Interest Group: Gender and Music Humphrey Chair: LIANE CURTIS, Brandeis University The Trouble with Minnie: Puccini’s Exotic American Heroine ANNIE JANEIRO RANDALL, Bucknell University Towards a Framework for Examining “Blackness” in Opera NAOMI ANDRÉ, University of Michigan MeShell Ndegéocello: Musical Articulations of Black Feminism MARTHA MOCKUS, SUNY Stony Brook “B-Girl Stance in a B-Boy’s World”: DJ Kuttin Kandi, Hip Hop Activist ELLIE M. HISAMA, Brooklyn College 12:15-4:15 p.m. 12:30-1:30 p.m. SAM COPAM Meeting ARSC Lunch FRIDAY AFTERNOON SAM 1:30-2:30 p.m. Session 9a SAM Interest Group: Gay/Lesbian Session 9b SAM Interest Group: Band Severance Pink or Plaid: Two Biographical Approaches to Charles Griffes’s Homosexuality HOWARD POLLACK, University of Houston Bush 1:30 p.m. Busses depart for afternoon outings ARSC 2:15-4:30 p.m. Cleveland, Ohio 21 Saturday morning--Saturday afternoon The Cleveland Orchestra Chair: BILL KLINGER, Chardon, Ohio 2:15-3:00 p.m. A Recording History of the Cleveland Orchestra DONALD ROSENBERG 3:00-3:45 p.m. A Hundred Men and a Perfectionist: The Transformation of the Cleveland Orchestra PETER MUNVES, RPM Productions Marketing Consultant, Merrick, NewYork 3:45-4:30 p.m. Recording the Cleveland Orchestra: It’s Not Your Father’s Severance Hall ROBERT CONRAD, President of WCLV/WRMR and Producer and Commentator for The Cleveland Orchestra Radio Broadcasts; and BRUCE GIGAX, Audio Supervisor for The Cleveland Orchestra 5:45 p.m. SAM Student Forum Dinner (ARSC Students Welcome!) ARSC 7:30-10:30 p.m. A Celebration of Music from Cleveland Chair: MARY DAVIS, Case Western Reserve University 7:30-8:15 p.m. Singing ‘bout the Sixth City: Cleveland, Ohio, in Popular Song WILLIAM L. SCHURK, Bowling Green State University 8:15-9:00 p.m. Rock ‘n’ Roll in Cleveland, Ohio DEANNA R. ADAMS, Mentor, Ohio 9:00-9:45 p.m. “Polka Capital”? “Home of Rock ‘n’ Roll”? “Little Nashville”?—A Cultural and Ethnic History of Recording in Cleveland SUSAN SCHMIDT HORNING, Case Western Reserve University and Cleveland Institute of Art SATURDAY MORNING, March 14 7:30-8:30 a.m. Student Forum Breakfast Reception 7:30-8:30 a.m. American Music Advisory Board Meeting 8:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m. Exhibits 22 ARSC-SAM Conference 2004 Saturday afternoon ARSC-SAM Session 8:30-10:15 a.m. Collections and Archiving Session 10c Gold Chair: NATHAN GEORGITIS, University of Oregon 8:30-9:00 a.m. The Difference is in the Moan: The Growing Pains of the Starr-Gennett Collection ELIZABETH SURLES, Starr-Gennett Foundation, Richmond, IN 9:00-9:30 a.m. Josiah K. Lilly and the Foster Hall Recordings MARIANA WHITMER, University of Pittsburgh 9:30-10:00 a.m. Herbert Elwell, Leonard Shure, and Mary Simmons: Classical Music in Cleveland in the Mid-20th Century MARC BERNSTEIN, Toronto, Canada SAM 8:30-10:00 a.m. Session 10a African-American Art Music in the 1930s Severance Chair: JOSEPHINE WRIGHT, College of Wooster Depression, War, and Rain: The Existence of African-American Opera Companies, 19301949 KAREN M. BRYAN, Arizona State University Representing America, Instructing Europe: The Hampton Choir on Tour LAWRENCE SCHENBECK, Spelman College The Life and Works of Black Creek American Contemporary Composer Zenobia Powell Perry: Race, Ethnicity, and Gender Issues in American Music Biography JEANNIE POOL, La Crescenta, California Session 10b 1972 Bush Chair: RON PEN, University of Kentucky Free to Be… What You Want Me to Be Folk Music and Gendered Identity Formation in 1970s Popular Children’s Music YARA SELLIN, University of California, Los Angeles “Cosmic American Music”: Country Rock and the Myth of Gram Parsons OLIVIA CARTER MATHER, University of California, Los Angeles Cleveland, Ohio 23 Saturday afternoon The Ovaltine Politics of Lawrence Welk’s Champagne Music J. BRADLEY ROGERS, University of Virginia SAM 10:15 11:45 a.m. Session 11 Severance SAM Plenary Session Teaching Controversial Aspects of American Music: A Panel Discussion Chair: JIM DEAVILLE, McMaster University CHARLES HIROSHI GARRETT, University of Michigan SANDRA GRAHAM, University of California, Davis CAROL OJA, Harvard University RON PEN, University of Kentucky GUTHRIE RAMSEY, University of Pennsylvania MICHAEL SAFFLE, Virginia Tech JOSEPHINE WRIGHT, College of Wooster ARSC 10:15 a.m.-11:45 p.m. New World and Telarc Chair: MICHAEL GRAY, Voice of America Library 10:15-10:45 a.m. The New World Records Story DAVID HAMILTON, The Juilliard School 10:45-11:45 a.m. The Telarc Story—From Direct-to-Disc and the Cleveland Orchestra…to DSD…and Beyond JACK RENNER, Chairman and Chief Recording Engineer, Telarc; and ROBERT WOODS, President and Senior Producer, Telarc 11:45-1:00 p.m. 12:00 Noon 12:00 Noon ARSC Lunch SAM Development Committee President's Suite SAM Site Selection Committee SATURDAY AFTERNOON ARSC 1:00-2:30 p.m. Recorded Sound: History and Science Chair: DAVID SEUBERT, University of California, Santa Barbara 1:00-1:45 p.m. Dayton C. Miller: The Clevelander Who Knew All About Sound Recording GEORGE BROCK-NANNESTAD, Patent Tactics, Denmark 24 ARSC-SAM Conference 2004 Saturday evening -- Sunday morning 1:45-2:30 p.m. The Radio: Recorded vs. Live Paradigm JAMES R. POWELL, JR., Gramophone Adventures, Portage, MI ARSC 2:30-4:00 p.m. Magnetic Tape Restoration and Transfer ARSC Technical Committee Roundtable Moderator: GARY GALO, Crane School of Music, SUNY, Potsdam, ARSC Technical Committee, Co-Chair Panelists: ADRIAN COSENTINI, VidiPax, New York, NY; JOSEPH PATRYCH, Patrych Sound Studios, Bronx, NY; DENNIS ROONEY, New York, NY; JON M. SAMUELS, Recorded Legacy, New York, NY; SETH B. WINNER, Rodgers and Hammerstein Archive, NYPL, Seth B. Winner Sound Studios, Inc., ARSC Technical Committee Co-Chair. SAM 1:15-3:15 p.m. Session 12a Film Music Severance Chair: NADINE HUBBS, University of Michigan Seen From the Street: Hollywood Underscoring, Urban Modernity, and Alfred Newman’s “Street Scene” MATTHEW MALSKY, Clark University The Performance of Assimilation: Power and Commerce in Cuban Love Song JONATHAN GREENBERG, University of California, Los Angeles “The Last Great Cause”: Blitzstein, Thomson, and The Spanish Earth CAROL A. HESS, Bowling Green State University Aaron Copland and the Aesthetics of Hollywood MARK CLAGUE, University of Michigan Session 12b Opera Bush Chair: NAOMI ANDRÉ, University of Michigan Puccini, Politics, and Patriotism JOANN TARICANI, University of Michigan Caruso and His Cousins: Portraits of Italian Americans in the Operatic Novelty Songs of Edwards and Madden LARRY HAMBERLIN, Brandeis University “Who Wants Real? I Want Magic!” Musical Madness in André Previn’s A Streetcar Named Desire Cleveland, Ohio 25 Sunday morning NICHOLE MAIMAN, University of Maryland Session 12c Contemporary Popular Musics Van Aken Chair: ALBIN ZAK, University of Michigan “Live More Musically” The Seductive Sounds of Starbucks’ Siren Songs ERIC MARTIN USNER, New York University and Sarah Lawrence College Dance Dance Revolution, Cyber-Dance Communities, and Musical Taste JOANNA DEMERS, University of Southern California Changing Wigs: Subcultural Dynamics and Performance Practices in the Southern California Metal Tribute Scene GLENN PILLSBURY, University of California, Los Angeles Hand Jive and Ear Prudence WALTER EVERETT, University of Michigan, and JOHN COVACH, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Session 12d Student Forum Panel: Teaching American Music Humphrey Co-Chairs: MARIA CIZMIC, University of California, Los Angeles, and LAURA PRUETT, Middle Tennessee State University DENISE VON GLAHN, Florida State University ROBERT WALSER, University of California, Los Angeles ELISABETH BARKLEY, Foothill College RICHARD CRAWFORD, University of Michigan DAVID B. PRUETT, Middle Tennessee State University SAM 3:30-4:00 p.m. Session 13a Performance Session 13b Performance Severance Two Gems of Ohio: Julia Perry and Zenobia Powell Perry SEBRONETTE BARNES, Cheyney University of Pennsylvania Bush Like Brothers: The Music of Ernst Bacon and Otto Luening HARLIE G. SPONAUGLE, Arlington, Virginia, and BARBARA WILKINSON, Washinginton, D.C. SPECIAL SAM SESSION 3:30-4:15 p.m. Chris Strachwitz The Society for American Music Honorary Member for 2004, Christ Strachwitz, will 26 ARSC-SAM Conference 2004 Sunday morning show excerpts from some of his films and discuss his current projects, including the digitization of the Frontera Collection of Mexican Music. 4:00-5:30 p.m. 4:15 p.m. Annual ARSC Business Meeting Gold Annual Meeting of the Society for American Music Severance 5:30-6:45 p.m. 7:00 pm ARSC-SAM Reception, Band Concert, and Silent Auction Closing (all welcome) Banquet (ticket required) SUNDAY MORNING, March 14 7:30-8:45 a.m. SAM Board Meeting ARSC 8:30-10:15 a.m. Record Companies: The Ohio Influence Chair: JERRY FABRIS, Edison National Historic Site 8:30-9:00 a.m. James Andem and the Ohio Phonograph Company PATRICK FEASTER, Indiana University, and DAVID N. LEWIS, All Music Guide 9:00-9:30 a.m. “The King of Them All”—Syd Nathan and the Rise and Fall of King Records (Cincinnati, Ohio) BEN GRILLOT, VidiPax, New York 9:30-10:15 a.m. Cleveland and Its Role in the Birth of the DIY Recording Industry PAUL MAROTTA, New World Records SAM 9:00-10:30am Session 14a Mexican, Cuban, and African Inspirations Severance Chair: CAROL A. HESS, Bowling Green State University Revueltas, The Chicago Years (1919-1925) ROBERT PARKER, Coral Gables, Florida Ernesto Lecuona’s Danzas Afrocubanas and the Mechanics of Stylization ERICA SCHEINBERG, University of California, Los Angeles “Afrikanische Musik in New York City”: Steve Reich and the Africanization of American Cleveland, Ohio 27 Art Music MARTIN SCHERZINGER, Eastman School of Music Session 14b Song in the 1930s Bush Chair: DANIEL GOLDMARK, University of Alabama The Poisonous Idyll: Hanns Eisler’s Hollywood Songbook MARGARET JACKSON, Florida State University Delivering Miss Otis’s Regrets: Performers and Arrangers Tackle Cole Porter’s Tale of an Unlikely Lynching TODD DECKER, University of Michigan Every Love But True Love: Unstable Relationships in Cole Porter’s “Love For Sale” MICHAEL BUCHLER, Florida State University Session 14c Reception Issues Van Aken Chair: DAVID NICHOLLS, University of Southampton “Show Them What Bad Music Is”: The American Premiere of Schoenberg’s Chamber Symphony No. 1, Op. 9 JAMES M. DOERING, Randolph-Macon College Searching for Musical Modernism in 1920s Los Angeles CATHERINE PARSONS SMITH, University of Nevada, Reno Toward a Reception History of Gershwin’s Concerto in F, 1925-1937 TIMOTHY FREEZE, University of Michigan Session 14d SAM Interest Group: Connecting Outside the Academy Humphrey JOSEPH HOROWITZ, New York, Chair MARK CLAGUE, University of Michigan DEANE ROOT, University of Pittsburgh DALE COCKRELL, Vanderbilt University ARSC 10:30 a.m.-12:00 p.m. Funk, Punk, and the Blues Chair: BRYAN CORNELL, Library of Congress 10:30-11:00 a.m. The Dayton Funk Movement JASON HOUSLEY, Indiana University 11:00-11:30 a.m. Ain’t It Fun Knowing You’ll Never Be Number One: Ohio Artpunk 1972-1987 28 ARSC-SAM Conference 2004 DAVID N. LEWIS, All Music Guide 11:30-12:00 Red, White, and Whose Blues? Questions of Authenticity, Appropriation and Identity from 1950-2003 ROBERTA FREUND SCHWARTZ, University of Kansas SAM 10:45-12:15 a.m. Session 15a Severance PERFORMANCES 10:45-11:30 a.m. Songs by Cleveland Composers STEPHANIE TINGLER, University of Georgia, and WILLIAM OSBORNE, Denison University 11:45-12:15 p.m. Normand Lockwood’s Out of the Cradle Endlessly Rocking KAY NORTON, Arizona State University, the University Singers of the University of Alabama, GREGORY R. GENTRY, University of Alabama, Director Session 15b Jazz Then Bush Chair: DAVID AKE, University of Nevada, Reno Borrowed Memories of the American South: Music, Imagination, and Identity in Duke Ellington’s Deep South Suite ANDREW BERISH, University of California, Los Angeles Jelly Roll Morton and the Spanish Tinge CHARLES HIROSHI GARRETT, University of Michigan Roustabouts, Black Levee Workers, and the Origins of Jazz Along the Mississippi and Ohio Rivers, 1865-1917 WILLIAM KENNEY, Kent State University Session 15c Orientalism Van Aken Chair: NANCY YUNHWA RAO, Florida International University Henry Eichheim, Henry Cowell, and Japan W. ANTHONY SHEPPARD, Williams College Beyond the Pleasure-Dome: The Asian-Influenced Music of Charles Tomlinson Griffes DAVID NICHOLLS, University of Southampton Henry Cowell’s Ongaku and a Transethnic Basis for the Tone Cluster PETER SCHIMPF, Indiana University Cleveland, Ohio 29 12:00-12:15 p.m. 30 ARSC-SAM Closing Remarks ARSC-SAM Conference 2004 Abstracts for Thurday morning—Session 1 PROGRAM ABSTRACTS Thursday, ARSC Session, 9:00 - 10:15 a.m. U-S Phonograph Company: Cleveland and Beyond U-S Phonograph Company: The Cleveland Firm That Dared to Challenge Edison and Columbia BILL KLINGER, Chardon, Ohio Between 1909 and 1914, the U-S Phonograph Company developed, manufactured, and sold an innovative line of high-quality cylinder phonographs and records. The technically advanced U-S products posed enough of a competitive threat to prompt Thomas Edison’s Legal Department to engage in industrial espionage and to file a series of lawsuits. This presentation offers an overview of the Cleveland firm, their technology and products, and the people who worked to build the company as well as those who wished to put it out of business. Recording Music and Experiences: J. Louis von der Mehden, Jr., at the New York Studio of the U-S Phonograph Company PHILIP C. CARLI, Rochester, New York American cellist-composer-conductor J. Louis von der Mehdeh, Jr., worked in many acoustic recording studios during the 1910s, including those of Victor, Columbia, Pathé, and Lyraphone. His happiest phonographic experiences occurred at the U-S Phonograph Company, where he played for, arranged, and conducted dozens of orchestral, band, and vocal selections for “U-S Everlasting” cylinder recordings. His extensive diaries detail individual sessions, solo artists, and the carefully chosen instrumentalists in the U-S ensembles. The diary entries, coupled with corresponding recordings, reveal the intimate interactions between management, technical staff, and company musicians that resulted in the inventive, wellrecorded, and artistically imaginative U-S cylinders. Thursday, SAM Session 1, 9:00-10:30 a.m. 1a Nostalgic Treatments of Composers Schubert on Broadway: Why He Never Married, Why the “Unfinished” Remained So (and Why We Should Listen to This Story) WYNN T. YAMAMI, New York University Blossom Time, the fictionalized bio-musical by Sigmund Romberg and lyricist Dorothy Donnelly, was an overwhelming commercial success on Broadway in the early 1920s. The composer Franz Schubert, as the subject of the musical, was transformed into a dramatic character who poured his emotions into song and ultimately surrendered human love for a loftier companionship with the muse. In this presentation, I will outline the origins of this depiction: highbrow versus Cleveland, Ohio 31 Abstracts for Thursday morning—Session 1 lowbrow, classical music versus popular music, Europe versus America, and commercial enterprise versus cultural brokerage. The Pianist as Cultural Icon: Contributions from American Popular Theater IVAN Raykoff, New School University, Washington In representing the figure of a Romantic concert pianist, many American literary works and Hollywood films borrow liberally from the histories and music of celebrated European composers and performers. American popular theater has also been a primary arena for the development and deployment of such representations. This paper examines the text, music, and production history of three Broadway plays—Hermann Bahr’s The Concert (1910), Philip Moeller’s Madame Sand (1917), and Harry B. Smith’s White Lilacs (1928)—to demonstrate an important link between the historical culture of the nineteenth-century European virtuoso and this figure’s perpetuity in twentieth-century American popular culture. Dream Analysis: Erich Wolfgang Korngold’s Weaving of Music, Speech, and Visuals in Warner Bros.’ A Midsummer Night’s Dream NATHAN PLATTE, University of Michigan Erich Wolfgang Korngold first arrived in Hollywood to adapt music for the film, A Midsummer Night’s Dream (1935). Using Felix Mendelssohn’s incidental music as a foundation, Korngold constructed a score containing his most intricate intertwining of musical and visual elements. His alterations to Mendelssohn’s music are noteworthy and reveal a deep sensitivity to narrative tone. In addition, his association with studio personnel expanded the role of music within the film’s production and placed some cinematic effects at the service of the score. As analysis will show, Korngold’s score enriches one’s perspective on the composer’s later Hollywood career. 1b Musical Traditions and Dialogues in the Lone Star State “Only the Lonely”: Roy Orbison’s Sweet West Texas Style ALBIN ZAK, University of Michigan Early rock and roll is widely portrayed as a fusion primarily of rhythm and blues and country music, exemplifying a different sensibility from contemporary styles of major-label urban pop. Rock and roll between 1959 and 1963, on the other hand, saw a reestablishment of many pop stylistic conventions among the so-called teen idols, particularly a return to a more polished sound. Roy Orbison’s career suggests that there was more of a latent pop sensibility in early rock and roll than mainstream historiography has acknowledged. At Sun Records in Memphis during the 1950s, his label-mates included Carl Perkins and Jerry Lee Lewis, and his recordings fit comfortably within Sun’s prevailing rockabilly style. This paper examines the influence of independent label recording practices on rock and roll’s early sonic style and takes a look at the pop affinities of a one-time “rockabilly cat.” 1c Asian-American Representations Negotiating “Looking Relations” in San Francisco’s Chinese Opera Theaters NANCY YUNHWA RAO, Flordai International University Nineteenth-century tourists’ view of San Francisco’s Chinese opera theaters frequently reveals not only a reaction typical of an American’s attitude toward Chinatown but also an orientalist fantasy about the effeminate Other. Nowhere was this more poignant than their response to female impersonators in Chinese opera. How did the theaters function as an apparatus of gaze? Whether or not the female impersonation constituted “gender-crossing”? And for whom? The spectatorship is on one level determined and structured by a preconceived notion, and on another level a non- 32 ARSC-SAM Conference 2004 Abstracts for Thursday morning— Session 2 static and endless dialogical process. I will explore the tensions among the different levels, and the ways that the theatrical performance constructed the spectator and the spectator shaped the encounter. “If It’s Asian American Can It Be Bad?” Politics, Aesthetics, and The Music of Glenn Horiuchi LOREN KAJIKAWA, University of California, Los Angeles Rhetorically asking, “If it’s Asian American can it be bad?” Kajikawa identifies a problem confronted by Asian American artists when they attempt to represent their history and viewpoints in an American musical soundscape. By combining musical and historical analysis to unpack the hermeneutics of Glenn Horiuchi’s “Terminal Island Sweep,” Kajikawa shows how and why one composer bent and broke existing musical conventions. In demonstrating the interdependency of musical interpretation and Japanese American history, he brings Asian American studies and musicology into dialogue. Asian-American Violinists: Race, Gender, and Class in Classical Music Today MAIKO KAWABATA, SUNY, Stony Brook This paper aims to lay the groundwork for studying Asian-American performers in the classical music world by exploring issues of identity in violin performance. Nowhere are questions of race, gender, and class more problematic, I believe, than in the case of women violinists. By identifying and breaking down stereotypical views of them as “exotic” creatures, as automatons, and as compromised peoples in American assimilation, I seek to fill the gaps that exist both in studies of Asian-American experience and in accounts of contemporary classical music in the United States. Thursday, ARSC Session, 10:30 - Noon Discography in the 21st Century Brian: A Relational Database Application for Discographers NOAL COHEN, Montclair, New Jersey; STEVE ALBIN, Montclair, New Jersey; and MICHAEL FITZGERALD, Scotch Plains, NJ Brian is a relational data base application used to compile standard discography information. Named after Brian Rust, who perfected the chronological recording session format for print discographies, the application tracks every aspect of a record date, from sidemen to songs to composers to releases. All of the important pieces of data are instantly cross-referenced and searchable. So far, Brian has been used to create discographies of nearly 30 pop and jazz artists including Tony Bennett, Sammy Davis, Jr. and Peggy Lee. It is available for both Macintosh and Windows platforms and is free for non-commercial use: http://www.jazzdiscography.com/ Discography in the Digital Age—Numerical Obsession Meets Mathematical Algorithm DAVID J. DIEHL, Texas State Technical College Projects like Canada’s Virtual Gramophone point to a potential explosion in access to discographic information while ARSC’s own AVRL (American Vintage Record Labelography) exemplifies both the benefits and difficulties of digital discography. Future efforts should have much more of the expertise “built in”, requiring a greatly enlarged and refined set of standards, particularly if eXtensible Markup Language rather than a proprietary format is used. Discussions will center on the widely varying needs of discographers, the role of ARSC and the current AVRL database structure, and the basics of XML and its application to discography. Thursday, SAM Session 2, 10:45–11:45 a.m. 2a 1939: Fostering European-American Music Cleveland, Ohio 33 Abstracts for Thursday morning—Session 2–3 Secret Rooms, Borrowed Pianos, and Les plus grands musicians du moment: Gaby Casadesus, Lucie Delécluse, and Franco-American Musical Exchange during the Second World War KENDRA LEONARD, Loveland, Ohio In September 1939, French artists and composers fled Europe for the United States, including Gaby Casadesus. Intent on preserving the Conservatoire Américain de Fontainebleau, where she taught in the summer, Casadesus made arrangements for the Conservatoire to operate in the United States. In New England, Casadesus hosted “les plus grands musicians du moment,” providing a European atmosphere for students and offering colleagues a wartime haven. In France, Conservatoire secretary Lucie Delécluse worked to save the Conservatoire from occupying German troops. Their accounts illustrate the relationship between French and American musicians as allies and artistic partners and create a view of cultural life and advocacy during the war. Thwarting the Path to Permanence: Civic Sponsorship and the Legacy of West Virginia’s Federal Music Project Orchestras” TRAVIS D. STIMELING, The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill The Federal Music Project of the Works Progress Administration (FMP) arrived in West Virginia in 1936 to establish orchestras in the state’s cities and to provide temporary employment for displaced musicians. The FMP orchestras also presented free public concerts to boost morale. When federal funding and control of the FMP ceased in 1939, urban socialites sought to reestablish their social status through musical patronage and by promoting orchestral programs that ignored public tastes. This paper explores the post-Depression restoration of the canon in local orchestral programs and its implications for the state of art music in West Virginia. 2b Music and Teen Girls Vinyl Communion: Girls, records, and ritual in coming-of-age films ROBYNN STILWELLl, Georgetown University While films like High Fidelity and Ghost World have depicted male record collectors in stereotypical terms—demonstrating just how recognizable their systemizing and hierarchizing tendencies are—the relationship between girls and records is at least as intense, though of a different order, in films like Heavenly Creatures, The Virgin Suicides, and Little Voice. Not only are the girls invested in the music to a greater degree, they treat the records, materially, as ritual objects, infused with identity (both of the artists and the girls themselves) and magic. In each film, the records’ destruction precipitate crises of self and plot resolution. She’s All That? Gender, Cultural Capital and the Teen Movie Soundtrack THEO CATEFORIS, Carleton College During the 1980s, and again in the late 1990s, the rise of “teen movies” like Valley Girl and She’s All That signaled the prominence of the compilation soundtrack, a scoring technique that allows filmmakers to associate youth groups with a wide range of popular music styles. Many of these teen movies play on one of the most visible signs of teenage cultural autonomy: the display of musical taste. This paper examines how the cultural capital of musical taste – most often associated with male characters in the movies of the early 80s – has since become primarily the province of female characters. 2d Interest Group:Twentieth Century Defining American Music DAVID NICHOLLS, University of Southampton 34 ARSC-SAM Conference 2004 Abstracts for Thursday afternoon—Session 4a America’s official motto, ‘e pluribus unum,’ is direct in its meaning and inspiring in its vision: that out of disparateness--of peoples, beliefs, values, ambitions--should come an overreaching unity of aim and purpose. The motto is certainly a statement both of demographic fact, and of political intent; yet, given that the United States is home to at least as many cultures as there are distinct cultural groups within the society as a whole, how can it be applied to music? This informal presentation will argue that while it is easy to identify a plethora of American musics, the definition of an American music is another matter entirely. Ultimately, if there is one American sound from among the many--an ‘unum e pluribus’--what is it? And, more importantly, can such an ‘American’ sound ever be heard with anything other than discomfort by the American establishment? Thursday, SAM Session 3, 12:00 noon - 12:45 p.m. 3a Interview-Performance HALIM EL-DABH in Conversation with DENISE A. SEACHRIST Internationally recognized as a major twentieth-century composer, Halim El-Dabh (b. in Cairo 1921; U.S. citizenship 1961), came to the United States in 1950, to study with Aaron Copland and Irving Fine. El-Dabh developed close associations with many prominent figures in twentieth-century music and dance, including Cowell, Cage, Hovhaness, Bernstein, Verèse, Stokowski, Graham, and Robbins. The first-ever biography of the composer, written by Denise A. Seachrist, was released by the Kent State University Press in April 2003. Seachrist will interview El-Dabh, whose music has been heard daily since 1961 at the Sound and Light Show at the pyramids of Giza, about his musical life. 3b Performance John Philip Sousa and the Art Song JOHN GRAZIANO, City College and Graduate Center, CUNY JULIA GRELLA, The Graduate Center, CUNY Although John Philip Sousa is known worldwide as the “March King,” leading many to believe that he wrote only marches, his musical oeuvre includes several other genres, with more than a dozen comic operas and over sixty art songs, which represent him in a more intimate venue, and span his entire career. This lecture/performance provides a brief introduction to the songs, examining Sousa’s text settings and use of song form in relation to other turn-of-the-twentieth century American composers of the art song, included Amy Beach, George Chadwick, and Arthur Foote. Songs selected from various periods in Sousa’s career are performed. Thursday, ARSC-SAM Session, 1:00 - 3:00 p.m. Music Downloading and File Swapping: Differing Views Unauthorized File Sharing—Academic Perspectives and Universities’ Responsibilities CHARLES F. PHELPS, University of Rochester Illegal Peer to Peer (P2P) sharing of music and movie is an important new legal problem brought about new technologies—digitized versions of musical performances and high-speed digital communication technologies. Higher education has a particularly important role in the P2P issue because our students are very active in its use and because our campus networks offer very high speeds of data transmission. Solving this problem involves education, creation of legitimate alternatives, and a careful balancing of interventions (“bandwidth” control of our networks) with extremely important concerns about privacy and freedom of speech, issues we hold very dear. Cleveland, Ohio 35 Abstracts for Thursday afternoon—Session 4b Unauthorized File-Sharing and the RIAA MITCH GLAZIER, Recording Industry Association of America The Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) is the trade group that represents the U.S. recording industry. Its members are the record companies that create, manufacture, and distribute approximately 90% of all legitimate sound recordings produced and sold in the United States. Its mission is to foster a business and legal climate that supports and promotes its members’ creative and financial vitality. In support of this mission, the RIAA works to protect intellectual property rights worldwide and the First Amendment rights of artists, to conduct consumer industry and technical research, and to monitor and review state and federal laws, regulations, and policies. File Sharing—The Impact on Artists: The Recording Academy’s Response MARC DICCIANI, National Advocacy Committee, National Academy of Recording Arts & Sciences Illegal downloading threatens the very core and future of the creative community, as well as our culture. The digital world has made infringement on creative works easy, private, constant, global, and accepted. As connection speed and storage volume continue to increase, the number and quality of works that are at risk will dramatically increase. There are alternative choices available, but not enough. The first decision that has to be made is a desire to become informed. Knowledge and information must join the debate if we are to preserve and enrich our musical legacy. Thursday, SAM Session 4: 1:00 - 3:00 p.m. 4b John Philip Sousa: A Sesquicentennial Revaluation John Philip Sousa — The Marine Band Years CAROLYN BRYANT, Bethesda, MD John Philip Sousa’s first band directorship was with the U.S. Marine Band, from 1880 to 1892, during which he worked to improve the band, at the same time undertaking music-related projects not associated with the military. Two early scrapbooks provide material detailing the scope and variety of his activities, attesting to his all-around energy and his determination to raise his own and the band’s reputation. Drawing on this and similar sources, I will discuss Sousa’s time with the Marine Band, focusing particularly on his and the band’s extracurricular activities as they illuminate the years during which Sousa developed the skills that enabled him to form his own highly successful touring band. Making the Band: David Blakely, Patrick Gilmore, Theodore Thomas, and the Formation of the Sousa Band PATRICK WARFIELD, Georgetown University While much of the credit for John Philip Sousa’s rise to fame in the early 1890s rests with the bandleader’s skills as a composer and conductor, his reputation was also assisted by the clever maneuverings of his manager David Blakely. Blakely worked tirelessly to secure the engagements and star players of the recently deceased bandmaster Patrick Gilmore, and to place Sousa at the Columbian Exposition in Chicago. While the efforts of the Exposition’s musical director, Theodore Thomas, to educate fairgoers foundered, visitors flocked to Sousa’s performances; and while the debacle forced Thomas’s resignation, it solidified Sousa’s reputation as Gilmore’s heir. Sousa’s The Liberty Bell and His Anomalous Quicksteps JONATHAN ELKUS, University of California, Davis Just what do we mean by the oft-used phrase “Sousa March”? Drawing on core examples from the early 1890s, the presentation summarizes the trademark formal and stylistic qualities that typify Sousa’s 36 ARSC-SAM Conference 2004 Abstracts for Thursday afternoon—Session 4c marches, and proposes the pivotal distinction that separates them into two categories: the “long form” (Sousa’s grand march derivative) and “short form” (his quickstep derivative). 4c The Musical World of Halim El-Dabh Halim El-Dabh and the Columbia/Princeton Electronic Music Center DENISE A. SEACHRIST, Kent State University, Trumbull Campus This paper addresses Egyptian-born, American composer, Halim El-Dabh (b. 1921) and his early approach working with magnetic tape at the Columbia/Princeton Electronic Music Center with electronic-music pioneers Otto Luening and Vladimir Ussachevsky in 1959. El-Dabh conceived noise as a piece of sculpture from which he could chisel the sound. The composer became obsessed with the realization that the human range of hearing is limited. He was overwhelmed by a strange and disturbing thought that although the sound frequencies are there, humans are not capable to perceive them. Three of his electronic pieces are examined. Halim El-Dabh and African Pianism AKIN EUBA, University of Pittsburgh The concept of an African pianism was pioneered by Akin Euba and subsequently endorsed by other African composers, notably Nketia. In developing the theme of African pianism, Euba stated that techniques used “in the performance of (African) xylophones, thumb pianos, plucked lutes, drum chimes ... and the polyrhythmic methods of African instrumental music in general would form a good basis for an African pianistic style.” Euba’s definition of African pianism has been mostly derived from the works of composers south of the Sahara and, as noted by Burman-Hall the definition needs to be modified in order to accommodate types of African pianism existing north of the Sahara. North African pianism is exemplified in the works of Gamal Abdel-Rahim (1924-88) and of his compatriot Halim ElDabh, who is the subject of this paper. The focus of the paper will be on El-Dabh’s MEKTA’ IN THE ART OF KITA’ (1955). Orchestra Ethiopia 1963-1975: Halim El-Dabh – Catalyst for Music Innovation and Preservation CYNTHIA TSE KIMBERLIN, Music Research Institute Halim El-Dabh was invited by Haile Selassie I University and the Ethiopian government in 1961 to teach, conduct research on Ethiopian Orthodox Christian Church music, and create a Pan-Ethiopian ensemble known as Orchestra Ethiopia. Questions addressed aided by illustrations include: What kind of environment set the stage for the creation of this Orchestra? Why was El-Dabh selected to create it and what was its purpose? Why did the Orchestra garner praise, yet also court controversy? Who were the Orchestra’s beneficiaries? Within the context of ye-bet agar (homeland), ye-wutch agar (diaspora), and ye-sayber agar (cyberspace), what legacy did El-Dabh’s Orchestra leave? Halim El-Dabh’s Opera Flies (1970-71) DAVID BADAGNANI Halim El-Dabh’s Opera Flies is one of the composer’s most striking works. Composed in response to the Kent State tragedy of May 1970 (which El-Dabh experienced firsthand), it is an unconventional opera, bringing its subject into relief through the use of metaphor and ritual rather than conventional narrative. Its musical language is frequently avant-garde, integrating such diverse elements as Ethiopian chant and West African drumming. Although Opera Flies remains unpublished and largely unknown, it is historically significant and deserving of wider recognition. This paper examines the background of the work’s composition, as well as its experimental musical and narrative structure. 4d Sexuality Cleveland, Ohio 37 Abstracts for Thursday afternoon—Sessions 5–6a “Little Red Corvette” – Make-Out Mobile or Celestial Chariot? Religious Imagery and Sexual Perversity in the Music of Prince GRIFFIN WOODWORTH, University of California, Los Angeles The interactions of sacred and profane elements in African-American musical genres has a long history, but the manner in which Prince’s musical and lyrical evocations of religious devotion interact with his complexly gendered sensuality go beyond the use of spiritual transcendence as a metaphor for sexual release (and vice-versa), and approaches a very post-modern manipulation of signifiers. Within the context of African-American religious history, the subject position of devout Christian would seem to tether – if not entirely exclude – the type of polymorphous gender-play in which Prince engages, and it is this apparent paradox that serves as the jumping-off point for my current study. Bernstein’s Mass Appeal: Eclecticism, Omnivorism, Dirty Laundry, Musical Knowledge NADINE HUBBS, University of Michigan Biographers depict Bernstein the polymath, blurring boundaries of métier, high and low culture, and more. All show him pursuing men and engaging, ambivalently, with women--without, however, acknowledging differing sociocultural vectors. Evidently key in Bernstein’s 1951 marriage was his ambition to succeed among conductors, “absolute monarchs, [permitted] anything . . . [if] protected with a wedding ring.” Bernstein also reportedly outed Mitropoulos to the BSO board, setting the stage for the NYPO’s sacking Mitropoulos in favor of his erstwhile protégé. Such private knowledge, “dirty laundry,” exposes mechanisms of cultural production and thus merits scrutiny as cultural history and musical knowledge. The Birds and the Squirrels: Finding David Diamond in Copland’s Dickinson Songs COLIN ROUST, University of Michigan Each of the Twelve Poems of Emily Dickinson (1950) is dedicated to a different “young composer friend.” Though David Diamond, the dedicatee of the “Nature the Gentlest Mother,” has claimed that he requested the poem Copland set for him, Phyllis Curtin has said, “The dedications are not idle.” My analysis of the text setting and motivic content in the sketches and the published version of this song argues that Copland intended the song specifically for the homosexual Diamond--not only to fulfill a request, but also as a parental affirmation of love and acceptance, in spite of Diamond’s disaffection. Thursday, ARSC Session, 3:15-5:30 p.m. Cleveland and the Wider World North Coast Jingles: The Career of a Commercial Composer in Cleveland AMY WOOLEY, The College of William and Mary From the 1960s to early 1980s, Dick Wooley had a highly successful career as a leading commercial composer and producer in Cleveland. His jingles for products ranging from the local soft drink company, Cotton Club, to the city of Cleveland itself became a lasting part of the local mass-media soundscape. I will look at the commercial advertising and jingle industry in Cleveland, discuss the anatomy of a successful jingle during this period, and talk about Cleveland Recording, the only 24-track studio operating in Cleveland at this time. I will introduce the composer himself, who will discuss his techniques and dealings with the local musicians union and Cleveland Symphony. The Cleveland-Chicago Nexus in Rhythm and Blues Recording in the Post World War II Era ROBERT PRUTER, Lewis University Cleveland had a large black population, and this community was vigorous in developing its own 38 ARSC-SAM Conference 2004 Abstracts for Thursday afternoon—Session 6a–b entertainment district, producing jazz, blues, and rhythm and blues acts for the world stage. But despite possessing a rich entertainment culture, a broad array of media, and a large economic base, Cleveland never developed a recording industry. On the other hand, 350 miles to the west was Chicago, with a flourishing and long-productive recording industry. There thus developed a pipeline between Cleveland and Chicago by which Cleveland talent flowed to Chicago for recording. This paper will explore that nexus as it existed in the early post-World War II years. POLKA, AND WHY IT’S GOOD FOR YOU Dick Spottswood, Silver Spring, Maryland; JOE OBERAITIS, Orlando Florida; and LAURIE GOMULKA PALAZZOLO, Farmington, Michigan Remember when it used to be safe to deride jazz, country, and rhythm & blues as the musical equivalent of something you scraped off your shoe? Well, they’ve all become academically respectable, and only polka remains as the genre at which it’s safe to sneer. So here’s the bad news. Polka, the 160-year old gift from central and eastern Europe to American musical life, is alive and thriving. Its artistry and resonance stand on their own, rewarding expansive hearts and open minds with memorable music. And, of course, you can still dance to it. Polka’s always been chic--you just didn’t know it! Join us, listen hard, and maybe you’ll learn Polka’s Secret. Thursday, SAM Session 5, 3:15 - 4:00 p.m. 5b Performance “It Don’t Mean a Thing If It Ain’t Got That Swing”: The Evolution of Swing Dancing RENEE CAMUS, Adelphi, Maryland Swing Dancing is one of the more popular social dances today. Growing out of the 1920s Charleston, swing dancing eventually achieved popularity with all classes and races. It continued to develop, sprouting new and innovative variations on the original. Inspired by the proximity to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, this lecture/demonstration will show the development of swing dancing, examples of its many variations, and their relation to different styles of music. The lecture will examine the social climate in which these styles developed, and how it affected the form and steps of the dance. Thursday, SAM Session 6, 4:15 - 5:45 p.m. 6a Musical Theater You’re Doin’ Fine, Oklahoma!”: The Making of an Icon, 1943-1950 KATHERINE AXTELL, University of Rochester Rodgers and Hammerstein’s Oklahoma! occupies a prominent position in the written history of the American musical theater. Richard Kislan, for example, states that “Oklahoma! was more than a spectacular critical and popular success; it was a revolutionary manifesto that . . . raised the integrated musical to the seat of power and influence” (Kislan 1995, p. 146). However, such hyperbole was largely absent from Oklahoma!’s initial reviews; rather, the show’s reputation grew over time. This paper explores critical commentary produced between 1943 and 1950 to reveal the multivalent historiographical process through which Oklahoma! became a musical theater landmark . Kurt Weill’s Love Life (1948) in a Comparative Analysis with Stephen Sondheim’s Assassins (1990) LARA HOUSEZ, London, Ontario Kurt Weill and Alan Jay Lerner’s experimental vaudeville, Love Life, shares musical, structural, and thematic similarities with Stephen Sondheim and John Weidman’s Assassins. Both musicals, written Cleveland, Ohio 39 Abstracts for Thursday afternoon—Session 6b–c forty-two years apart, also incorporate examples of Bertolt Brecht’s epic theater. These striking parallels not only suggest that Sondheim may have used Love Life as a model, but also expose a lacuna in the literature on Weill and Sondheim. In comparing Love Life and Assassins, an attempt is made to present Sondheim as an heir to Weill’s compositional throne. Rodgers and Hart’s All Points West and Its Legacy FELIX COX, University of Wisconsin-Whitewater Returning to New York after spending four years in Hollywood, Rodgers and Hart created a “serious” piece for the Paul Whiteman Orchestra titled All Points West. In his autobiography, Rodgers proclaimed the work “a faltering step in a basically right direction.” The evolution of the piece from sketch to published score shows how Rodgers used phrase, cadence, form and key to build a cohesive whole. Comparisons with “Soliloquy” from Carousel and the first act of South Pacific reveal how these techniques developed in All Points West were applied in later works for the musical theater. 6b Black Female Jazz Performers and Musical Identity “A Paradox in the Hubbub of Swing”: Maxine Sullivan and Black Musical Identity in the Swing Era PATRICK BURKE, Washington University in St. Louis This paper examines interactions between musical practices and ideas of racial authenticity by considering the reception of Maxine Sullivan, an African American singer who became successful in 1937 with a swing version of the Scottish standard Loch Lomond. Although the seeming incongruity of a black singer performing an ostensibly white song intrigued a large audience, it also led conservative listeners to attack Sullivan’s performances as “sacrilegious.” While Sullivan’s example demonstrates that black musicians could not fully escape dominant racial ideologies in the 1930s, it also reveals that these performers found ways to suggest alternative notions of “authentic” black music. Don’t Fence Me In!: The Effects of Race and Gender on the Shaping of the Image of Black Women Jazz Instrumentalists TAMMY KERNODLE, Miami University of Ohio In the 1940s two of jazz’s most successful female pianists, Mary Lou Williams and Hazel Scott, were booked indefinitely at New York’s most unique and controversial nightclub, Café Society. Both were notable because of their approaches to the instrument. They would, however, become the source of debate as the two were juxtaposed against one another as representations of “novel” and “serious” jazz musicians. This presentation will examine how the politics of race and gender dictated the lives, and careers of these two pianists and discuss how Barney Josephson, owner of Café Society, constructed images of black womanhood through his interpretations of performance etiquette, stage presence and repertoire. The Many Voices of Sarah Vaughan ELAINE HAYES, University of Pennsylvania In November of 1953 vocalist Sarah Vaughan signed two contracts with Mercury Records – one with Mercury to sing pop, and a second contract with their subsidiary label, EmArcy, to sing jazz. This paper examines how this dual contract influenced public interpretations of Vaughan’s identity and subjectivity as represented by her voice on sound recordings. Focusing on a pop single and jazz album, I explore the degree to which each recording invoked a specific place or performing context, such as the home or nightclub, as well as a relationship between voice and body, and how this was mediated by modern recording technology. 6c New York Experimentalism A Big Noise for More to Hear: Bang on a Can and the Art of Audience Building 40 ARSC-SAM Conference 2004 Abstracts for Thursday afternoon—Session 6d; Session 6.5 MARGARET MARTIN, SUNY Stony Brook Over the past 30 years numerous composers, musicians, and record labels have striven to expand the scope of the American art music audience through a variety of musical, performative, and marketing methods. Bang on a Can, a New York-based musical collective, encapsulates many of these developments; in particular, its annual music festival offers a focused view of the group’s approach to audience cultivation. This paper examines how Bang on a Can has attempted to construct and use its yearly festival to carve out a broadly intellectual listenership for its members and contemporary art music. Resisting the Airport: Bang on a Can Performs Brian Eno CECILIA SUN, University of California, Los Angeles In 1998, Bang on a Can transcribed and recorded Brian Eno’s ambient classic Music For Airports (1978). The project transformed what was the result of Eno’s experimentations in the electronic studio into a showcase for live virtuosos. In this paper, I use French anthropologist Marc Augé’s relatively new idea of ‘Supermodernism’ in conjunction with architecture critic Charles Jencks’ more established notion of ‘Late Modernism’ to argue that Bang on a Can¹s performance of Music for Airports changes Eno’s quintessentially supermodernist sonic soundscape into an archetypal late-modernist phenomenon. Downtown Overtones: Glenn Branca, Rhys Chatham, and the Art of the Guitar CAROLINE O'MEARA, University of California, Los Angeles In the late seventies, New York-based composers Glenn Branca and Rhys Chatham were performing in rock bands and writing works using rock instrumentation in larger formal contexts. In this paper, I analyze Branca’s The Ascension (1981) and Chatham’s Drastic Classicism (1982), both scored for four electric guitars, electric bass, and drums. These works explore the sonic effects of highly amplified guitars tuned in very small intervals. In my analysis, I expose the composers divergent conceptions of the electric guitar, American music history, and the relationship between rock and art music, particularly within downtown New York¹s “borderline” music culture. Friday, ARSC-SAM Session, 8:30 - 10:00 a.m. Recording the History of Folk and Traditional Music RON PEN, University of Kentucky, SAM Folk/Traditional Music Interest Group Chair The history of recorded sound is inextricably intertwined with the preservation, presentation, and transformation of folk and traditional music in the United States. The nascent recording industry created commercial venues for traditional music with Mamie Smith’s release of Crazy Blues (1920) and Eck Robertson’s Sally Goodin (1922). In addition to the commercial exploitation of traditional music, sound recording also allowed collectors to record and preserve traditional music through documentary recordings. Not long after Thomas Edison released the wax cylinder in 1878, people began documenting various traditional music from Pennsylvania coal miners to Omaha Plains Indians. This session will create some perspective on the history of recorded folk song. Panelists will include the following participants: Ronald Cohen, Jeff Place, Chris Strachwitz, Kip Lornell, Dick Spottswood, and Ron Pen. Friday, SAM Session 7, 8:30 - 10:10 a.m. 7b Film, Stage, and Tin Pan Alley “Is He Charlie Chaplin?”: Cinematic Impersonation and Song on the American Stage SCOTT D. PAULIN, Princeton University For much of 1915, it was nearly obligatory for American vaudeville bills to feature some form Cleveland, Ohio 41 Abstracts for Friday morning—Session 7 of Charlie Chaplin imitation; other theatrical genres, including revues and musicals, also began to interpolate Chaplin numbers, even Chaplin chorus lines. An embodied supplement to the film images of Chaplin seems to have been desirable, especially at this watershed moment in American entertainment, with cinema in ascendance over live performance. This obsession with performative mimesis, especially as manifested in the act of song, suggests that Chaplin impersonators aspired both to mimic the movies and to supply the living, audiovisual presence that movies lacked. “I Think I’ve Got It!”: Tin Pan Alley Songwriters Through the Hollywood Lens JENNIFER R. JENKINS, Columbia College Chicago A spate of “biopics,” released by the major Hollywood studios in the 1940s-50s, purported to tell the life stories of America’s greatest musical figures. As biography and as multimedia spectacle, the effectiveness of these movies can be gauged in part by highlighting the use of works associated with these musicians to manipulate the audience’s impressions of the lives of the people themselves. The almost standardized scenario, underscored (literally) by key musical selections, suggests a number of elements deemed important to the popular image of musical genius, qualities imperative to the tale that the studios wished to tell and perhaps that the audiences wished to hear and see. 7c The Avant Garde in California and New York John Cage and Narratives of American History BENJAMIN PIEKUT, University of California, San Diego This paper examines the statements of John Cage and his biographers to show how well-worn nationalist tropes are used to create a place for Cage in the pantheon of American masters. I also examine the contrasting celebrations of heterogeneity in his work, and use the composition, Apartment House 1776, to clarify his vision of American history. Introducing the key concept of agency leads to a discussion of the difference between cosmetic multiculturalism and cultural pluralism in the work. Reading accounts of Cageian diversity against the grain raises serious doubts about the composer’s claims to cultural pluralism. Lou Harrison and the Aesthetics of Revision LETA E. MILLER, University of California, Santa Cruz Lou Harrison was an inveterate self-borrower, continually revisiting old compositions to rescore, update, or rework them. The process of revision also acted as a creative stimulus for Harrison: His early works would reappear years later (sometimes drastically altered, sometimes barely changed) alongside newly-composed movements, resulting in large-scale compositions with striking stylistic contrasts. For Harrison, such diversity carried its own inherent logic: He strove to establish coherence among disparate geographic and temporal sources of influence. That Harrison felt stimulated by his earlier works suggests a linear developmental process; his style evolved by additions to, rather than replacement of, prior interests. Morton Feldman’s existentialist rhetoric and the authoring of avant-garde identity BRETT BOUTWELL, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Scholarship on Morton Feldman has begun to unravel the composer’s numerous technical and aesthetic borrowings from the visual arts. This presentation will expand the scope of this endeavor by demonstrating Feldman’s participation in a cultural discourse that flourished within New York’s art world during the 1950s and 1960s, one colored by the contemporary vogue of existentialist philosophy. This discourse provides an historical context for the existentialist references that pepper Feldman’s essays and lectures while shedding light on his conception of artistic subjectivity, on aspects of his reception history, and on the social milieu with which he identified during the 1960s. 42 ARSC-SAM Conference 2004 Abstracts for Friday morning—Session 7c–8 Friday, ARSC Session, 10:15-12:30 p.m. Personalities in American Music Rediscovering George W. Johnson, The First African American Recording “Star” TIM BROOKS, Greenwich, Connecticut As the first black performer to gain fame through the phonograph, and the only prominent black in the virtually all-white record industry of the 1890s, George W. Johnson holds a special fascination for collectors and researchers. This presentation offers new research on him, including the story of his 1899 trial for murder. Johnson’s career, the repertoire he recorded, and the manner in which it was marketed paint a picture of black-white interaction at the dawn of recording. His success laid the groundwork for later black artists, as detailed in my book Lost Sounds: Blacks and the Birth of the Recording Industry. Harry Belafonte and his Global Carnival CARY GINELL, Origin Jazz Library, Thousand Oaks, California In the 1950s and ‘60s, Harry Belafonte was one of the chief explorers of folk music traditions around the world. Beginning as a jazz singer in New York nightclubs, Belafonte abruptly quit and began researching folk music at the Library of Congress. His RCA Victor recordings of folk, blues, and work songs from America, the West Indies, and elsewhere helped influence the burgeoning “folk music revival,” although his overt commercialism prevented him from gaining appropriate credit from folk “purists.” This presentation will attempt to examine Belafonte’s masterful work in bringing folk music of many cultures to the American musical landscape. Carmichael’s Hoagy: The Hidden Complexity Behind the Homespun Persona SUZANNE MUDGE, Indiana University Working his way from dance halls to Tin Pan Alley, radio, and Hollywood, Hoagland Howard Carmichael developed a persona for himself as an easy-going, folksy musician. By the 1940s Hoagy had became one of the best-known songwriters and performers in the country. Drawing on rare recordings and unpublished papers from the Hoagy Carmichael Collection at Indiana University, I will look beyond Carmichael’s well-crafted persona and talk about his versatility, tenacity, and creative drive. I will look specifically at some of the ways Carmichael reworked unsuccessful compositions and refashioned himself as a performer over time, ever conscious of his place in history. Friday, SAM Session 8, 10:45 a.m. - 12:45 p.m. 8a The “Deep Structures” of Charles Ives: Mental, Environmental, and Sentimental Antimodernism, “The Celestial Railroad,” and the “Comedy” of Charles Ives KARA ANNE GARDNER, University of San Francisco Recent scholars have derided Charles Ives for misogyny and subjected him to psychoanalysis, but his volatile character has not been adequately used to shed light on his compositional choices. Gayle Sherwood has written an article that could reverse that trend. She argues that Ives suffered from nervous anxiety, partly as a result of the modernization that took place in turn-of-the-century America. This paper takes up where Sherwood left off. It looks at the way Ives’s concerns about urbanization and commercialization influenced the “Comedy” movement of the Fourth Symphony, which was inspired by Hawthorne’s antimodern allegory “The Celestial Railroad.” Sylvan in the City: The Everyday Eternal in “Central Park in the Dark” DENISE VON GLAHN, Florida State University Cleveland, Ohio 43 Abstracts for Friday morning—Session 8b-d Around 1906 Charles Ives composed two pieces which he later paired as Two Contemplations: “Central Park in the Dark (in the good ole Summer Time)” and “The Unanswered Question (A Cosmic Landscape). According to Ives, the latter was “A Contemplation of a Serious Matter” and the former “A Contemplation of Nothing Serious.” A careful reading of “Central Park,” however, reveals that it is as “serious” as its more openly profound and meditative partner. The two pieces are more alike than opposite in their generative ideas and ultimate execution. Using sketches and their marginalia, and commentary by the composer, this paper considers the deep structure of “Central Park in the Dark.” Ives’s “cartoon” or “take off” is a finely wrought work wherein the composer, employing purely musical means, reconciles nature and the city, and the everyday and the eternal. Memory, Form, and Invention in Charles Ives’s Fourth Violin Sonata THOMAS L. RIIS, University of Colorado, Boulder This paper examines Ives’s Fourth Violin Sonata, a work hitherto viewed as a relatively simple piece, to reveal its rich set of structural elements all resting on a subtle philosophical and religious foundation. In the second movement, for example, pitch classes, motives, intervals, measure numbers, tempi, and the registers of chord members are tightly linked together in symbolic numeric groups; yet all is presented so unobtrusively that a first-time listener could be unaware of the care Ives so clearly bestowed on it. The piece thus illustrates calmly and precisely what Ives meant when he held up “substance” (an authenticity born of spiritual intensity) above “manner” (mere technique). Charles Ives’s Simulacrum of Mental Life in Music STUART FEDER, New York City The same Zeitgeist that animated Freud’s concept of free association and William James’s stream of consciousness engendered comparable innovations in the arts. Although the representation of such mental processes has received scant attention in music, the works of Charles Ives provide a unique opportunity. The quest for underlying formal principles in Ives has resulted in a compendium of Ives’s compositional procedures. (Burkholder) In this paper an alternative and supplementary view of form is suggested, namely, music as a semblance of the flow of mental life--in effect, a simulacrum. Among the mental functions encoded are memory and reminiscence; vicissitudes such as intrusions, denial, and distortion; and various affective states. 8b Jazz Now Negotiating National Identity Among American Jazz Musicians in Paris DAVID AKE, University of Nevada, Reno Jazz emerged from the U.S., and many of its revered figures were born there. But the genre also established early footholds in Europe, Asia, and elsewhere; and today, outstanding performers can be found throughout the globe. Despite jazz’s worldwide presence, however, many writers continue to tout it as “America¹s Music.” Given the web of locations and meanings enveloping this genre, it’s worth exploring how national identity might operate among jazz performers and audiences. To that end, this paper investigates the ways in which American jazz musicians in Paris today display, discard, or otherwise represent “American-ness” through musical style, subjective identity, and professional strategy. Swing and Sehnsucht: Jazz after Postmodernism DALE CHAPMAN, Mount Allison University In recent years, writers, directors, musicians and thinkers have begun to put forth narratives that challenge some of the inherited conventional wisdom surrounding postmodernism. The jazz world has 44 ARSC-SAM Conference 2004 Abstracts for Saturday morning—Session 9a not remained untouched by these developments. In their music, both Brad Meldhau and Dave Douglas renounce what they see as the information culture’s preoccupation with ironic playfulness and detachment. “Swing and Sehnsucht” will explore the question of whether we can begin to speak of a new sensibility in jazz distinct from what we understand as the postmodern. Who Plays the Tune in “Body and Soul”? JOSE ANTONIO BOWEN, Georgetown University Jazz standards evoke different models of authority and identity than do Western musical works, and European legal or phenomenological models often lead us astray. This paper explores the competing authorities present in the transmission of Johnny Green’s “Body and Soul,” which arrived as a dozen recorded versions (including one by Louis Armstrong) in 1930. An alteration in the first four notes of the piece became authoritative, and its most popular recorded version (Coleman Hawkins 1939) contains barely a reference to the original melody. 8c 19th Century Topics Amy Beach, Robert Browning, and D. W. Griffith: Artists with one mind? ADRIENNE FRIED BLOCK, Music in Gotham, Graduate Center, CUNY Amy Beach’s song, “The Year’s at the Spring” (1899) embodies late nineteenth- century optimism. It is her most successful song and the outstanding setting of an eight-line lyric excerpted from Robert Browning’s long dramatic poem, “Pippa Passes.” Beach called the text “a burst of joy and faith.” Browning’s poem, however, concerns the conflict between faith and religious belief, a subject that haunts much of his poetry. Members of the many Browning clubs celebrated Beach’s song as one proof of the poet’s optimism. In 1909, Griffith turned the entire poem into a positive expression of faith by giving happy endings to its tragic episodes. This paper investigates the readings and misreadings of the poem. “Run … Run:” Appropriation and Re-appropriation from Slave Song to Neo-Nazi Propaganda ANGELA HAMMOND, University of Kentucky “Run Nigger, Run” was originally a text and tune commenting on nineteenth century slave patrols known as paterollers. Through the examination of slave narratives, songsters, recordings, works of literature and other accounts this paper addresses four things: 1) appropriation by African-Americans of “Run…Run,” within the context of slave songs; 2) white re-appropriations via the minstrel show; 3) the textless fiddle and banjo versions of the tune; and 4) related intertextual and intermusical tropes. Confronting the Stereotypes, Confounding Cultural Hierarchy: An Unexplored Web of American Musical Life, 1876-1880. KATHERINE K. PRESTON, College of William and Mary American musicians active on the late 19th-century stage moved from place to place and genre to genre with an amazing alacrity. In this paper I focus on members of the Boston Ideal Opera Company, one of the most popular and longest-lived English troupes of the period. The company itself attracted heterogeneous audiences with its mixed repertory; its individual performers—when not singing opera—participated in a wide range of performance activities. A close examination of these musicians’ jobs during 1876 through 1880 contradicts many unconscious and ingrained stereotypes about 19th-century music and musicians; it furthermore reveals much about the rich, complex, and interconnected web that was the American musical and theatrical world during the period. 8d Interest Group: Gender and Music The Trouble with Minnie, Puccini’s Exotic American Heroine ANNIE JANEIRO RANDALL, Bucknell University Cleveland, Ohio 45 Abstracts for Saturday morning—Session 9b Puccini treated Belasco’s California as the exotic site for La Fanciulla del West (New York, 1910) and viewed the western US’s play of race, ethnicity, class, and gender through the lens of opera’s voyeuristic imperial gaze. US critics resisted seeing their countrymen portrayed as “them” in the us/them formulation that lies at the heart of operatic exoticism; that Americans might be considered comparable to Turks, gypsies, geishas, nubians, et. al., was anathema. This paper considers the musico-dramatic function of the American Other (Native Americans, Mexicans, European Americans, immigrants, and the unseen Chinese population) with particular attention to la fanciulla of the title. Drawing from archival material and Puccini’s unpublished letters, I conclude that the opera’s tortured reception stems largely from interpretive problems associated with the leading character, Minnie. Towards a Framework for Examining “Blackness” in Opera NAOMI ANDRE, University of Michigan Considering operas by Verdi, Gershwin, and Krenek, I examine the ways in which racial difference is depicted on the opera stage. Models in feminist musicology have provided a starting point for framing issues related to “blackness” in opera. From my work on gender in early nineteenth-century Italian opera, I find three areas of inquiry to be especially helpful: the physicality of the singer (black bodies and blackfaced performers on stage), the structure of the plot and the identity of specific singers (e.g., Leontyne Price). These parameters begin to construct a discourse on blackness in opera. MeShell Ndegéocello: Musical Articulations of Black Feminism MARTHA MOCKUS, SUNY Stony Brook Although American bassist/singer/songwriter MeShell Ndegéocello expresses an ambivalent relationship to feminism, much of her music enacts vigorous feminist critiques of capitalism, racism, and homophobia. This paper analyzes three of her songs from Cookie: The Anthropological Mixtape (2002), drawing from theoretical work by Angela Davis and bell hooks. In “Dead Nigga Blvd” Ndegéocello manipulates vocal “space” and the phenomenon of echo to critique the conflation of freedom with capitalist consumption. “Hot Night” employs an unusual musical strategy of vocal framing to engage a feminist critique of global capitalism. Finally, in “Barry Farms” Ndegéocello makes compelling use of Go-Go style music to expose homophobic betrayal from within a queer relationship. “B-Girl Stance in a B-Boy’s World”: DJ Kuttin Kandi, Hip-Hop Activist ELLIE M. HISAMA, Brooklyn College & the Graduate Center, CUNY While African American women and Latinas have begun to gain a toehold in the male-dominated world of hip-hop, Asian American women are hard to find in mainstream accounts. This paper examines the music of New York-based Filipina American DJ Kuttin Kandi, who challenges stereotypes about Asian American women in hip-hop as a member of 5th Platoon and the Anomolies. By considering Kuttin Kandi’s work as a turntablist and DJ, I suggest that hip-hop can be an empowering medium for those women who confront the industry’s expectations about gender and race. 9a Interest Group: Gay/Lesbian Gay Authorship and Music Historiography HOWARD POLLACK, University of Houston How does gay authorship effect the treatment of sexual orientation or the deciphering of homosexual codes and subtexts? what are the strengths and pitfalls of gay authorship? can comparisons be drawn to studies focussed on gender, race, ethnicity, religion, nationality? A few case studies – beginning with Edward M. Maisel’s 1943 study of Charles Griffes – will be cited in order to elicit discussion of such matters among the members of the society’s gay and lesbian study group. 46 ARSC-SAM Conference 2004 Abstracts for Saturday—Session 9d–12a Friday Afternoon ARSC Session, 2:15-4:30 p.m. The Cleveland Orchestra A Recording History of the Cleveland Orchestra DONALD ROSENBERG, Classical Music Critic for The Plain Dealer in Cleveland and author of The Cleveland Orchestra Story: "Second to None" The rise of the Cleveland Orchestra from the industrial surroundings of a small Midwestern city to one of the great orchestras in the world is a story of extraordinary events. It’s a tale of indomitable founders like Adella Prentiss Hughes, the first woman to manage a symphony orchestra, and John L. Severance, the wealthy industrialist after whom Severance Hall is named. It’s a drama of driven conductors like Artur Rodzinski, who packed a loaded pistol during every performance, and George Szell, who is still renowned for his precision. Musicians, managers, and patrons all played a role in making the orchestra *second to none.* Excerpts of orchestra recordings will be played, beginning with the 1812 Overture recorded in 1924. Recording the Cleveland Orchestra: It’s Not Your Father’s Severance Hall ROBERT CONRAD, President of WCLV/WRMR and Producer and Commentator for The Cleveland Orchestra Radio Broadcasts; and BRUCE GIGAX, Audio Supervisor for The Cleveland Orchestra In 1965, WCLV and The Cleveland Orchestra became partners in an organization called The Cleveland Orchestra Broadcast Service, a unique association between a commercial for-profit radio station and one of the nation’s leading orchestras. The national broadcasts continued through 2002, making the network the longest running orchestra broadcast series in the United States. As of 2003, national distribution ended because of Orchestra budgetary problems. However, local broadcasts from Severance Hall continue over WCLV. Since 1965, COBS has documented virtually every Orchestra concert at Severance Hall and the Blossom Music Center as well as some tour concerts, during the reigns of four Music Directors-George Szell, Lorin Maazel, Christoph von Dohnanyi, and Franz Welser-Moest, beginning with the Szell Shell (installed in 1956) and continuing with the new shell of 2000. This re-constructed stage house, which also includes the refurbished Norton Memorial Organ, provided new acoustics for musicians on stage, the audiences in the hall and listening on the radio, and, of course, new recording challenges for the audio staff. Friday Evening, ARSC Session 7:30-9:45 p.m. A Celebration of Music from Cleveland Singing ‘bout the Sixth City: Cleveland, Ohio, in Popular Song WILLIAM L. SCHURK, Bowling Green State University Whether it is the Cuyahoga River or Lake Erie, the Cleveland Browns or the Cleveland Indians, or even the suburbs of Parma Heights and Euclid, a large body of popular songs and music about the one-time “Sixth City” appeared on recordings during the last century. This presentation will make some sense of this exciting town through recorded examples. Rock ‘n’ Roll in Cleveland, Ohio DEANNA R. ADAMS, Mentor, Ohio In 1951, Cleveland deejay Alan Freed began spinning race records (music by black recording artists) on his WJW-AM radio show. And he called it rock and roll. The following year, on March 21, 1952, he, along with Record Rendezvous owner Leo Mintz and promoter Lew Platt, organized what became the first-ever rock concert, the Moondog Coronation Ball at the Cleveland Arena. From that moment on, Cleveland was the hub for anything rock ‘n’ roll and became a proving ground for hundreds of superstars Cleveland, Ohio 47 Abstracts for Friday afternoon in the making. In her audio/visual presentation, Deanna R. Adams, author of Rock ‘ n’ Roll and the Cleveland Connection will demonstrate why Cleveland is indeed the home of this music genre. “Polka Capital”? “Home of Rock ‘n’ Roll”? “Little Nashville”?—A Cultural and Ethnic History of Recording in Cleveland SUSAN SCHMIDT HORNING, Case Western Reserve University and Cleveland Institute of Art Cleveland’s musical identity has long been linked to its title as the “rock ‘n’ roll capital of the world.” But long before disc jockey Alan Freed popularized the music with his “Moondog’s Rock ‘n’ Roll Party” on WJW radio, Cleveland saw recording activity dating back to the 1920s. This paper explores the efforts of radio-amateurs-turned-recording-enthusiasts who turned their passion for sound into successful business endeavors during the booming postwar years, when magnetic tape revolutionized the recording industry, radio and, TV advertising exploded, and baby-boomers grabbed electric guitars and spent their hard-earned money on the all-important demo record. SATURDAY, ARSC-SAM Session 8:30 - 10:00 a.m. Collections and Archiving The Difference Is in the Moan: The Growing Pains of the Starr-Gennett Collections ELIZABETH SURLES, Starr-Gennett Foundation The Starr-Gennett Foundation, incorporated in 1991, struggles to grow as a collecting organization. “The Difference Is In The Moan” (a word-play on Gennett Records’ slogan, “The Difference Is In The Tone”) chronicles the Starr-Gennett Foundation’s growing pains as it continues to develop and preserve its collection. Issues with the Foundation’s nascent collection include: purpose of collection, establishment of collection and material sources, preservation of materials with limited resources, access to materials with donated facilities, the importance of partnerships, policy development, and working with volunteers. Josiah K. Lilly and the Foster Hall Recordings MARIANA WHITMER, University of Pittsburgh Josiah K. Lilly, founder of the Foster Hall Collection, commissioned the Foster Hall Recordings, to make available all of the music of Stephen Foster, much of which had never been recorded, and hasn't since. This collection of 96 long-playing discs, recorded between 1934 and 1937, reveals important information about Lilly, the growth of the collection, and the recording process that took place at the Gennett Recording Laboratory in Indianapolis. The performers' names have long since faded into obscurity, yet their talented renditions remain a testament to the enduring quality of Foster's music, as will become evident from recorded examples. Herbert Elwell, Leonard Shure, and Mary Simmons: Classical Music in Cleveland in the Mid-20th Century MARC BERNSTEIN, Toronto, Canada The mid-20th century was an active period for classical musicians living in Cleveland-including soprano Mary Simmons, pianist Leonard Shure, and composer, critic, and teacher Herbert Elwell. Excerpts will be played from *The Forever Young: A Ritual for Solo Voice and Orchestra* composed by Herbert Elwell for Mary Simmons in 1953 and from Schubert’s *Die Winterreise* performed by Mary Simmons and Leonard Shure at Severance Hall’s chamber music hall in 1954. Elwell’s papers, scores, and recordings can be found in Special Collections at the Cleveland State University Library. 48 ARSC-SAM Conference 2004 Abstracts for Saturday morning—Session 12b–c Saturday, SAM Session 10: 8:30 - 10:00 a.m. 10b African-American Art Music in the 1930s Representing America, Instructing Europe: The Hampton Choir On Tour LAWRENCE SCHENBECK, Spelman College In 1930, American philanthropists financed a European tour by the Hampton Institute Choir. They hoped to convince colonial powers that Africans possessed unique cultural gifts but could also absorb the best European traditions: the Hamptonians’ polished presentations seemed perfect for the task. Yet conflicts arose. Hampton administrators worried about alienating white supporters or “spoiling the Hampton atmosphere.” Conductor Nathaniel Dett wanted to showcase Gretchaninoff, while his handlers urged him to program more “authentic” folk material. Fashionable primitivist iconography was used to market the group. Competing visions of American music—and America—shaped every step of the choir’s journey. The Life and Music of Black Creek American Contemporary Composer Zenobia Powell Perry: Race, Ethnicity and Gender Issues in American Music Biography JEANNIE GAYLE POOL Born in 1908 in Boley, Oklahoma, to a black physician father and a Creek Indian mother, Ohio composer Zenobia Powell Perry studied with R. Nathaniel Dett, Cortez Donald Reece, William L. Dawson, Allan Willman, and Darius Milhaud. Having taught at black universities for more than five decades, she is a formidable role model for all who desire to have a career in music while facing challenges related to race, ethnicity, and gender. Perry’s story bears witness to a century during which tremendous strides were made towards equality, while raising many complex and unresolved issues related to blacks with native American heritage. 10c 1972 Free to Be…What you Want Me to Be: Folk Music and Gendered Identity Formation in 1970s Popular Children’s Music YARA SELLIN When Marlo Thomas created the album Free to Be... You and Me in 1972, she produced a propagandafilled soundtrack that evoked the politicized folk tradition of the 1950s and 1960s. The album stands up as a remarkable cultural artifact, one that reveals the preoccupations of its creators-white, middle-class feminists. bell hooks has problematized this particular strain of feminism, claiming that its proponents ignore issues of class and race in the interests of developing careers and moving outside the home . Continuing hooks’ argument, I show that Free To Be ultimately promotes a culturally white and essentially suburban model of childhood, and a hetero-normative model of adulthood. “Cosmic American Music”: Country Rock and the Myth of Gram Parsons OLIVIA CARTER MATHER, University of California, Los Angeles Recent interest in “roots music” has led to a search for the progenitors of “alternative country,” often traced to Gram Parsons (1946-1973), a Southern-born singer/songwriter and member of the Byrds. Since his death, critics, fans, and musicians have dubbed Parsons the inventor of “country rock” – a term he hated, preferring “cosmic American music.” This paper will evaluate narratives about Parsons’s music and significance, proposing that while he was an instigator of the style, he was one part of a burgeoning roots scene in southern California that was equally responsible for country rock. Session 11 SAM Plenary Session Teaching Controversial Aspects of American Music: A Panel Discussion JAMES DEAVILLE, McMaster University, Moderator Cleveland, Ohio 49 Abstracts for Saturday morning—Session 12c–d The minstrel show, gangsta rap, Eminem, Showboat. All of these American musics have been the source of considerable controversy because of associations with racism, misogyny, homophobia, profanity, and/or violence. Teaching this “material” in post-secondary institutions is often regarded as transcending the traditional boundaries of appropriateness within the academy, A teacher’s decision to include the topic in a course on American music runs the risk of offending students and facing censure by the university administration. Yet each of the musics indicated above represents an important moment in the history of American music, reflecting major issues within the society of the time. It is crucial that we engage students and colleagues in a productive dialogue about the controversial aspects of what we perform and study. Recognizing the difficulty yet importance of the task, our panel intends to provide insights into how we as teachers can accomplish that in the classroom. The result will be an open and frank discussion about issues that all too rarely enter public discourse. Saturday, ARSC Session, 10:15-11:45 a.m. New World and Telarc The New World Records Story DAVID HAMILTON, The Juilliard School New World Records, a non-profit record company dedicated to American music, began as a project of the Rockefeller Foundation to celebrate the 1976 bicentennial. This involved the publication and distribution of 100 LPs of re-issued and newly recorded music, covering a wide range of art and vernacular idioms from two centuries. The success of the project led to its continuation as an independent label that, having survived amid the industry’s hard times, is currently developing an online database of American music recordings (in collaboration with the Mellon Foundation and NYU) and absorbing and reviving the catalogue of Composers Recordings Inc. The Telarc Story-From Direct-to-Disc and the Cleveland Orchestra*to DSD*and Beyond JACK RENNER, Chairman and Chief Recording Engineer, Telarc; and ROBERT WOODS, President and Senior Producer, Telarc Although it began as a classical-only recording company in 1977, Telarc International now boasts a catalog of more than 600 recordings, ranging from classical, classical-crossover, jazz, contemporary jazz, and blues. The company releases close to fifty-five recordings each year, working with a distinguished roster of artists and backed by an outstanding staff of more than fifty employees in its Cleveland-based headquarters. Who and what enabled this comparatively small, independent American company to achieve this revered position? Learn how is it still successfully challenging the majors in the recording industry and what is it doing to keep its leading edge. Saturday, ARSC Session, 1:00-2:30 p.m. Recorded Sound: History and Science Dayton C. Miller: The Clevelander Who Knew All About Sound Recording GEORGE BROCK-NANNESTAD, Patent Tactics, Denmark From 1905 to 1941 D.C. Miller was synonymous with US knowledge in the field of musical acoustics and his work was comparable to the most important European contributions. Needless to say, most acoustic sound recording was performed in the record companies, but their results were commercial secrets at the time. I will present Miller’s systematic work in acoustic sound recording and contrast it to the published work of other researchers. Some of his original material has survived and it gives 50 ARSC-SAM Conference 2004 Abstracts for Saturday afternoon—Session 12d–13a an interesting insight, not only into the problems of acoustic sound recording, but also into the working of his mind. The Radio: Recorded vs. Live Paradigm JAMES R. POWELL, JR., Gramophone Adventures, Portage, MI Phonograph records were used in early radio broadcasts then became disfavored as live entertainment was deemed more realistic. Electrical transcriptions designed to sound like live broadcasts started to be used in the late 1920s-early 1930s. This presentation will feature a demonstration of electrical transcription samples from 1927 to 1969, including early radio recordings, the Western Electric wide range system, Orthacoustic lacquer cuts, as well as European and American tape recordings. The audience may judge which recordings sound “live.” Saturday, ARSC Session 2:30 - 4:00 p.m. Magnetic Tape Restoration and Transfer Moderator: Gary Galo, Crane School of Music, SUNY Potsdam; ARSC Technical Committee, CoChair Panelists: Adrian Cosentini, VidiPax, New York, NY; Joseph Patrych, Patrych Sound Studios, Bronx, NY; Dennis Rooney, New York, NY; Jon M. Samuels, Recorded Legacy, New York, NY; Seth B. Winner, Rodgers and Hammerstein Archive, NYPL, Seth B. Winner Sound Studios, Inc., ARSC Technical Committee Co-Chair. Saturday, SAM Session 12, 1:15 - 3:15 p.m. 12a Film Music Seen From the Street: Hollywood Underscoring, Urban Modernity, and Alfred Newman’s “Street Scene” MATTHEW MALSKY, Clark University Between 1931 and 1953, no fewer than seven Hollywood films were underscored using the same orchestral music: Alfred Newman’s “Street Scene”. Running the genre gamut from realist drama to film noir to romantic comedy, all of these films prominently featured New York City, with a distinctly American form of vernacular musical modernism. This paper will examine the persistence of this semiotic equation that illustrates that an urban location is at the center of modernity itself, and confirms the connection between public life and the psychoanalytic register that in Lacan’s late writing is called the symbolic order. The Performance of Assimilation: Power and Commerce in Cuban Love Song JONATHAN GREENBERG, University of California, Los Angeles Read in light of the historic popularity of its central musical number, MGM’s 1931 film Cuban Love Song becomes the fictional story of the genesis of “El manisero,” the song that only a year earlier had kicked off the first Latin music craze in the U.S. In depicting this hit in a pre-commercial setting, and setting up its popularity in the U.S., the movie creates a mythology about the migration of Cuban music into the North American market. In particular, Lawrence Tibbett’s operatic singing invokes a discourse of highbrow culture that was important to colonialism. “The Good Fight”: Blitzstein, Thomson, and Musical Incongruity in The Spanish Earth CAROL A. HESS, Bowling Green State University Cleveland, Ohio 51 Abstracts for Saturday afternoon—Session 13b–14b Musical reaction in the U. S. to the Spanish Civil War (1936-39) has never been comprehensively studied, despite the activities of many left-leaning composers and performers on behalf of the Spanish Republic. A compelling case is Joris Ivens’s 1937 film The Spanish Earth, for which Marc Blitzstein and Virgil Thomson selected music from recorded folklore collections. Many of their choices seem arbitrary both in relation to the images on the screen and to historical reality. Yet even the most incongruous selections reveal multiple layers of meaning that comment on the war–the Good Fight–in ways Blitzstein and Thomson probably never imagined. Aaron Copland and the Aesthetics of Hollywood MARK CLAGUE, University of Michigan Given as a guest lecture for Columbia University’s History of the Motion Picture course at New York’s Museum of Modern Art in January of 1940, an unpublished talk by Copland reveals his initial, informal reactions to Hollywood’s prevailing “systems” of composition and explains his own compositional approach to film. These ideas lie behind the well-known conclusions given in the “Film Music” chapter of his best selling music guidebook What to Listen For in Music. This paper explores the aesthetic debates informing Copland’s film music and critical writings with a focus on his music for The City (1939) and Of Mice and Men (1939). Copland functions as an aesthetic traveler connecting the soundscapes of Hollywood film with New York’s concert hall. In the process he reveals clues to his working methods that help to explain his effectiveness as a composer for film as well as his frustrations. 12b Opera Caruso and His Cousins: Portraits of Italian Americans in the Operatic Novelty Songs of Edwards and Madden LARRY HAMBERLIN, Brandeis University In the early years of the twentieth century, the proponents of opera as high art were challenged by the unrefined but enthusiastic Italian immigrants crowding the galleries of the Metropolitan Opera House. Documenting this confrontation were comic songs that comment satirically on the star status of Caruso and Tetrazzini and on the aspirations of would-be Italian American opera singers. Beyond their still-considerable entertainment value, the “operatic novelties” of Gus Edwards and Edward Madden shed light on opera reception in the United States during opera’s transition from an art of the people to the reserve of a cultivated elite. “Who wants real? I want magic!” Musical Madness in André Previn’s A Streetcar Named Desire NICHOLE MAIMAN, University of Maryland In André Previn’s operatic adaptation of Tennessee Williams’s A Streetcar Named Desire, Blanche Dubois is depicted as a character driven mad by her own desperate cries for human affection and acceptance. Her façade as the traditional Southern belle eventually leads to her mental breakdown as she attempts to find a good man to save her from a sordid sexual past. Through a dramatic and musical examination of Previn’s opera – including an analysis of the composer’s use of leitmotives – I explore Blanche’s operatic madness in order to greater highlight her mental decline. 12d Contemporary Popular Musics Dance Dance Revolution, Cyber-Dance Communities, and Musical Taste JOANNA DEMERS, University of Southern California In Dance Dance Revolution (DDR), an arcade and home video game distributed by the Japanese entertainment corporation, Konami, players move their feet in specific patterns set to electronic dance music. Only by achieving a high accuracy rate can a player advance from one level to the next. DDR enjoys worldwide popularity among teenagers and young adults, partially due to the marketing of the 52 ARSC-SAM Conference 2004 Abstracts for Saturday afternoon—Session 14b–14d game’s “soundtracks” as separate, purchasable collections of underground techno, house, and drum ‘n’ bass. This paper considers the many internet communities of DDR fans and their debates concerning “mainstream” culture and musical taste. Changing Wigs: Subcultural Dynamics and Performance Practices in the Southern California Metal Tribute Scene GLENN T. PILLSBURY, University of California, Los Angeles Occupying a unique nexus between the performative and the recorded—between the choreographed spontaneity of live concerts and the private realm of recordings as “text”—tribute bands represent a latemodern search for stable authenticity in a hyper-mediated world that emphasizes constant change and fragmentation. Metal tribute bands, such as the Southern California Metallica tribute band Creeping Death, present a particularly compelling backdrop to explore diverse musical-social issues such as music and place, genre and musical complexity, and the ever-developing personalized relationship between fandom and history. As such, they also offer a window into the infrequently studied area of popular music and maturity. Hand Jive and Ear Prudence WALTER EVERETT, University of Michigan and JOHN COVACH, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Aspects of modern pop and rock music are often attributed to convenient hand position (“those parallel chords are simply a product of barre chords on the guitar!”) without a thought to underlying tonal relations that are guided by the composer’s ear. Today’s presentation will attempt to address possible ways by which we may compare characteristics of guitar, keyboard and vocalization techniques, as heard in well-known examples of American pop-rock music, in the hope that rock researchers will no longer talk past each other when some are attuned to performance-based compositional method and others, instead, to musical function. 12d Student Forum Panel: Teaching American Music This panel will provide a self-reflective forum for our community of scholars to share practical and philosophical insights regarding what we do on a day to day basis: teaching American Music. Conceived especially with graduate students in mind, we hope to create a space in which ideas about music, scholarship, methodologies, and classroom strategies can be exchanged, discussed, shaped, and passed on to the up and coming generation of American Music scholars and teachers. Saturday, SAM Session 13, 3:30 - 4:00 p.m. 13a Performance Two Gems of Ohio: Julia Perry and Zenobia Powell Perry SEBRONETTE BARNES, Cheyney University of Pennsylvania Julia Perry (1924-1979) and Zenobia Powell Perry (1908-2004) represent the second generation of composers who fused their African-American musical heritage and Western European training. Julia lived in Akron, Ohio as a child and enjoyed a career that included studying and performing in Europe. The recipient of two Guggenheim fellowships, her songs give way to both black idioms and traditional European practices. Zenobia Perry’s songs are a study of poetry in motion for they reflect the influence of black American and native American folklore and her original flare and appreciation of language. She died on January 17th in Xenia, Ohio. 13b: Performance Like Brothers: The Music of Ernst Bacon and Otto Luening HARLIE SPONAUGLE, Arlington, Virginia Cleveland, Ohio 53 Abstracts for Sunday morning—Session 15a–b On Ernst Bacon’s death, Otto Luening wrote these words of consolation to his widow: “We were, of course, more like brothers than anything else; our backgrounds and aims were similar.” Bacon (1898-1990) and Luening (1900-1996) met in their early twenties, and forged a musical and spiritual kinship that lasted the rest of their lives. This lecture-recital mines the bounty of their extensive song literature and demonstrates why the works of these two quintessentially American composers should be performed more widely. Sunday, ARSC Session, 8:30-10:15 a.m. Record Companies: The Ohio Influence James Andem and the Ohio Phonograph Company PATRICK FEASTER, Indiana University; and DAVID N. LEWIS, All Music Guide We will give a preliminary assessment of the work of James L. Andem, the entrepreneur responsible for promoting the phonograph in late nineteenth-century Ohio. Andem entered the business through his interest in court reporting, but in the entertainment field his company pioneered the “phonograph arcade” and produced the “Pat Brady” series of Irish comedy cylinders. When the North American Phonograph Company collapsed, Andem charted an independent course, publishing the Edison Phonographic News as an industry trade journal and expanding his operations into Indiana and Illinois. Later, Andem gained notoriety by seeking to enforce franchise contracts from the North American period. “The King of Them All”—Syd Nathan and the Rise and Fall of King Records (Cincinnati, Ohio) BEN GRILLOT, VidiPax, New York King Records, founded in Cincinnati in 1943 by a frustrated jazz drummer named Syd Nathan, was one of the most important independent American labels of the mid-20th century, recording musicians ranging from James Brown to Cowboy Copas. Nathan recognized the growing demand for both R&B and country music among a population that was moving to factory jobs in the North. This presentation will trace the origins of King Records, explore the stories behind some of it’s biggest stars and songs, discuss Syd Nathan’s unscrupulous business practices, and conclude with a discussion of the label’s dissolution and legacy. Cleveland and Its Role in the Birth of the DIY Recording Industry PAUL MAROTTA, New World Records Between 1974 and 1983 Cleveland was home to numerous record labels. Hearthan, Mustard, Drome, Neck, and Terminal, among others, produced the first U.S. recordings of what would soon be called “DIY” (Do It Yourself). Groups such as The Electric Eels, Mirrors, Devo, Pere Ubu, The Styrenes, The Pagans, were the pioneers of a movement that by the ‘80s produced thousands of releases each year. Many of these early Cleveland recordings remain in print. This talk will provide a comprehensive overview of the labels and their releases, the artists and their musical vision, the studios and producers, methods of distribution, and contemporary press and critical response. Sunday, SAM Session 14, 9:00 - 10:30 a.m. 14a Mexican, Cuban, and African Inspirations Revueltas, The Chicago Years (1919-1925) ROBERT PARKER, Coral Gables, Florida 1919 to 1925 were formative years for Mexican composer and violinist Silvestre Revueltas (1899-1940). He enrolled in the Chicago Musical College in January 1919 and worked in theatre orchestras to support his wife and daughter. During a 1924 visit to Mexico his composition production was influenced by 54 ARSC-SAM Conference 2004 Abstracts for Sunday morning—Session 15c Carlos Chávez and the avant garde music Chávez espoused. In March 1925 he left Chicago to rejoin the Chávez coterie in Mexico. The Chicago years prepared Revueltas for the professional life that followed in San Antonio and Mobile, leading to his ultimate success in Mexico in the 1930s. Ernesto Lecuona’s Danzas Afrocubanas and the Mechanics of Stylization ERICA SCHEINBERG, University of California, Los Angeles The middlebrow composer Ernesto Lecuona published his Danzas Afrocubanas in 1930, a set of stylized piano pieces that mimic various Afrocuban dance genres and depict the moving bodies of Afrocuban dancers. Lecuona’s virtuosic music seems to enforce rigorous discipline and mechanical motion upon both the performing pianist and the imagined Afrocuban subjects he or she programmatically invokes. This paper seeks to contextualize Lecuona’s Afrocuban Dances within several stylistic and ideological movements: the turn-of-the-century ragtime craze, traditions of nationalist Cuban salon music, and piano pieces by European Modernist composers such as Ravel and Stravinsky that conflate the “primitive” with the mechanical. “Afrikanische Musik in New York City:” Steve Reich and the Africanization of American Art Music MARTIN SCHERZINGER, Eastman School of Music Steve Reich’s musical oevre is fundamentally beholden to African musical practices and forms. Yet, for most commentators, Reich’s music refers less to the thematic recall of African textures and tunes themselves than to the formal assemblage and rearrangement of their abstract elements: in short, the aesthetics of “minimalism”. This paper traces Reich’s African citations to specific source materials; describes the original functions and contexts of the borrowed music (even if they are not demonstrably known by Reich); and, finally, assesses the ideological dimensions implicit in the way the African materials are put to use in an American context. 14b Song in the 1930s The Poisonous Idyll: Hanns Eisler and the Hollywood Songbook MARGARET JACKSON, Florida State University Throughout the 1930s and 1940s, Hollywood, California served as a refuge for disenfranchised European musicians seeking safety from National Socialism and a devastating world war. Among these was communist composer Hanns Eisler. While in the U.S., Eisler worked on The Hollywood Songbook, a collection of fifty songs with German and English texts. These songs suspended the composer between two worlds: his German homeland and his adopted country, the United States. The Hollywood Songbook offers a window into a time and place in which the American landscape served as both a haven for displaced artists and an oppressive idyll whose climate, language, people, and politics reinforced deeply-rooted immigrant isolation. Delivering Miss Otis’s Regrets: Performers and Arrangers Tackle Cole Porter’s Tale of an Unlikely Lynching TODD DECKER, University of Michigan Cole Porter composed “Miss Otis Regrets (She’s Unable to Lunch Today)” (1934) when national awareness of lynching was at its zenith. The lyric, in which the singer narrates the lynching of a white woman, is structured around disturbing reversals of race, class, and gender. The seventy-year performance history of the song, as captured on over fifty recordings, offers examples of how popular music has sung America’s unspeakable history. Listening to the “Miss Otis Regrets” discography allows one to hear how performers and arrangers can ignore, neutralize, or trivialize meaning in a troublesome text. Every Love but True Love: Unstable Relationships in Cole Porter’s “Love for Sale” MICHAEL BUCHLER, Florida State University Cleveland, Ohio 55 In the thirties, Cole Porter’s “Love for Sale” was better known for its lyrics than for its music. This song about prostitution, with its references to soiled love and the price of paradise, was famously banned in Boston and even raised a few eyebrows on Broadway. I will demonstrate some ways in which Porter musically depicted his tawdry lyrics, coupling ambiguous and non-functional harmonic structures with disguised and incomplete contrapuntal lines. For comparison, portrayals of “true love” in two of Porter’s more normative torch songs will also be considered. 14c Reception Issues “Show Them What Bad Music Is”: The American Premiere of Schoenberg’s Chamber Symphony No. 1, Op. 9 JAMES M. DOERING, Randolph-Macon College In spring of 1915, Leopold Stokowski announced plans to conduct the American premiere of Schoenberg’s Chamber Symphony No. 1. His decision was a gamble: at the time of the announcement he hadn’t heard the work nor seen the score. He simply needed a novelty for the Philadelphia Orchestra’s upcoming season. A month later, the score arrived, and Stokowski was baffled. He privately declared the piece “ridiculous” and sought to cancel the premiere. Orchestra manager Arthur Judson suggested that perhaps they could use the work “to show audiences what bad music is.” Stokowski agreed. What resulted was a public relations campaign to prepare Philadelphians for difficult modern music, both good and bad. Looking for High Modernism in 1920s Los Angeles CATHERINE PARSONS SMITH, University of Nevada Reno By the time the first concert series in Los Angeles devoted to high modernism (Evenings on the Roof) got started (1939), several such series had come and gone in New York, the journal Modern Music was well into its second decade, emigre Arnold Schoenberg was ensconced at UCLA, and the Los Angeles-as-musical-vacuum myth was well established. In this paper I document appearances of high modernism in LA from 1919 and the opposition that arose c.1926. The increasing hostility was grounded in local and national cultural issues as well as in the changing face of ultramodernist music itself. Towards a Reception History of Gershwin’s Concerto in F, 1925-1937 TIMOTHY FREEZE, University of Michigan Drawing evidence from the scrapbooks in the Gershwin Collection at the Library of Congress and in the Whiteman Collection at Williams College, this paper sketches a reception history of Gershwin’s Concerto in F from the work’s première in 1925 to the composer’s death in 1937. An analysis of the concerts and their reviews shows how differences in program, venue, and geography led to many conflicting opinions of the Concerto among both audiences and critics, giving the modern scholar a window onto the interaction between the classical and popular in music of the 1920s and 1930s. 14d Interest Group: Connecting Outside the Academy JOSEPH HOROWITZ, chair. The four presenters will describe opportunities and pitfalls when scholars link with institutions outside the academy. DALE COCKRELL will discuss a forthcoming “Dvorak in America” festival partnering Vanderbilt University with the Nashville Symphony, and including an evening exploring the trajectory of African-American song through Foster, Dvorak, Burleigh, and Cook. MARK CLAGUE will discuss a forthcoming MUSA edition of Copland’s film score for “The City” and its application to a planned Naxos DVD series of American documentary films with newly recorded scores. DEANE ROOT will discuss the scholar-teacher interaction in creating and implementing “Voices Across Time” for American schools. 56 ARSC-SAM Conference 2004 ARSC Session, 10:30 a.m. - 12:00 noon Funk, Punk, and the Blues The Dayton Funk Movement: Midwife to the Birth of Album-Oriented Black Pop JASON HOUSLEY, Indiana University Dayton, Ohio was teeming with musical talent during the 1970s and 80s. The Dayton band known as the Ohio Players helped to popularize urban funk with pop/rock audiences and achieved both R&B and pop success. Soon, more Dayton funk bands would emerge just as black music was making the transformation from a singles-oriented industry to one that concentrated on the long-play albums format. As funk became the preeminent black musical style of the late 1970s, Dayton groups made a significant contribution to America’s musical landscape. Ain’t It Fun Knowing You’ll Never Be Number One: Ohio Artpunk 1972-1987 DAVID N. LEWIS, All Music Guide “Ain’t It Fun Knowing You’ll Never Be Number One” deals with the early history of Ohio underground rock music recordings. This represents a large and varied body of mostly undocumented work; far more of it survives in the form of homemade cassette recordings than as issued records. Ohio made some serious impact on popular music in this period, yet the records remain obscure and the cassette tapes continue to deteriorate. I plan to make an appeal for preservation of these recordings and to advocate for the need to evaluate regional recorded legacies of the recent, but not immediate, past. Red, White, and Whose Blues? Questions of Authenticity, Appropriation and Identity from 1950-2003 ROBERTA FREUND SCHWARTZ, University of Kansas The popularity of the blues with white audiences has generated concerns that the music has lost its force as a serious expression of African American culture. Many fear that the blues has been adopted as a “feel-good” gesture of racial inclusion and the “authenticity” of the form has been compromised. These concerns are not new. In both the late 1940s and early 1960s, British critics and fans discussed the implications of commercialization and appropriation of the blues. Over time the standards of what constitutes “authentic” blues have shifted, but the central argument remains: under what conditions should the music survive? SAM Session 15, 10:45 - 12:15 p.m. 15a Performances Songs by Cleveland Composers STEPHANIE TINGLER, University of Georgia, and WILLIAM OSBORNE, Denison University Arthur Shepherd (1880–1958) served as assistant conductor and program annotator of The Cleveland Orchestra, taught at Western Reserve University and wrote criticism for the Cleveland Press. Herbert Elwell (1898–1974) taught at the Cleveland Institute of Music, served as program annotator for The Cleveland Orchestra and wrote criticism for the Plain Dealer. James H. Rogers (1857–1940) served several Cleveland temples and churches as organist, taught at the Cleveland School of Music, and founded his own music publishing house. Ernest R. Ball (1878–1927), the only Cleveland native of our quartet, trained at the Cleveland Conservatory of Music before moving to New York, where he established a considerable reputation in part by writing Irish songs for performers like John McCormack. His songs were also employed by crooners like Rudy Vallee and Roy Rogers. However, he proclaimed in a song of 1918 that “I’m from Ohio,” and is buried in Cleveland’s Lakeview Cemetery, Normand Lockwood’s Out of the Cradle Endlessly Rocking Cleveland, Ohio 57 KAY NORTON, Arizona State University, the University Singers of the University of Alabama, GREGORY R. GENTRY, University of Alabama, Director Following a three-year apprenticeship with Nadia Boulanger (1925-28) and his Rome Prize residency in Italy (1929-32), composer Normand Lockwood (1906-2002) began his long and productive academic career with an appointment at Oberlin College. The College’s strong choral tradition inspired some of Lockwood’s best-remembered works, including Out of the Cradle Endlessly Rocking, winner of the 1939 G. Schirmer “World’s Fair Prize.” Lockwood’s vibrant, evocative setting of the Whitman poem features close-position choral sonorities and understated mood and text painting. This performance by the University of Alabama’s premiere choral ensemble will be conducted by Gregory Gentry. Kay Norton, author of a 1993 life-and-works monograph on Lockwood, will provide brief commentary. 15b Jazz Then Borrowed Memories of the American South: Music, Imagination, and Cultural Identity in Duke Ellington’s Deep South Suite ANDREW BERISH, University of California, Los Angeles Based in New York City, but more often a resident of the road, Duke Ellington was a musician preoccupied with place. The bandleader’s 1946 composition Deep South Suite opens for the listener an imaginary photo album of carefully constructed Southern impressions. Through a close reading of the final movement of the suite, “Happy-Go-Lucky-Local,” I will explore how the Ellington Orchestra’s imaginary evocation of this place is a search for an African-American identity that can balance the local and the national, the great diversity of the American landscape with the need for a cohesive larger community. Jelly Roll Morton and the Spanish Tinge CHARLES HIROSHI GARRETT, University of Michigan In his 1938 interviews with Alan Lomax, Jelly Roll Morton identified the Spanish tinge as a key component of early jazz. Despite increasing scholarly interest in Morton and in Latin influences on American music, this aspect of his music has received little attention. To come to terms with Morton’s musical border-crossing, this paper addresses his exposure to Latin music, his sojourn in Tijuana, his ride on the tango bandwagon, and his numerous Spanish-tinged compositions. Such an approach also underscores how Morton’s Creole background and his creolized musical blend challenge jazz narratives that rely on a black/white racial model. Roustabouts, Black Levee Workers, and the Origins of Jazz Along the Mississippi & the Ohio Rivers, 1865-1917 WILLIAM KENNEY, Kent State University This paper will explore an interstate, interurban network of African American manual laborers developed along the Mississippi and Ohio rivers after the Civil War; a musical culture hidden behind the racial stereotypes of the Broadway productions of Show Boat and camouflaged by the lack of media to preserve the music for us. In freeing the slaves, the Civil War opened opportunity to Free Black male laborers along the Inland Waterways in such jobs as longshoreman, stevedore, and levee roustabout. In addition to working on packet boats, these workers also rode along on and while between ports, they entertained the passengers with work songs and blues accompanied by banjo, guitar, and harmonica, while providing various sorts of comic entertainment. “Frankie and Johnny,” “Staggolee and Billy,” and “There’ll Be a Hot Time in the Old Town Tonight,” “Tah, Rah, Rah, Bump T’ay” are just some of the songs that emerged from this culture. 15c Orientalism Henry Eichheim, Henry Cowell, and Japan W. ANTHONY SHEPPARD, Williams College 58 ARSC-SAM Conference 2004 For Eichheim, Japan had “a poetry no other country seems to possess.” He traveled there between 1915 and 1928 and composed pieces based on Japanese material. Japan was of central importance throughout Cowell’s life. In the 1930s Cowell studied shakuhachi with Kitaro TAMADA, a musician who had met Eichheim and who wrote poignantly to Cowell from Manzanar. Cowell traveled to Japan in 1957 and 1961 and composed several Japanese-inspired works. Juxtaposing the musical journeys of these two composers and proselytizers highlights the roles Japanese music played for those Americans who sought to sound “ultra modern” in the twentieth century. Beyond the Pleasure-Dome: The Asian-influenced Music of Charles Tomlinson Griffes DAVID NICHOLLS, University of Southampton American transculturalism is usually associated with such composers as Cowell, Partch, Hovhaness, Harrison, and certain of the minimalists and post-minimalists. But before them came an earlier pioneering generation, which included Henry Eichheim and Charles Tomlinson Griffes (1884-1920). During the 1910s, Griffes’s developing interests in the Orient engendered a number of works influenced by other cultures, notably The Pleasure-Dome of Kubla Khan. But while Kubla-Khan’s Orientalism is largely superficial, other pieces—such as the songs Landscape and Tears, and the instrumental works Komori Uta and Sho-Jo—show Griffes adopting quasi-Japanese compositional procedures, including the use of drones, and of pentatonic and hexatonic modes. As well as examining the musical specifics of these fascinating pieces, this paper will investigate Griffes’s complex—and not solely musical—reasons for immersing himself in Eastern culture, and consider the possibility that for Griffes the Orient became a portal through which he could escape to, and explore, his other—gay—self. Henry Cowell’s Ongaku and a Transethnic Basis for the Tone Cluster PETER SCHIMPF, Indiana University In 1957 Henry Cowell composed an orchestral work titled Ongaku, which drew upon traditional Japanese musical styles and techniques. A noteworthy feature of this work is Cowell’s employment of tone clusters. What he had previously rationalized as secundal harmony in the 1920’s, is used in this piece to evoke the clustered sonorities heard in traditional Japanese court gagaku. This paper will explore the ways in which gagaku music specifically influenced Cowell’s Ongaku, and how the use of tone clusters within Japanese court music affected his perception of the tone cluster in general. Cleveland, Ohio 59 INDEX Prepared by Subjects and Participants, by Sessions Names of Presenters and Chairs in italics 60 ARSC-SAM Conference 2004 Cleveland, Ohio 61 62 ARSC-SAM Conference 2004 Cleveland, Ohio 63 UNIVERSITY OF ROCHESTER PRESS Claude Debussy As I Knew Him and Other Writings by Arthur Hartmann ���������������� ����������� ������������� ������ ������������������������������������������������������������������������������� ����������������� ����������������������������������� ���������������������� Musics Modern Muse: A Life of Winnaretta Singer, Princesse de Polignac ������������ ������������������������������������������������������������������������ �������������������������������������������������������������������������� �������������������������������������������������������������������������������� ����������������������������� ����������������������������������� ���������������������� "Let the Church Sing!": Music and Worship in a Black Mississippi Community 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Conference 2004