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Singing Bourgeois
A01=Derek B. Scott
amateur music market analysis
Auld Robin Gray
Author_Derek B. Scott
Ballad Concerts
Blackface Minstrel Songs
Blackface Minstrelsy
Boosey's Ballad Concerts
Bourgeois Song
Category=AVLA
Category=NHD
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cultural assimilation music
domestic music history
Dominant Ideological State Apparatus
drawing
Drawing Room Ballad
Eliza Cook's Journal
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Ethiopian Serenaders
Green Sickness
HMS Pinafore
minstrel
Minstrel Show
Minstrel Songs
Mohawk Minstrels
Moore's Irish Melodies
nineteenth-century musicology
room
Royalty Ballad
Sacred Songs
sheet music publishing
social class Victorian era
sol
Sol Fa
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Tin Pan Alley
Tin Pan Alley Songs
tonic
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Women Composers
women composers Britain
Young Man
Product details
- ISBN 9780754602590
- Weight: 680g
- Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
- Publication Date: 07 Aug 2001
- Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
- Publication City/Country: GB
- Product Form: Hardback
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First published in 1989, The Singing Bourgeois challenges the myth that the 'Victorian parlour song' was a clear-cut genre. Derek Scott reveals the huge diversity of musical forms and styles that influenced the songs performed in middle class homes during the nineteenth century, from the assimilation of Celtic and Afro-American culture by songwriters, to the emergence of forms of sacred song performed in the home. The popularity of these domestic songs opened up opportunities to women composers, and a chapter of the book is dedicated to the discussion of women songwriters and their work. The commercial success of bourgeois song through the sale of sheet music demonstrated how music might be incorporated into a system of capitalist enterprise. Scott examines the early amateur music market and its evolution into an increasingly professionalized activity towards the end of the century. This new updated edition features an additional chapter which provides a broad survey of music and class in London, drawing on sources that have appeared since the book's first publication. An overview of recent research is also given in a section of additional notes. The new bibliography of nineteenth-century British and American popular song is the most comprehensive of its kind and includes information on twentieth-century collections of songs, relevant periodicals, catalogues, dictionaries and indexes, as well as useful databases and internet sites. The book also features accompanying downloadable resources of songs from the period.
Derek B. Scott, University of Leeds, UK
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