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The 19th Century Crucible


Banjo

Banjo

Though routinely considered a white music, 1920s rural southerners, both Black and White, performed similar musical styles, such as folk ballads, gospel songs, event songs, the blues, fiddle tunes, and popular vaudeville and ragtime songs and music. But rather than sing in the polished, learned style of the theater or the middle-class salon, they performed in a folksy nasal singing style often accompanied by string instruments like fiddles, guitars, banjos, and mandolins; think of the Soggy Mountain Boys in the film O Brother Where Art Thou.In the 19th century, Euro-American (often Irish) and African-American performers often "blacked up," or performed in blackface, to entertain audiences in minstrel shows.

These highly popular shows included slapstick humor, "plantation (twangy) dialects," fiddle music, banjo picking (the banjo is an instrument derived from Africa), ballads, comedic stories, and songs like "Oh! Susanna" by Stephen Foster, which we also heard in the prior chapter. Imagine Saturday Night Live in blackface with a bluegrass band, and you have a good sense of a minstrel show. Stir into this 19th century musical stew some traditional ballads of death and regret from the British Isles for a touch of tragedy, collections of Sunday morning hymns and gospel songs for harmonizing and worship, Saturday night fiddle tunes for dancing and carousing, and we have the multicultural beginnings of country music.

Mandolin

Mandolin

Stephen Foster

Stephen Foster

From these 19th century musics came the 20th century urban entertainments of vaudeville, ragtime, and burlesque shows, but they also led to rural traveling medicine shows, honky-tonk blues performances, and other rustic entertainments found in the rural South.

  Play Button Oh! Susanna
Stephen Foster

As the musicians in these shows traveled from Texas to the Carolinas, sharing songs and styles, they developed a pre-country Southern musical culture that crossed the ever-present color lines.

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"Country music is still your grandpa's music, but it's also your daughter's music. It's getting bigger and better all the time and I'm glad to be a part of it. "

-Shania Twain
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"If twang isn't what I do, I don't know what is."

-George Strait
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Fun Facts

Kitty Wells became the first female to hit No.1 on the Billboard chart opening doors for future female artists.

Fun Facts