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The Old Guard (1760-1862): Before Emancipation (Continued)


The Opening of a School by Newport Gardner
Residence of Newport Gardner, c. 1810
House at 25 Pope Street, believed to have been owned and occupied by Gardner
Notice of Upcoming Instruction by Newport Gardner in the Newport Mercury Newspaper

James Monroe Trotter (1842-1892)

James Monroe Trotter (1842-1892)

Cover of his influential work, Music and Some Highly Musical People

Cover of his influential work, Music and Some Highly Musical People

The publication of Slave Songs of the United States laid the foundation of what we now know as Black music research and scholarship. This work, the world's first book-length document consisting of 138 compositions of Black music, was compiled by a trio of White scholars in 1867-the lesson on Folk Spirituals covers the importance of this work. Building on that work, eleven years later, James Monroe Trotter (1842-1892), a Black newspaper editor from Boston, "published his Music and Some Highly Musical People, which was the first comprehensive survey in the field of American music history. Its focus was entirely on Black music" (Floyd 2009, 10; Southern 1983, 142-148).

African American Oral Project presents Virginia Isaac Trotter (wife) commenting on her husband James Trotter on the theme "Struggle for Equality."

Virginia Isaac Trotter

Virginia Isaac Trotter

In this work, Trotter outlines in the first and second parts as delineated by its content. See this important text, beginning on page 66 at Project Gutenberg's Music and Some Highly Musical People.

 

Read on for a list and a brief discussion of the best-known concert performers of the period, as is indicated by the following selective list from his chapter headings:

From this partial list of "the best-known concert performers of the period," according to Trotter, this lesson will now explore the music of:

  1. Frank Johnson (1792-1844) (who appears in the second part of Trotter's book)
  2. Justin Holland (1819-1887)
  3. Elizabeth Taylor Greenfield (c. 1819-1876)
  4. Thomas Green Bethune (1849-1908)

William C. Banfield

Can you imagine American music without the work of Black composers or without Black music in general? Still, there is a refusal, a denial, of that reality.

William C. Banfield

We got some Black Beethovens living up in here, and what's most sad is, y'all don't even know it!