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Piano Music in Georgia: Thomas Green Wiggins Bethune


Thomas Green Wiggins Bethune (1849-1908), also known as Blind Tom, was a child genius on the piano. According to contemporary sources, he would try to reproduce every sound he heard and play it back from memory. Born in Columbus, Georgia, he was promoted by slave owner, Col. James N. Bethune, as a concert pianist and performed in such places as Great Britain, Scotland, Europe, Canada, the Rocky Mountain states, the West, and South America. According to Tom's descendent, Teisha Dynell Wiggins, his concertizing brought to his "owners a fortune of $750,000, bringing home $50,000 per year-in which reports claim that he gave it all to charity. Charity being his owners…" (Wiggins 2011; Wright 2015, 142).

Thomas Green Wiggins Bethune (1849-1908)

Thomas Green Wiggins Bethune (1849-1908)

Blind Tom Concert Handbill, Philadelphia, 1868

Blind Tom Concert Handbill, Philadelphia, 1868

Headstone in Linwood Cemetery in Columbus

Headstone in Linwood Cemetery in Columbus

His concertizing repertoire would "consist primarily of nineteenth-century keyboard literature by European or American composers, piano transcriptions of popular operas, and works of his own compositions. He reportedly composed more than one hundred keyboard pieces, primarily dances, marches, character pieces, and programmatic music in the romantic style of his era. One of his popular compositions was the descriptive "The Battle of Manassas" (Wright 2015, 142). Read the narrative surrounding this work before listening to " The Battle of Mannassas."

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!