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Придбаний Книга A Language of Song: Journeys in the Musical World of the African Diaspora (Семюел Чартерс)

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Gadzhi

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Recounts experiences from a half-century spent following, documenting, recording, and writing about the Africa-influenced music of the United States, Brazil and the Caribbean
In A Language of Song, Samuel Charters—one of the pioneering collectors of African American music—writes of a trip to West Africa where he found “a gathering of cultures and a continuing history that lay behind the flood of musical expression [he] encountered everywhere . . . from Brazil to Cuba, to Trinidad, to New Orleans, to the Bahamas, to dance halls of west Louisiana and the great churches of Harlem.” In this book, Charters takes readers along to those and other places, including Jamaica and the Georgia Sea Islands, as he recounts experiences from a half-century spent following, documenting, recording, and writing about the Africa-influenced music of the United States, Brazil, and the Caribbean.
Each of the book’s fourteen chapters is a vivid rendering of a particular location that Charters visited. While music is always his focus, the book is filled with details about individuals, history, landscape, and culture. In first-person narratives, Charters relates voyages including a trip to the St. Louis home of the legendary ragtime composer Scott Joplin and the journey to West Africa, where he met a man who performed an hours-long song about the Europeans’ first colonial conquests in Gambia. Throughout the book, Charters traces the persistence of African musical culture despite slavery, as well as the influence of slaves’ songs on subsequent musical forms. In evocative prose, he relates a lifetime of travel and research, listening to brass bands in New Orleans; investigating the emergence of reggae, ska, and rock-steady music in Jamaica’s dancehalls; and exploring the history of Afro-Cuban music through the life of the jazz musician Bebo Valdés. A Language of Song is a unique expedition led by one of music’s most observant and well-traveled explorers.
"“Let’s hope Charters keeps extracting from his mine of inexhaustible stories of music from around the world for future tomes. Roots music lovers will devour them over and over again.”" - Library Journal
"“Reading Charter’s book, even an experienced researcher may find precious tips on how to articulate sources and conduct fieldwork. The author’s experience in finding and interviewing local musicians and making profitable use of literary and historical sources can be useful for the academic public as well as providing a pleasant reading experience for the non-specialist.”" - Popular Music
"“The scope of the book is pretty astounding, particularly considering that so much of Charters’ work with jazz, blues and other musics—not to mention his literary pursuits—is barely referenced here. The book flows smoothly thanks to Charters’ narrative style, which shifts effortlessly back and forth between colorful travelogues, summarizations of modern research, and his informed interpretations of the music and social settings he encounters. All in all it’s a delightful book that reflects a remarkable life in music.”" - Living Blues
"“[A]n extraordinary journey, filled with vital, revealing details of cultures and music. Charters himself emerges as a guide fully worthy of all the guides he’s sought out so diligently and clearly been so blessed to discover.”" - Signal to Noise
"“Charters’s sensitive examination of the well-heeled Kingston audience and their ambivalent response to this inflammatory music is one of this book’s high points. . . . The present volume falls somewhere between a memoir and a compilation album: over 14 chapters he recounts his trips in search of what lies behind black music. . . . Charter’s elegant gambit is to switch back and forth from today’s music to its historical precedents...This is a quietly written book, but Charter’s excitement at such moments of epiphany is palpable. . . . His book is an absorbing, accessible read, underpinned by solid scholarship and the author’s good-humoured and seemingly endless curiosity”" - The Wire
"“No garden-variety writer about music, Samuel Charters deserves a respectful bow from anyone who values roots music. . . . Charters’ first-person writing—straightforward, flowing, quietly passionate, seldom dry, never afflicted by self-absorption or scholarly denseness—provides proof of his gift for understanding various types of African-derived music that he encountered on his travels. . . . Any reader beginning an investigation of this or that music discussed would be wise to spend time with A Language of Song. Readers already hip will find new information and appreciate Charters’ fresh enthusiasm over the golden sounds.”" - DownBeat
"“What’s truly impressive is the scope of the whole work which, while it devotes a little space to blues and jazz, is basically about all of the rest of the African-derived music we hear from around the world. . . . The quality of the writing is invariably interesting and sympathetic, not to mention informative. . . . [T]here’s a timely attention to the economics of slavery and the present-day persistence of racism which merits a wide readership.”" - Jazzwise


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