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Education » Literary
Burton W. Peretti - Lift Every Voice. The History Of African American Music PDF screenshot
English | Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 2009 | 240 Pages | PDF | 3 MB
Since their enslavement in West Africa and transport to plantations of the New World, black people have made music that has been deeply entwined with their religious, community, and individual identities. Music was one of the most important constant elements of African American culture in the centuries-long journey from slavery to freedom. It also continued to play this role in blacks' post-emancipation odyssey from second-class citizenship to full equality.

Lift Every Voice traces the roots of black music in Africa and slavery and its evolution in the United States from the end of slavery to the present day. The music's creators, consumers, and distributors are all part of the story. Musical genres such as spirituals, ragtime, the blues, jazz, gospel, rhythm and blues, rock, soul, and hip-hop—as well as black contributions to classical, country, and other American music forms—depict the continuities and innovations that mark both the music and the history of African Americans. A rich selection of documents help to define the place of music within African American communities and the nation as a whole.

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comments

  Resident 7.02.2014 13 1870
+918
what's very interesting too me, is the angle of that snare...

I am assuming that he played it at that angle?.. honestly?.. that actually makes more sense than having it parallel to the floor.

However, I imagine he plays "trad"... as in his left stick is held almost perpendicular to his lower arm... while the other hand is "timpani."

That's like the military drummers in the revolutionary/civil war, etc. You couldn't walk very well with a drum bouncing off yer legs. so they had the drum hanging to the left side... and THAT is why they held the drumstick of the left-hand in a different way... cuz of the weird angle of drum on left of body... which has to be why the drummer in this picture probably DID use the snare like that.

Thank you Rottensurfer
I finally can tune a drum set

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