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Sonny in the Dark: Jazzing the Blues Spirit and the Gospel Truth in James Baldwin’s “Sonny’s Blues”
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The webs of musical connection are essential to the harmony and cohesion of James
Baldwin’s “Sonny’s Blues.” As a result, we must explore the spectrum of musical references
Baldwin makes to unveil their delicate conjunctions. It is vital to probe the traditions
of African-American music—Spirituals, Blues, Jazz, and Pop—to get a more comprehensive
sense of how Baldwin makes use of music from the sacred and secular continuum in the
African-American community. Looking more closely at the variety of African-American
musical genres to which Baldwin refers in the story, we can discern even more the nuances
of unity that Baldwin creates in his story through musical allusions, and shed greater
light on Baldwin’s exploration of the complexities of African-American life and music, all
of which have as their core elements of human isolation, loneliness, and despair
ameliorated by artistic expression, hope, and the search for familial ties. Through
musical intertextuality, Baldwin demonstrates not only how closely related seemingly
disparate (in the Western tradition) musical genres are, but also shows that the elements
of the community that these genres flow from and represent are much more in
synchronization than they sometimes seem or are allowed to be. To realize kinship across
familial (Creole), socio-economic (the brother), and most importantly for this paper
appreciation and meanings of musical genres advances to Sonny the communal cup of
trembling that is both a mode and an instance of envisioning and treating music in its
unifying terms, seeing how they coalesce through a holistic vision.
Title: Sonny in the Dark: Jazzing the Blues Spirit and the Gospel Truth in James Baldwin’s “Sonny’s Blues”
Description:
The webs of musical connection are essential to the harmony and cohesion of James
Baldwin’s “Sonny’s Blues.
” As a result, we must explore the spectrum of musical references
Baldwin makes to unveil their delicate conjunctions.
It is vital to probe the traditions
of African-American music—Spirituals, Blues, Jazz, and Pop—to get a more comprehensive
sense of how Baldwin makes use of music from the sacred and secular continuum in the
African-American community.
Looking more closely at the variety of African-American
musical genres to which Baldwin refers in the story, we can discern even more the nuances
of unity that Baldwin creates in his story through musical allusions, and shed greater
light on Baldwin’s exploration of the complexities of African-American life and music, all
of which have as their core elements of human isolation, loneliness, and despair
ameliorated by artistic expression, hope, and the search for familial ties.
Through
musical intertextuality, Baldwin demonstrates not only how closely related seemingly
disparate (in the Western tradition) musical genres are, but also shows that the elements
of the community that these genres flow from and represent are much more in
synchronization than they sometimes seem or are allowed to be.
To realize kinship across
familial (Creole), socio-economic (the brother), and most importantly for this paper
appreciation and meanings of musical genres advances to Sonny the communal cup of
trembling that is both a mode and an instance of envisioning and treating music in its
unifying terms, seeing how they coalesce through a holistic vision.
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