Javascript must be enabled to continue!
African American Covers of Country Music Before Ray Charles
View through CrossRef
Timothy Dodge explores African American interest in and participation in country music dates from the earliest days of the recording industry’s racial segregation of vernacular music into African American “race” and white “hillbilly” music.
Ray Charles’s then-controversial decision to record an entire album of country music covers in 1962 turned out to be a major success that, in effect, made it “legitimate” for African Americans to record country music. However, the author’s intensive research reveals that African Americans had been recording such music as far back as the early 1920s.
Previous scholarship has focused on the important influence of African American popular music, especially the blues, on country music. This study investigates the prevalence of country music first recorded by white artists subsequently recorded by African Americans artists from several musical genres including blues, R&B, gospel, jazz, and pop.
The author analyzes and discusses his findings to confirm that African American interest in and participation in country has been part of the music’s history from the beginning despite the segregation of such vernacular music by the early recording industry into the basic racial categories of “race” and “hillbilly,” the influence of which to some extent continues to inform contemporary 21st.-century understandings of country music.
Title: African American Covers of Country Music Before Ray Charles
Description:
Timothy Dodge explores African American interest in and participation in country music dates from the earliest days of the recording industry’s racial segregation of vernacular music into African American “race” and white “hillbilly” music.
Ray Charles’s then-controversial decision to record an entire album of country music covers in 1962 turned out to be a major success that, in effect, made it “legitimate” for African Americans to record country music.
However, the author’s intensive research reveals that African Americans had been recording such music as far back as the early 1920s.
Previous scholarship has focused on the important influence of African American popular music, especially the blues, on country music.
This study investigates the prevalence of country music first recorded by white artists subsequently recorded by African Americans artists from several musical genres including blues, R&B, gospel, jazz, and pop.
The author analyzes and discusses his findings to confirm that African American interest in and participation in country has been part of the music’s history from the beginning despite the segregation of such vernacular music by the early recording industry into the basic racial categories of “race” and “hillbilly,” the influence of which to some extent continues to inform contemporary 21st.
-century understandings of country music.
Related Results
Greenwood Encyclopedia of African American Folklore
Greenwood Encyclopedia of African American Folklore
African American culture draws upon a rich body of traditions from Africa, Latin America, and the South, and folklore is fundamental to the African American heritage. The first wor...
Seeing Voices
Seeing Voices
Abstract
We often think of music in terms of sounds intentionally organized into patterns, but music performed in signed languages poses considerable challenges to t...
African Americans and Popular Culture
African Americans and Popular Culture
The African American influence on popular culture is among the most sweeping and lasting this country has seen. Despite a history of institutionalized racism, black artists, entert...
Music Therapy Research
Music Therapy Research
Music therapy is an evidence-based profession. Music therapy research aims to provide information about outcomes that support music therapy practice including contributing to theor...
African American Folklore
African American Folklore
African American folklore dates back 240 years and has had a significant impact on American culture from the slavery period to the modern day. This encyclopedia provides accessible...
The New Red Negro
The New Red Negro
Abstract
The New Red Negro surveys African-American poetry from the onset of the Depression to the early days of the Cold War. It considers the relationship between ...
Rastafari and Reggae
Rastafari and Reggae
A combination dictionary and annotated discography, videography and bibliography, this sourcebook brings together listings of materials on the Rastafarian movement and reggae music...
Black Music Matters
Black Music Matters
Black Music Matters: Jazz and the Transformation of Music Studies is one of the first books to promote the reform of music studies with a centralized presence of jazz and black mus...

