An edition of Doo-dah! (1997)

Doo~Dah!

Stephen Foster and the Rise of American Popular Culture

1st Da Capo Press Ed edition
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Last edited by Robin Lionheart
November 8, 2012 | History
An edition of Doo-dah! (1997)

Doo~Dah!

Stephen Foster and the Rise of American Popular Culture

1st Da Capo Press Ed edition
  • 1 Want to read

Stephen Foster was America's first great songwriter. The composer of classics such as "Oh! Susanna," "Jeanie with the Light Brown Hair," "Beautiful Dreamer," "My Old Kentucky Home," "Old Folks at Home" ("Way down upon the Swanee River"), and "Camptown Races" ("Doo-dah! Doo-dah!"), Foster virtually invented popular music as we recognize it to this day. Yet by his death in 1864, at the early age of thirty-seven, he was all but forgotten.

In the first biography of Foster in more than sixty years, Ken Emerson makes the man as well as his music come alive.

Foster's life was riddled with contradictions. Although his songs celebrated the rural South, he scarcely set foot there, spending most of his life in Pittsburgh, the smoky cradle of America's industrial revolution. He won fame by writing blackface minstrel songs, doing what white boys from Irving Berlin to Elvis Presley to Michael Bolton have been doing ever since: mimicking black music.

Yet the best of his songs transcended burnt-cork caricature and expressed a profound sympathy for African Americans that even Frederick Douglass applauded. Foster's yearning for respectability drove him to write genteel love songs, but these ballads were belied by his own broken marriage. Unable to equal the success of his earlier hits, he died a nearly penniless alcoholic on the Bowery.

Doo-dah! evokes not only Foster's songs but the wide-ranging music of his era, from high opera to low dives, and it looks ahead to the ragtime, rock, and rap of our own century. It's a sweeping panorama with a cast of characters that extends from Davy Crockett to Andrew Carnegie, from America's first great classical pianist, Louis Moreau Gottschalk, to its first great proponent of Afrocentrism, Martin Delany.

It was the era of industrialization; of steamboats, railroads, and the telegraph; of westward expansion and the California gold rush; and, of course, of slavery and the Civil War. Foster absorbed it all, and all of it infused his music.

After Emerson's exploration of the multiple meanings of Foster's first hit song - relating it to the tragic death of Foster's sister, the catastrophic triumph of technology, and the casual cruelty of racism as well as to the writings of Whitman, Melville, Thoreau, and Mark Twain - "Oh! Susanna" will never sound the same.

Publish Date
Publisher
Da Capo
Language
English
Pages
420

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Previews available in: English

Edition Availability
Cover of: Doo-dah!
Doo-dah!: Stephen Foster and the rise of American popular culture
1998, Da Capo Press
in English - 1st Da Capo Press ed.
Cover of: Doo~Dah!
Doo~Dah!: Stephen Foster and the Rise of American Popular Culture
22 August 1998, Da Capo
Paperback in English - 1st Da Capo Press Ed edition
Cover of: Doo-dah!
Doo-dah!: Stephen Foster and the rise of American popular culture
1997, Simon & Schuster
in English
Cover of: Doo-dah!
Doo-dah!: Stephen Foster and the Rise of American Popular Culture
May 7, 1997, Simon & Schuster
Hardcover in English

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Book Details


First Sentence

"On July 4, 1826, smoke smudged the green, leafy heights of Coal Hill, the steep ridge overlooking Pittsburgh from the opposite, southern bank of the muddy Monongahela River."

The Physical Object

Format
Paperback
Number of pages
420
Dimensions
8.8 x 6.1 x 0.9 inches
Weight
1.4 pounds

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL9503352M
ISBN 10
0306808528
ISBN 13
9780306808524
Google
Ousn0lWqeisC
Library Thing
479844
Goodreads
52503
52503

First Sentence

"On July 4, 1826, smoke smudged the green, leafy heights of Coal Hill, the steep ridge overlooking Pittsburgh from the opposite, southern bank of the muddy Monongahela River."

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Download catalog record: RDF / JSON / OPDS | Wikipedia citation
November 8, 2012 Edited by Robin Lionheart goog, gr
August 12, 2010 Edited by IdentifierBot added LibraryThing ID
April 24, 2010 Edited by Open Library Bot Fixed duplicate goodreads IDs.
April 16, 2010 Edited by bgimpertBot Added goodreads ID.
April 30, 2008 Created by an anonymous user Imported from amazon.com record