Blacksound: Making Race and Popular Music in the United States

Matthew D. Morrison

Book cover for Blacksound: Making Race and Popular Music in the United States
Book cover for Blacksound: Making Race and Popular Music in the United States
Book cover for Blacksound: Making Race and Popular Music in the United States
Book cover for Blacksound: Making Race and Popular Music in the United States

Blacksound: Making Race and Popular Music in the United States

Blacksound: Making Race and Popular Music in the United States

Matthew D. Morrison

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Description

A new concept for understanding the history of the American popular music industry.

Blacksound explores the sonic history of blackface minstrelsy and the racial foundations of American musical culture from the early 1800s through the turn of the twentieth century. With this namesake book, Matthew D. Morrison develops the concept of "Blacksound" to uncover how the popular music industry and popular entertainment in general in the United States arose out of slavery and blackface.

Blacksound as an idea is not the music or sounds produced by Black Americans but instead the material and fleeting remnants of their sounds and performances that have been co-opted and amalgamated into popular music. Morrison unpacks the relationship between performance, racial identity, and intellectual property to reveal how blackface minstrelsy scripts became absorbed into commercial entertainment through an unequal system of intellectual property and copyright laws. By introducing this foundational new concept in musicology, Blacksound highlights what is politically at stake--for creators and audiences alike--in revisiting the long history of American popular music.

About the Author

Matthew D. Morrison, a native of Charlotte, North Carolina, is a musicologist, violinist, and Associate Professor in the Clive Davis Institute of Recorded Music at New York University's Tisch School of the Arts.

Critical Reviews

"Morrison argues that today's popular music industry was built on the exploitation of slave song and blackface minstrelsy, resulting in an amalgamation of Black and other racialized (including white) musics that he theorizes as 'Blacksound.' Over five chapters, Morrison uses Blacksound to analyze sonic identity, performance, and property within a cultural and legal system under white control. . . . Essential reading."-- "CHOICE"

Publishing Information

Publisher: University of California Press
Pub date: 2024-03-05
Length: 328 pages

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