Hello,
I have so many irons-in-the-fire as of late that I haven't even picked up my banjo in a couple weeks (grrr). Yet, I finally made time to take a ridiculously brief look into something that's been on my mind A LOT, but which I've yet to investigate more fully--musical literacy in the 19th century, especially as it might pertain to amateur and non-professional early banjo players and their ability to read music and, thus, transmit music and influence others. This is something I know a number of us have gone back-and-forth on in the past.
I started going through JStor today and came a across an article from 1983 (which means that there should definitely be much more available, hopefully) that was written by
Dr. Richard Crawford. Since I'm at the beginning of my literature review, I figured I'd share something with all of you that was meaningful to me.
Here's the information:
Musical Learning in Nineteenth-Century America
Author(s): Richard Crawford
Source: American Music, Vol. 1, No. 1 (Spring, 1983), pp. 1-11
Published by: University of Illinois Press
I'm not suggesting any conclusions, just a preliminary gesture toward finding a way to substantively think about what we are gleaning from our structural understanding of the banjo books and arranging and interpreting music from other sources. FOR ME, this article began to provoke some new thoughts (probably some thoughts some of you have already considered):
I liked how Crawford presents two ends of a spectrum in which people have looked at music learning and music making. He talks about about a "chip-off-the-old-block" school of looking at European musical influences in America vs. "Americans finding their own forms and styles of musical expression, distinct from those of European musicians." Instead of looking at things exclusively from either end of this spectrum, he suggests that much can be learned about music in America by looking at both and what's in between. He says,
"My hunch is that a study of musical learning and its dissemination in nineteenth-century America could make that period more accessible to scholarly understanding than it has been. ("Musical learning" here is taken to mean musical knowledge and/or skill voluntarily acquired.) The agenda for such a study would be wide-ranging. It might seek to define the various degrees and states of learning that specific American musicians sought and achieved; it might deal with modes of learning-self-study, group instruction, private study-always within the framework of the learner's and the teacher's methods and expectations; it might also trace the geographical spread of musical learning; and it might examine the resistance or indifference to formal musical learning found in many quarters, and all that that implies."
FOR ME, THIS ARTICLE SUGGESTS THAT THERE IS A REASONABLE WAY TO CONTEXTUALIZE certain aspects of early banjo music in a way that I had not considered previously. WHAT I WANT TO KNOW is how much of what Crawford posits here has been more fully explored since 1983 (and before, for that matter) and HOW CAN IT INFORM OUR COLLECTIVE APPROACH TO THE EARLY BANJO BOOKS AND RELATED PRIMARY SOURCE MATERIAL?
Hope to see you all soon,
Greg