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  • Formaat: EPUB+DRM
  • Sari: American Made Music Series
  • Ilmumisaeg: 19-May-2025
  • Kirjastus: University Press of Mississippi
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781496857156

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The Texas Panhandles frontier days were fresh in memory when fiddler Eck Robertson (1887-1975) arrived. Cowboys still worked on ranches in the 1910s but barbed-wire fences abounded too. Robertson pursued a continually evolving strategy to profit from the feverish transformation of living history into marketable nostalgia. He adopted cowboy dress clothes for his first recording session in New York in 1922 and became known as a "Famous Cowboy Fiddler." His stubborn vision spawned traditional-yet-transformed Texas fiddling.

Robertson criticized other fiddlers because their playing was "just the same thing over and over." Robertson insisted that his fiddlinghis balance of cleaving to tradition while adding new contentwas the way of the future. Author Chris Goertzen traces Robertsons story through detailed biography, music transcriptions, and careful musical analysis. Though Robertson struggled to attain consistent financial success as a performer, he cultivated a varied repertoire which allowed him to balance offering the comfort of shared recollection with fresh excitement. His biggest hit, "Sally Goodin," was a game changer, both as played live and as the very first country music recording. With his undeniable talent and forward thinking, Robertson took a musical practice that already had a broad reach and a distinguished history in a direction that would guarantee a niche in modern American culture.

Arvustused

"Eck Robertson at the Crossroads of American Fiddling is a masterwork in the genre of vernacular American music." - Andrew Kuntz, contributor to Fiddler Magazine and editor of the Traditional Tune Archive Robertson was an extraordinarily influential figure in the world of American fiddlingindeed, in the larger picture of American music as a wholewho more than deserves a book of his own." - Paul F. Wells, director emeritus of the Center for Popular Music at Middle Tennessee State University

"Eck Robertson was both a great traditional fiddler and the inspiration for modern Texas contest fiddling. This is as complete, readable, and playable documentation of Eck Robertsons life and music as we are ever likely to have the pleasure to read. The answers are all here. Goertzen has done it again!" - Harry Bolick, fiddler and coauthor of Mississippi Fiddle Tunes and Songs from the 1930s and Fiddle Tunes from Mississippi: Commercial and Informal Recordings, 19202018

"Goertzens abundant research into family history, archives, and discussion of Eck Robertsons mentees and musical inheritors offers a gold mine of detail on numerous facets of Robertsons biography and kaleidoscopic career, ranging from 1800s minstrelsy to modern hot fiddling. The richness of this valuable documentation helps todays readers understand the historical and evolving cultural landscapes of America." - Howard Wight Marshall, author of Keep It Old-Time: Fiddle Music in Missouri from the 1960s Folk Music Revival to the Present

Chris Goertzen is professor emeritus of music history and world music at University of Southern Mississippi. His books include Fiddling for Norway: Revival and Identity; Southern Fiddlers and Fiddle Contests; Made in Mexico: Tradition, Tourism, and Political Ferment in Oaxaca; George P. Knauff's "Virginia Reels" and the History of American Fiddling; American Antebellum Fiddling; and Rugs, Guitars, and Fiddling: Intensification and the Rich Modern Lives of Traditional Crafts, the latter five published by University Press of Mississippi.