Irving Berlin: Songs from the Melting Pot - The Formative Years, 1907-1914: Songs from the Melting Pot - The Formative Years, 1907-14 Book + PRICE WATCH * Amazon pricing is not included in price watch

Irving Berlin: Songs from the Melting Pot - The Formative Years, 1907-1914: Songs from the Melting Pot - The Formative Years, 1907-14 Book

Irving Berlin : Hardback : Oxford University Press Inc : 9780195071887 : 0195071883 : 27 Mar 1997 : Irving Berlin remains a central figure in American music, a lyricist/composer whose songs are still loved today. His first piece, "Marie from Sunny Italy"", was written in 1907 and was followed by classics such as ""God Bless America"", ""Blue Skies"", ""Always"", ""White Christmas"" and ""Easter Parade""."Read More

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  • Amazon Review

    According to the classic songwriter Jerome Ken, "Irving Berlin is American music." Some may differ about Berlin's absolute primacy, but without a doubt this child of New York's Lower East Side is responsible for an astonishing number of American war-horses, including "God Bless America," "Blue Skies," "Always," "White Christmas," and "Easter Parade". In this study of Berlin's earliest works, musicologist Charles Hamm redefines the composer's relationship to the melting-pot culture of the Lower East Side. As Hamm points out, Berlin began by writing for the vaudeville stage, which dictated an outpouring of cornball pieces in Italian, Irish, German, and African American dialect. This would suggest an impulse for assimilation. Yet he argues that Berlin, like a host of other Tin Pan Alley stalwarts, never truly surrendered to the melting pot. His own culture never disappeared in a broth of American homogeneity. Hamm's book is an intriguing lesson in artistic formation.

  • Product Description

    Irving Berlin remains a central figure in American music, a lyricist/composer whose songs are loved all over the world. His first piece, "Marie from Sunny Italy," was written in 1907, and his "Alexander's Ragtime Band" attracted more public and media attention than any other song of its decade. In later years Berlin wrote such classics as "God Bless America," "Blue Skies," "Always," "Cheek to Cheek," and the holiday favorites "White Christmas" and "Easter Parade." Jerome Kern, his fellow songwriter, commented that "Irving Berlin is American music."

    In Irving Berlin: The Formative Years, Charles Hamm traces the early years of this most famous and distinctive American songwriter. Beginning with Berlin's immigrant roots--he came to New York in 1893 from Russia--Hamm shows how the young Berlin quickly revealed the talent for music and lyrics that was to mark his entire career. Berlin first wrote for the vaudeville stage, turning out songs that drew on the various ethnic cultures of the city. These pieces, with their Jewish, Italian, German, Irish, and Black protagonists singing in appropriate dialects, reflected the urban mix of New York's melting pot. Berlin drew on various musical styles, especially ragtime, for such songs as "Alexander's Ragtime Band," and Hamm devotes an entire chapter to the song and its success. The book also details Berlin's early efforts to write for the Broadway musical stage, culminating in 1914 with his first musical comedy, Watch Your Step, featuring the popular dance team, Vernon and Irene Castle. A great hit on Broadway and in London, the show was a key piece in the Americanization of the musical comedy. Blessed with prodigious ambition and energy, Berlin wrote at least 4 or 5 new songs a week, many of which were discarded. He nevertheless published 190 songs between 1907 and 1914, an astonishing number considering that when Berlin arrived in America, he knew not a single word of English. As one writer reported, "there is scarcely a waking moment when Berlin is not engaged either in teaching his songs to a vaudeville player, or composing new ones."

    Early in his career, Irving Berlin brilliantly exploited the musical trends and influences of the day. Hamm shows how Berlin emerged from the vital and complex social and cultural scene of New York to begin his rise as America's foremost songwriter.

  • 0195071883
  • 9780195071887
  • Charles Hamm
  • 27 March 1997
  • OUP USA
  • Hardcover (Book)
  • 304
  • First Edition
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