Hidden Harmonies: Women and Music in Popular Entertainment
Hidden Harmonies: Women and Music in Popular Entertainment
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Abstract
For every star, there are hundreds of less-recognized women who contribute to musical communities in ways that influence musical aesthetics and expand opportunities available to women.This collection focuses not on those whose names are the best known nor on the most celebrated but on the many women who had power in collective, subversive, or other ways hidden from standard histories. Each chapter examines the contributions of a woman or group of women whose work in music led to developments within the field, and how our understanding of such contributions alters the traditional narratives associated with women and music in popular entertainment. The contributing authors have uncovered striking and often revelatory materials and information that rewrite the histories of women in music before the onset of Second Wave Feminism in the late 1960s. We have ordered our chapters chronologically, although there is some overlap between several essays. Our subjects also fall into one or more of three categories: serving as arbiters of taste; expanding or participating in opportunities often gendered as male; and contributing to or strengthening community.
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Front Matter
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Introduction
Paula J. Bishop andKendra Preston Leonard
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1
“She Takes up Music as a Profession”: Women Organists in the Nineteenth-Century South
Candace Bailey
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2
Agnes Woodward’s Whistling School and White Women’s Musical Labor in the United States
Maribeth Clark
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3
Women’s Compiled Scores in Early Film Music
Kendra Preston Leonard
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4
Listen to the “Poor Girl Story”: (Re)Considering Southern Femininity in Early Old-Time Music
April L. Prince
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5
Housewives’ Choice?: Vera Lynn as Lady DJ in the 1950s and 1960s
Christina Baade
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6
“A Belly Full of Spaghetti and Ears Full of Song”: Felice Bryant and Country Music Songwriting in the 1950s
Paula J. Bishop
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7
Goldie and the Gingerbreads: A Case Study of the All-Girl Band in 1960s Rock ’n’ Roll
Brittany Greening
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8
Song and Sentiment in an Appalachian Woman’s Private Lyric Notebook
Travis D. Stimeling
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9
Finding Hidden Women in the Feminist Narrative: Candie Carawan and Music in the Civil Rights Movement
Kristen M. Turner
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10
Come Go with Me to Freedom Land: Black Women Musicians and the Unexplored Sonic History of the March on Washington
Tammy Kernodle
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End Matter
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