Soundscapes of Liberation

Soundscapes of Liberation

African American Music in Postwar France

  • Author: Moore, Celeste Day
  • Publisher: Duke University Press
  • Serie: Refiguring American Music
  • ISBN: 9781478013761
  • eISBN Pdf: 9781478021995
  • Place of publication:  Durham , United States
  • Year of digital publication: 2021
  • Month: August
  • Pages: 312
  • Language: English
In Soundscapes of Liberation, Celeste Day Moore traces the popularization of African American music in postwar France, where it signaled new forms of power and protest. Moore surveys a wide range of musical genres, soundscapes, and media: the US military's wartime records and radio programs; the French record industry's catalogs of blues, jazz, and R&B recordings; the translations of jazz memoirs; a provincial choir specializing in spirituals; and US State Department-produced radio programs that broadcast jazz and gospel across the French empire. In each of these contexts, individual intermediaries such as educators, producers, writers, and radio deejays imbued African American music with new meaning, value, and political power. Their work resonated among diverse Francophone audiences and transformed the lives and labor of many African American musicians, who found financial and personal success as well as discrimination in France. By showing how the popularity of African American music was intertwined with contemporary structures of racism and imperialism, Moore demonstrates this music's centrality to postwar France and the convergence of decolonization, the expanding globalized economy, the Cold War, and worldwide liberation movements.
  • Cover
  • Contents
  • Abbreviations
  • Acknowledgments
  • Introduction: Making Soundwaves
  • 1. Jazz En Liberté: The US Military and the Soundscape of Liberation
  • 2. Writing Black, Talking Back: Jazz and the Value of African American Identity
  • 3. Spinning Race: The French Record Industry and the Production of African American Music
  • 4. Speaking in Tongues: The Negro Spiritual and the Circuits of Black Internationalism
  • 5. The Voice of America: Radio, Race, and the Sounds of the Cold War
  • 6. Liberation Revisited: African American Music and the Postcolonial Soundscape
  • Epilogue: Sounding like a Revolution
  • Notes
  • Sources
  • Index
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