The Black Musician and the White City

Race and Music in Chicago, 1900-1967

Subjects: African American Studies, Music, American Studies, History, American History, Urban Studies, Sociology, African American History, Michigan and the Great Lakes
Hardcover : 9780472119172, 216 pages, 2 B&W illustrations, 8 maps, 4 figures, 6 x 9, June 2014
Open Access : 9780472900961, 216 pages, 2 B&W illustrations, 8 maps, 4 figures, 6 x 9, May 2018

This open access version made available with the support of libraries participating in Knowledge Unlatched.
See expanded detail +

An exploration of the history of African American musicians in Chicago during the mid-20th century

Look Inside

Description

Amy Absher’s The Black Musician and the White City tells the story of African American musicians in Chicago during the mid-twentieth century. While depicting the segregated city before World War II, Absher traces the migration of black musicians, both men and women and both classical and vernacular performers, from the American South to Chicago during the 1930s to 1950s.

Absher’s work diverges from existing studies in three ways: First, she takes the history beyond the study of jazz and blues by examining the significant role that classically trained black musicians played in building the Chicago South Side community. By acknowledging the presence and importance of classical musicians, Absher argues that black migrants in Chicago had diverse education and economic backgrounds but found common cause in the city’s music community. Second, Absher brings numerous maps to the history, illustrating the relationship between Chicago’s physical lines of segregation and the geography of black music in the city over the years. Third, Absher’s use of archival sources is both extensive and original, drawing on manuscript and oral history collections at the Center for Black Music Research in Chicago, Columbia University, Rutgers’s Institute of Jazz Studies, and Tulane’s Hogan Jazz Archive. By approaching the Chicago black musical community from these previously untapped angles, Absher offers a history that goes beyond the retelling of the achievements of the famous musicians by discussing musicians as a group. In The Black Musician and the White City, black musicians are the leading actors, thinkers, organizers, and critics of their own story.

Amy Absher is a SAGES Fellow at Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland, Ohio, where she teaches history and writing.

“Absher is at her best and most useful on the racial history of Chicago’s musicians unions… Recommended .”
--Choice

- F.J. Hay

"Absher impressively incoproates these...fascinating stories into a lager framework that clearly demonstrates the role of segregation in the lives of Chicago's Black musicians, and her study represents a valuable addition to the historiography on urbanization, segregation, and cultural history in the early to mid-twentieth century."
--Dale Moler, Michigan Historical Review

- Dale Moler

"Absher’s book adds significantly to the historiography of black musicians in Chicago and nationally."
--Tony Gass, Oxford University Press Journal of American History

- Tony Gass

"...a lively, well-written overview of a perennially fascinating subject. The author convincingly demonstrates how black musical lives mattered then as they do now, not only for the aesthetic delights they produce and the pleasure and inspiration they bring, but also for what African American musicians have contributed to Chicago and the nation as members of larger communities and collectives striving to prevail despite challenging conditions of discrimination and limited opportunity."
--Derek W. Vaillant, American Historical Review

- Derek W. Vaillant

"This is an important addition to the growing shelf of books on the musical contributions of Chicago’s African American community."
--Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society

- perry duis