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NGE >> The Arts >> Music >> Early Music >> Antebellum Music |
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Antebellum Music The musical life of antebellum Georgia is remarkable not so much for its originality—much of the music heard in Georgia was heard nationwide—but for its diversity and the extent to which it permeated the lives of the citizenry. In 1800 Georgians were still singing "Yankee Doodle" with nationalistic pride in the streets of Savannah. Sixty years later they were whistling "Dixie." The songs stand as musical bookends to the antebellum period and illustrate the monumental and wrenching change from the youthful cockiness of a union newly formed to the calamity of disunion. Between these touchstones, a great wealth of many types of music was heard in Georgia. Theater Theater was the primary source of entertainment for the populace in antebellum Georgia. Wealthy planters,
Melodramas, variety shows, and (less often) minstrel shows were presented at the largest theaters, including the Athenaeum in Savannah and the Thespian in Augusta. Concerts Concerts of vocal and instrumental music flourished in antebellum Georgia, particularly in Savannah, Augusta, and Columbus, though they were held in smaller towns like Macon and Milledgeville as well. Much of the music and many of the performers were heard in cities throughout the United States. The repertory was dominated by eighteenth- and nineteenth-century European composers, and the most-heralded concerts were those offered by traveling European performers. Piano and other instrumental works of such nineteenth-century European composers as Beethoven, Schubert, Chopin, Mendelssohn, Schumann, and Berlioz do not appear on the programs of concerts in Georgia throughout the entire antebellum period, though these composers were widely celebrated in Europe. The instrumental forces available in Georgia at the time precluded performances of symphonies by Beethoven and Berlioz and other large-scale concertos. Even the late symphonies of Haydn and Mozart were beyond the reach of the state's instrumental resources at that time. Such international figures as the violinists Ole Bornemann Bull and Henry Vieuxtemps, the pianists Henri Herz and Sigismond Thalberg, and the opera divas Marietta Piccolomini and Adelina Patti traveled the circuit from Boston, Massachusetts, down the Atlantic coast to Savannah in the 1840s and 1850s. In addition to traveling artists, local, mostly amateur performing musicians provided a stream of concerts and recitals for the urban populations. Some choirs offered oratorios and other choral music in the larger churches from time to time. The transplanted Englishman Henry Russell gave several concerts of his songs. His melodramatic performances of such songs as "Woodman! Spare That Tree!" and "The Old Arm Chair" were performed to frequently sold-out houses. The most famous musician in Augusta in the early antebellum era was James Hewitt, father of John Hill Hewitt, the composer of numerous widely popular songs. In general, antebellum Georgia experienced dramatic advances in the arena of concert life, from humble beginnings, when amateurs did their best to enrich the musical lives of audiences in the urban centers, to the arrival of more professional musicians like Hewitt and Lowell Mason in the 1820s, to the late decades of the era when many of the world's most prodigious musical talents graced the stages of performance halls in Savannah, Augusta, and Columbus. Sacred Music Two
Mason left his native Massachusetts in 1812 for Savannah. His years in Savannah set him on a lifelong course of involvement in the fields of sacred music and public music education. In addition to composing and arranging hymns, tunes, and harmonizations selected from a variety of sources over the course of his long career, Mason was editor or coeditor of numerous music publications. One of the most important and influential of Mason's publications was his very first one, which he compiled during his Savannah years: The Boston Handel and Haydn Society Collection of Church Music (1821-22). In his effort to provide "better music," he adapted the works of several European classical composers, including Mozart, Beethoven, Handel, and Haydn. Jesse
Significant among Mercer's accomplishments was the formation of his hymnbook, The Cluster of Spiritual Songs, Divine Hymns and Sacred Poems. Five editions of the book were published in the years 1810-35. With its folk-like melodies and simple, sometimes graphic texts, it appealed to the hardy, free-spirited backcountry folk. Although it was widely popular in the mid-nineteenth century, as its five editions suggest, most of its contents fell out of favor and in time were forgotten. The most durable of the several books of rural church music has proved to be The Sacred Harp, compiled by Benjamin Franklin White of Hamilton in 1844. The book has been revised several times, most recently in 1991. Because of its unusual shape (wider than it is tall), it has come to be called an oblong. It is unusual too because of its note heads, which are of different shapes (called shape notes). The book is not the only or the first of its kind; it belongs to a tradition that began in New England. In the
Suggested Reading Buell Cobb, The Sacred Harp: A Tradition and Its Music (reprint, Athens: University of Georgia Press, 1978). Kenneth Coleman, ed., A History of Georgia, 2d ed. (1977; reprint, Athens: University of Georgia Press, 1991). Frederick Law Olmsted, A Journey in the Back Country in the Winter of 1853-54, 2 vols. (New York: G. P. Putnam's Sons, 1907). Ron Byrnside, Agnes Scott College Published 3/3/2006 |
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