ECU Libraries Catalog

How shall we sing in a foreign land? : music of Irish Catholic immigrants in the antebellum United States / Robert R. Grimes.

Author/creator Grimes, Robert R.
Format Book and Print
Publication InfoNotre Dame, IN : University of Notre Dame Press, ©1996.
Descriptionxi, 237 pages : illustrations, music ; 24 cm.
Subject(s)
Series Irish in America
Irish in America. ^A665803
Contents The Irish immigrant and the Catholic parish -- Music in the press -- Change and adaptation in the 1830s, Boston -- Canonical music of ritual: art music and the immigrant -- Popular music of ritual: the tradition of vernacular song -- Music of popular ritual: song and parish organizations -- "We hung our harps on the willows."
Abstract In this important contribution to the history of American Catholicism and to neglected aspects of ethnomusicology, the author documents for the first time the musical repertory and practice of the urban Irish in America, focusing on Catholic parishes and affiliated organizations between 1830 and 1860. Catholic parishes became the religious, educational, and musical center of Irish immigrant life during this period when the Irish were the largest single immigrant group entering the United States. The author begins this fascinating study by providing an overview of the social and economic issues that isolated Irish immigrants from mainstream American life. He then analyzes the descriptions of musical life in antebellum America that appear in newspapers and journals of the time, suggesting that the Transcendental and Unitarian movements, Romanticism, and Nativism influenced reporting on the musical life of Irish Catholic immigrants. The book examines the musical changes that took place among the Catholic communities of Boston during the 1830s and then focuses on the twenty years immediately prior to the onset of the Civil War, examining three different aspects of the Irish immigrant musical repertory: canonical music of ritual, popular music of ritual, and music of popular ritual. The author concludes by examining the larger musical trends and preferences that the documented repertory displays, relating the musical life of the Irish immigrant to the wider American musical life of both the antebellum and post-Civil War years.
Local noteLittle-327335--305131026585$
Bibliography noteIncludes bibliographical references (pages 221-231) and index.
LCCN 95018803
ISBN0268011109 (pbk.)

Available Items

Library Location Call Number Status Item Actions
Music Closed Stacks - Ask at Circulation Desk ML3554 .G75 1996 ✔ Available Place Hold