Mastery and Masquerade in the Transatlantic Blues Revival

Focusing on two influential broadcasts staged for British television in 1963-4, this article traces transatlantic attitudes towards blues music in order to explore the constitutive relationship between race, spectatorship and performativity. During these programmes, I claim, a form of mythic history...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of the Royal Musical Association 2018-01, Vol.143 (1), p.173-210
Main Author: Cole, Ross
Format: Article
Language:eng
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Summary:Focusing on two influential broadcasts staged for British television in 1963-4, this article traces transatlantic attitudes towards blues music in order to explore the constitutive relationship between race, spectatorship and performativity. During these programmes, I claim, a form of mythic history is translated into racial nature. Ultimately, I argue that blues revivalism coerced African American musicians into assuming the mask of blackface minstrelsy - an active personification of difference driven by a lucrative fantasy on the terms of white demand. I ask why this imagery found such zealous adherents among post-war youth, situating their gaze within a longer tradition of colonialist display. Subaltern musicians caught within this regime were nonetheless able to 'speak' via sung performances that signified on the coordinates of their own marginalization. The challenge for musicology is thus to heed the relational syncretism arising from intercultural contact while acknowledging the lived experience of African American artists unable fully to evade the preordained mask of alterity.
ISSN:0269-0403
1471-6933