Place an Order






Contact Us
 

Information for Media
Rights and Permissions


Frequently Asked Questions
Support the Press
Site Index

 

Write Me a Few of Your Lines

A Blues Reader

Book Jacket: "Write Me a Few of Your Lines" edited by S.C. Tracy

Edited by Steven C. Tracy

Honorable Mention, Book Award, Gustavus Myers Center for Study of Bigotry and Human Rights

A major anthology of writings on the blues

Among the signal achievements of African American culture is the style of music known as the blues, an art form evolved from southern black songs of the late nineteenth century. From the field hollers and steel-bodied guitar of its early days to the electric amplification of today's performers, the visceral power of the blues has long been celebrated for its creativity, spontaneity, and ingenuity. It has served as a wellspring for other forms of music, including gospel, jazz, rhythm and blues, soul, rock, and rap, and has exerted an influence on literature and the visual arts as well.

This book brings together some of the most significant writings about the blues published between 1911 and 1998. Included are selections by folklorists, anthropologists, sociologists, literary artists, musicians, critics, and aficionados. Thut the blues published between 1911 and 1998. Included are selections by folklorists, anthropologists, sociologists, literary artists, musicians, critics, and aficionados. The extraordinary appeal of the blues is reflected in the range of contributors to this volume, among them Howard W. Odum, Alan Lomax, Richard Alan Waterman, Langston Hughes, Paul Oliver, Sam Charters, Janheinz Jahn, James Baldwin, Leroi Jones, Charles Keil, Jeff Todd Titon, Houston Baker, Hazel Carby, and Angela Davis. 

From these various perspectives emerges a new understanding of the blues: its origins in African aesthetics; the impact of slavery and Reconstruction; its early folk manifestations; and the importance of religion, style, gender, audience, protest, and the record business in its development as an art form. Further context is provided by a comprehensive introduction, section overviews, and an extensive bibliography, discography, and videography of blues materials.

Steven C. Tracy is Associate Professor of Afro-American studies at the University of Massachusetts Amherst. His books include Langston Hughes and the Blues; Going to Cincinnati; and A Brush with the Blues, and he is coeditor of The Complete Works of Langston Hughes. An accomplished blues musician, he has opened for such performers as B. B. King, Muddy Waters, and Bo Diddley.

Music / African American Studies
624 pp., 7" x 10" format
LC 99-18332
$70.00s library cloth edition, ISBN 1-55849-205-4
$34.95s paper, ISBN 1-55849-206-2
1999
To order the paperback edition online, click on "ADD TO CART"
To order either edition by mail or fax, click here for an order form

about placing orders on our secure server
ADD TO CART  |    VIEW CART  |   CHECKOUT


Home | Browse by Subject | Browse by Author | Book Series | Electronic Books
About UMass Press | In the News | Placing Orders | Contact Us
Information for Authors | Information for Media | Rights & Permissions
Frequently Asked Questions | Site Index