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Freeland, David Ladies of Soul eBook

Ladies of Soul

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Imprint: University Press of Mississippi

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American soul music of the 1960s is one of the most creative and influential musical forms of the twentieth century. With its merging of gospel, R&B, country, and blues, soul music succeeded in crossing over from African American culture into the general pop culture. Soul became the byword for the styles, attitudes, and dreams of an entire era.

Female performers were responsible for some of the most enduring and powerful contributions to the genre. All too frequently overlooked by the star-making critics, seven of these women are profiled in this book -Maxine Brown, Ruby Johnson, Denise LaSalle, Bettye LaVette, Barbara Mason, Carla Thomas, and Timi Yuro.

Getting started during the heyday of soul, each of these talented women had recording contracts and gave live performances to appreciative audiences. Their careers can be tracked through the popularity of soul during the 1960s and its decline in the 1970s. With humor, candor, pride, and honest recognition that their careers did not surge into the mainstream and gain superstardom, they recount individual stories of how they struggled for success.

Their oral histories as told to David Freeland address compelling issues, including racism and sexism within the music industry. They discuss their grueling hardships on the road, their conflicts with male managers, and the cutthroat competition in the recording business. As each singer examines her career with the author, she reveals the dreams, hopes, and desires on which she has built her professional life. All seven face up to the career swings, from the highs of releasing the first hit to the frustrating lows when the momentum stops.

Although the obstacles to stardom are heartbreaking, these singers are committed to their art. With determination and style these seven have pressed onward with club appearances and recordings. They survive through their savvy mix of talent, hubris, and honesty about their lives and their music.

David Freeland is an oral historian and artistic adviser of a performance series at Columbia University's Miller Theatre. He has been a guest lecturer at Columbia's School for Social Work.

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Title of eBook: Ladies of Soul
Release Date: 12-21-2011
Publisher: University Press of Mississippi

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Parent title Ladies of Soul
Encrypted (DRM) Yes
SKU 9781604737271
File size 1817
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Ladies of Soul


Chapter One


Part One

The South


Peter Guralnick has written that "Soul music is Southern by definition if not by actual geography." While the soul sound eventually spread to points as distant and diverse as Philadelphia, New York, and Chicago, its historical and emotional core always lay in its heady admixture of three southern musical forms: blues, gospel, and country. But equally important is the notion that soul music—its sparse elegance and richness of imagery, the pain and feeling evident in its grooves—is somehow representative of something distinctly southern. Soul embodies the complexity and contradiction of southern life: adversity, joy, hardship, determination, and loss. The South is a place where things of great artistic worth seem forever in danger of slipping away, where fine singers like Ruby Johnson burst upon the scene to release a handful of classic records and then just as quickly fade out of sight, never to be heard from again. A desire to comprehend the sadness and mystery behind this evanescence, accompanied by the longing to keep such great voices from disappearing forever, insures that one will always return to the South to grasp an understanding of soul's true heart.


The Memphis Sound


It can be argued that no city has played a more important role in the development of American popular music than Memphis. Strategically located north of New Orleans on the banks of the Mississippi River, this unique city has contributed to the evolution of gospel, blues, rock & roll, jazz, and

...

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