Amazing Grace A tribute to Aretha Franklin

Amazing Grace   A tribute to Aretha Franklin
Author: Alessandro Bonini,Emanuele Tamagnini
Publsiher: Lulu.com
Total Pages: 158
Release: 2024
Genre: Electronic Book
ISBN: 9780244411831

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Aretha Franklin s Amazing Grace

Aretha Franklin s Amazing Grace
Author: Aaron Cohen
Publsiher: Bloomsbury Publishing USA
Total Pages: 177
Release: 2011-10-06
Genre: Music
ISBN: 9781441112088

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This is a fascinating and thoroughly researched exploration of the best-selling gospel album of all time. For two days in January 1972, Aretha Franklin sang at the New Temple Missionary Baptist Church in Los Angeles while tape recorders and film cameras rolled. Everyone there knew the event had the potential to be historic: five years after ascending to soul royalty and commercial success, Franklin was publicly returning to her religious roots. Her influential minister father stood by her on the pulpit. Her mentor, Clara Ward, sat in the pews. Franklin responded to the occasion with the performance of her life and the resulting double album became a multi-million seller - even without any trademark hit singles. But that was just one part of the story. Franklin's warm inimitable voice, virtuoso jazz-soul instrumental group and Rev. James Cleveland's inventive choral arrangements transformed the course of gospel. Through new interviews, musical and theological analyses as well as archival discoveries, this book sets the scene, traces the recording's traditional origins and pop infusions and describes the album's enduring impact.

Aretha Franklin

Aretha Franklin
Author: Aaron Cohen
Publsiher: Unknown
Total Pages: 143
Release: 2020-02-20
Genre: Electronic Book
ISBN: 2377970850

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A Tribute to Woody Guthrie and Leadbelly Teacher s Guide

A Tribute to Woody Guthrie and Leadbelly  Teacher s Guide
Author: Will Schmid
Publsiher: R&L Education
Total Pages: 68
Release: 1990
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 0940796856

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Provides notes on objectives and strategies, ideas for student activities, and all the pages contained in the student textbook, not including the music, as well worksheets and quizzes for students.

A Tribute to Woody Guthrie Leadbelly

A Tribute to Woody Guthrie   Leadbelly
Author: Will Schmid
Publsiher: R&L Education
Total Pages: 52
Release: 1991
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 0940796848

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Includes a look at the social realities faced by Woody and Leadbelly, and at the music they used to bring about change; photographs and biographies of the musicians featured on the Grammy award-winning A Vision Shared; fascinating, easy-to-follow activities and projects; the music and words for nineteen songs by Woody and Leadbelly.

Mahalia Jackson and the Black Gospel Field

Mahalia Jackson and the Black Gospel Field
Author: Mark Burford
Publsiher: Oxford University Press, USA
Total Pages: 497
Release: 2019
Genre: African American gospel singers
ISBN: 9780190634902

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Nearly a half century after her death in 1972, Mahalia Jackson remains the most esteemed figure in black gospel music history. Born in the backstreets of New Orleans in 1911, Jackson during the Great Depression joined the Great Migration to Chicago, where she became an highly regarded church singer and, by the mid-fifties, a coveted recording artist for Apollo and Columbia Records, lauded as the "World's Greatest Gospel Singer." This "Louisiana Cinderella" narrative of Jackson's career during the decade following World War II carried important meanings for African Americans, though it remains a story half told. Jackson was gospel's first multi-mediated artist, with a nationally broadcast radio program, a Chicago-based television show, and early recordings that introduced straight-out-of-the-church black gospel to American and European audiences while also tapping the vogue for religious pop in the early Cold War. In some ways, Jackson's successes made her an exceptional case, though she is perhaps best understood as part of broader developments in the black gospel field. Built upon foundations laid by pioneering Chicago organizers in the 1930s, black gospel singing, with Jackson as its most visible representative, began to circulate in novel ways as a form of popular culture in the 1940s and 1950s, its practitioners accruing prestige not only through devout integrity but also from their charismatic artistry, public recognition, and pop-cultural cachet. These years also saw shifting strategies in the black freedom struggle that gave new cultural-political significance to African American vernacular culture. The first book on Jackson in 25 years, Mahalia Jackson and the Black Gospel Field draws on a trove of previously unexamined archival sources that illuminate Jackson's childhood in New Orleans and her negotiation of parallel careers as a singing Baptist evangelist and a mass media entertainer, documenting the unfolding material and symbolic influence of Jackson and black gospel music in postwar American society.

The Life of Aretha Franklin

The Life of Aretha Franklin
Author: Silvia Anne Sheafer
Publsiher: Enslow Publishing, LLC
Total Pages: 98
Release: 2014-12-15
Genre: Juvenile Nonfiction
ISBN: 9780766062269

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Author Silvia Anne Sheafer relates the entertaining life and career of this legend of soul music, from her childhood in Detroit, through her struggles with personal heartache and racial prejudice, to her continued success as a major force in the music industry. Crowned the "Queen of Soul," Aretha Franklin has won fifteen Grammy Awards, and has also received the Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award.

Soul Covers

Soul Covers
Author: Michael Awkward
Publsiher: Duke University Press
Total Pages: 276
Release: 2007-05-04
Genre: Music
ISBN: 9780822389491

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Soul Covers is an engaging look at how three very different rhythm and blues performers—Aretha Franklin, Al Green, and Phoebe Snow—used cover songs to negotiate questions of artistic, racial, and personal authenticity. Through close readings of song lyrics and the performers’ statements about their lives and work, the literary critic Michael Awkward traces how Franklin, Green, and Snow crafted their own musical identities partly by taking up songs associated with artists such as Dinah Washington, Hank Williams, Willie Nelson, George Gershwin, Billie Holiday, and the Supremes. Awkward sees Franklin’s early album Unforgettable: A Tribute to Dinah Washington, released shortly after Washington’s death in 1964, as an attempt by a struggling young singer to replace her idol as the acknowledged queen of the black female vocal tradition. He contends that Green’s album Call Me (1973) reveals the performer’s attempt to achieve formal coherence by uniting seemingly irreconcilable aspects of his personal history, including his career in popular music and his religious yearnings, as well as his sense of himself as both a cosmopolitan black artist and a forlorn country boy. Turning to Snow’s album Second Childhood (1976), Awkward suggests that through covers of blues and soul songs, Snow, a white Jewish woman from New York, explored what it means for non-black enthusiasts to perform works considered by many to be black cultural productions. The only book-length examination of the role of remakes in American popular music, Soul Covers is itself a refreshing new take on the lives and work of three established soul artists.