Blues
Instructions?: Answer four? of the following five essay questions using NO MORE than
350 words (2-5 paragraphs) for each question?. You must use at least one specific
song example in each essay. ? Make sure to identify any assigned readings you use by
author name and title. If you quote from a reading, provide the page number. Identify at
the start of each essay the number of the question you are addressing.
Use complete sentences with a clear and direct style, correct grammar and spelling,
and terms from the course where appropriate. Format should be double-spaced, using a
12-point common font (Arial, Times, etc.). Submit your response as a Word document
(export to Word if you use Pages or another program).
Submit the document both to the Canvas assignment AND? to VeraCite (also located on
the Canvas assignments tab).
Questions (answer 4 of the following 5 questions):
1. Why is it important to Elijah Wald’s thesis to argue that "blues" in the 1920s meant a
style of popular music to audiences, rather than a style of folk or art music.
2. The Blues Queens of the 1920s represent a significant evolution of black
performance style beyond black-face minstrelsy. However, they also still present a
racially stereotyped or confining set of performance practices. Discuss this dichotomy.
3. The 1920s saw the emergence of two broad styles of blues music - one that
reflected the experience of rural blacks in the south, and the other reflecting a growing
population of urban, middle-class blacks in the industrial north. Using one specific
example from each, and referring to the Wald and Palmer readings, discuss the
difference in musical style represented by these two genres (southern rural vs. northern
urban).
4. Using the first half? (thru p. 49) of Susan McClary’s “Thinking Blues” article as a
framework, discuss the way in which the musical conventions of the blues serve as
expressive devices in W.C. Handy’s song “St. Louis Blues” (and, in particular Bessie
Smith’s performance of it).
5. The musical conventions of the blues are typically thought of as useful for expressing
the harsh realities of poverty and racial oppression in the early 20th century. However,
those same conventions have also been used to express the power of religious faith in
black gospel music. Discuss how blues musical style functions in early gospel music.