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The Day Is So Long and the Wages So Small: Music on a Summer Island

$1510


Description

In the summer of 1958, jazz and blues historian Samuel Charters traveled with Ann Danberg to Andros, a remote island "on the wrong side of the wind" in the Bahamas. Living within a small local community descended from a handful of Bahamian slaves, they discovered how the unique historical fusion of disparate cultures on Andros, from Africa and Europe, had resulted in a wealth of traditional music that had stubbornly resisted the influx of modern styles. Combining rare travel and musical elements with Danberg's evocative photographs, Char-ters describes their search for a song so rich and startling in its resonance, they had to follow it to its source. "Just about the best 'what-I-did-on-my-summer-vacation' report ever written." --Booklist (starred review)



Author: Samuel Charters
Binding Type: Paperback
Publisher: Marion Boyars Publishers
Published: 11/01/2002
Pages: 176
Weight: 0.49lbs
Size: 8.51h x 5.36w x 0.46d
ISBN: 9780714530765

About the Author
Now in his seventies, Sam Charters is a jazz expert with over 11 books on jazz to his name. His 1959 book The Country Blues was the first serious examination of this seedbed of virtually all American music. He followed this book with The Legacy of the Blues and The Roots of the Blues (all Marion Boyars publications).

Specifications

  • Publication Date
  • Dimensions
    8.51 in, 5.36 in, 0.46 in
  • Pages
    176
  • Publisher
    Marion Boyars Publishers

Reviews (0)

The Day Is So Long and the Wages So Small: Music on a Summer Island by Charters, Samuel
Marion Boyars Publishers

The Day Is So Long and the Wages So Small: Music on a Summer Island

$1510

In the summer of 1958, jazz and blues historian Samuel Charters traveled with Ann Danberg to Andros, a remote island "on the wrong side of the wind" in the Bahamas. Living within a small local community descended from a handful of Bahamian slaves, they discovered how the unique historical fusion of disparate cultures on Andros, from Africa and Europe, had resulted in a wealth of traditional music that had stubbornly resisted the influx of modern styles. Combining rare travel and musical elements with Danberg's evocative photographs, Char-ters describes their search for a song so rich and startling in its resonance, they had to follow it to its source. "Just about the best 'what-I-did-on-my-summer-vacation' report ever written." --Booklist (starred review)



Author: Samuel Charters
Binding Type: Paperback
Publisher: Marion Boyars Publishers
Published: 11/01/2002
Pages: 176
Weight: 0.49lbs
Size: 8.51h x 5.36w x 0.46d
ISBN: 9780714530765

About the Author
Now in his seventies, Sam Charters is a jazz expert with over 11 books on jazz to his name. His 1959 book The Country Blues was the first serious examination of this seedbed of virtually all American music. He followed this book with The Legacy of the Blues and The Roots of the Blues (all Marion Boyars publications).
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