Judith Tick's magisterial Music in the USA is far and away the best and most wide-ranging anthology of source readings on the music of the United States. Tick significantly expands on the most comprehensive of the earlier anthologies of source readings on U.S. musical life—J. Heywood Alexander's valuable To Stretch Our Ears: A Documentary History of America's Music.Footnote 1 But over the past several decades, many other collections of source readings have also been published, covering a wide range of individual topics and genres, including music in the United States from the Civil War to World War I, American composers and songwriters, popular music and singers, country music, jazz, film music, and African American music.Footnote 2 Anthologies of readings about music and dance in Puerto Rico and Latin America have also appeared, indicating an inter-American interest in this type of publication.Footnote 3
Bringing together in one large volume excerpts from more than 200 primary sources spanning more than four and a half centuries, Tick has fashioned a history in documents that brims with fascinating details while offering a compelling narrative of music's development on the North American continent from the sixteenth century to the present. One of the leading scholars of music in the United States, Tick first made her mark as a musicologist in 1983 with American Women Composers before 1870, followed up in 1986 by Women Making Music, a pathbreaking collection of essays by several authors that still stands as a watershed work of feminist musicology.Footnote 4 That book's success lay not only in the quality of the essays themselves but also in the inspired editorial work of Tick and her co-editor Jane Bowers. Now, after a solo performance as author of the prize-winning biography Ruth Crawford Seeger: A Composer's Search for American Music, and after work as co-editor of two more works relating to Crawford Seeger and two books on Aaron Copland, Tick returns to the editorial challenge of corralling disparate voices into a unified whole.Footnote 5 Working with assistant editor Paul Beaudoin, she has assembled an anthology that illuminates the many facets of music in the United States.
Most of the book's 159 chapters consist of an excerpt from a single primary source, but several cite as many as four sources. Each chapter opens with a brief editor's introduction that contextualizes the source material with two or three paragraphs of quick, confident historical scene-setting. A source note follows each reading. When a chapter draws from more than one source, each usually has its own miniature introduction, clarifying the dialogue among sources, which do not always agree with each other, as in the chapter on responses to Dvořák's visit to the United States in the 1890s. The few instances in which these clarifications do not appear sometimes include missed opportunities, as in the excerpt from Nathaniel Gould's 1853 memoir that closes a chapter on William Billings; not all readers will intuit Gould's hostility toward the Yankee tunesmiths in general, an attitude that colors his recounting of second-hand “facts” about Billings. But these oversights are minor and few in number.
Tick organizes her chapters in seven chronological parts. The first, though the shortest, covers by far the longest time period, from 1540 to 1770. Its eight chapters contain first-hand accounts of Europeans’ encounters with indigenous peoples, the rise of psalmody, and social music in the British colonies. Particularly vivid is a sampling of newspaper notices announcing public concerts, advertising music lessons, and describing the musical abilities of runaway slaves. The second part, in contrast, covers a mere fifty years, from 1770 to 1830, embracing chapters on sacred and secular singing, broadsides and sheet music, and music making in Moravian settlements and Spanish missions. Part 3 spans another half century, from 1830 to 1880, chronicling the emergence of a popular music culture in the form of minstrelsy and parlor song, as well as shape-note hymnody, opera and symphony performances, institutions for music education, the music of African slaves and German immigrants, and songs of the Civil War. Part 4 reduces the time span to four decades, from 1880 to 1920, focusing on such colorful personalities as Amy Beach, Irving Berlin, Antonín Dvořák, Henry Higginson, Charles Ives, Edward MacDowell, and John Philip Sousa. Alongside the period sources appear some later commentaries, such as William Bolcom writing on ragtime in 1972 and a 1996 description of the Federal Cylinder Project; encountering these later voices among those from the turn of the century is at first disconcerting, but these items have their own value as historical documents pertaining to the later reception of earlier music, and their appearance here is preferable to delaying them for later sections or omitting them altogether.
Arriving at 1920, the book's divisions cover progressively shorter time spans: thirty years for Part 5 (which is also the longest in terms of number of chapters and page count), and twenty-five years each for Parts 6 and 7. That the period from 1920 to 1950 gets the most space seems only reasonable: here are primary sources on jazz, blues, gospel music, and the classic popular song; film and cartoon music; folk and country music; the experimentalists Henry Cowell and Ruth Crawford Seeger; and modernists such as Aaron Copland, Virgil Thomson, and Samuel Barber. The quarter century from 1950 to 1975 is hardly less rich, ranging from Chicago blues and rock 'n’ roll to urban folk and psychedelia; from modern jazz to electronic music and minimalism; and from Ella Fitzgerald and Leonard Bernstein to John Cage, George Crumb, and Elliott Carter. Finally, Part 7 covers the last quarter of the twentieth century with chapters on performance art, the jazz repertory movement, roots music, MTV, hip-hop, digital sampling, and Napster.
Tick's Music in the USA has a sufficiently clear organization and broad coverage to stand alone as a richly informative work of scholarship. Indeed, the introduction's reference to meeting “the demands of a textbook” (xxxvi) implies that it is intended to function that way. But source readings alone, even with the superlative critical apparatus found here, cannot supplant the historian's work of synthesis and analysis. Fortunately, Tick makes no such claim. Her book's subtitle, A Documentary Companion, suggests that it is designed to be read alongside a more standard narrative history of American music, and that is probably how most readers will find it to be of greatest use.
The value of source readings naturally lies in the reader's direct encounter with the voices of those who were there: composers, performers, impresarios, critics, and audience members. In Music in the USA these primary voices can be heard loud and clear. Musicians who speak for themselves in these pages include not only such likely figures as William Billings, Theodore Thomas, John Philip Sousa, and Milton Babbitt but also writers less frequently anthologized, such as Amy Beach, Scott Joplin, Janis Joplin, Jimi Hendrix, and Willie Colón. Also valuable are the observations of non-musicians as diverse as Benjamin Franklin, Walt Whitman, Frederick Douglass, Willa Cather, and Malcolm X. Especially interesting are the musicians who appear here as commentators on the music of others; thus we read Victor Herbert on Patrick Gilmore, Roger Sessions on Arnold Schoenberg, Copland on Igor Stravinsky, Arthur Berger on Copland, and John Zorn on Carl Stallings. With such a rich web of interconnections, it is no surprise that Tick, as she writes in her preface, came to “hear the sources talk to one another in imaginary conversations” (vii). Equipped with a robust index, her anthology allows the inquisitive reader to dip into its pages at any point and explore lines of inquiry that extend outward in all directions.