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Wichita Blues: Music in the African American Community

Contributor(s): O'Connor, Patrick Joseph (Author), Evans, David (Foreword by)

ISBN: 9781496853004

Publisher: University Press of Mississippi

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Pub Date: August 30, 2024

Dewey: 781.64309781

LCCN: 2024013156

Lexile Code: 0000

Features: Bibliography, Index

Target Age Group: NA to NA

Physical Info: 0.64" H x 9.21" L x 6.14" W ( 0.96 lbs) 282 pages

Series: American Made Music

Descriptions, Reviews, etc.

Description: An examination and celebration of the distinct sound of Wichita's regional blues tradition

Brief description: Patrick Joseph O'Connor has been an active blues musician and researcher since the late 1960s. He is a former lecturer in the blues for Wichita State University's Department of Anthropology, and his research has been published in several academic journals.

Review Quotes: Of the regional centers for African American blues music, Wichita (in south central Kansas) is not as familiar as Memphis, Houston, or even Kansas City to the northeast, although it was home to a vibrant community of blues performers. That raises the question of the creative, historical, and social context of the city. O'Connor, who is a performer as well as a researcher, fills out the story of the city's blues legacy. His contribution to American musical studies is in recording the experiences of musicians active in the city from the 1920s to the 1960s. O'Connor introduces the transcripts of interviews with the historical an musical contexts of 19th-century migration from Oklahoma to Kansas of African Americans in the quest for freedom and opportunity. The narratives of the musicians take center stage, but O'Connor provides a summative concluding chapter in which he analyzes the patters of life as well as lore apparent in this community of blues performers and their audiences. It opens the door to further analysis of the effects of regional migration and folk-popular influences on African American music nationally.--S. J. Bronner "CHOICE"

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