Scarecrow Press
Pages: 248
Trim: 5¾ x 9
978-0-8108-4477-3 • Hardback • November 2002 • $84.00 • (£65.00)
William Tortolano is College Organist and Professor Emeritus of Fine Arts/Music at Saint Michael's College, Vermont.
Chapter 1 Acknowledgments
Chapter 2 Acknowledgments to the Second Edition
Chapter 3 Introduction
Chapter 4 Introduction to the Second Edition
Chapter 5 1 Schooling and Early Career
Chapter 6 2 Hiawatha: Analysis and Musical Examples
Chapter 7 3 America and Success
Chapter 8 4 Twenty-four Negro Melodies
Chapter 9 5 America Again
Chapter 10 6 The Violin Concerto
Chapter 11 7 Coleridge-Taylor's Writings
Chapter 12 Appendix A: Catalog of Music by Coleridge-Taylor
Chapter 13 Appendix B: Articles by or about Coleridge-Taylor
Chapter 14 Appendix C: Discography of Coleridge-Taylor
Chapter 15 Bibliography
Chapter 16 Index
Chapter 17 About the Author
Dr. Tortolano...shares a wealth of information about this brilliant and important musical figure. Coleridge-Taylor and his music had a powerful influence on American culture at the turn of the 20th century. Dr. Tortolano in his insightful and detailedwork has beautifully illustrated how Coleridge-Taylor's influence moved and inspired so very many artists, writers, and musicians in the United States during his lifetime. W.E.B. Dubois, Booker T. Washington, Paul Laurence Dunbar, and Harry T. Burleigh are amongst many who are referenced in Dr. Tortolano's book as collaborators and admirers of this great musician...
— William E. Thomas, Director of Performance, Phillips Academy and Director of the Coleridge Music Society
Dr. Tortolano is to be warmly congratulated for his pioneering and painstaking research on Samuel Coleridge Taylor. His endeavours have helped arouse interest in the composer and encouraged Coleridge Taylor's deserved renaissance during recent decades. This revised second edition incorporates an extensive new bibliography, discography, an up-to-date catalogue of his music and an extensive list of 'arrangements.' It also usefully includes articles by or about Coleridge Taylor, some long out of print, others newly published. The author's enthusiasm for his subject in no way hinders objectively critical and perceptive commentary. There is much to enjoy in this fascinating study.
— Richard Marlow, Fellow, Organist and Director of Music, Trinity College
When Dr. Tortolano prepared the first edition of this engaging book, there was good reason to wonder why the music of Coleridge-Taylor was so rarely encountered after the great popularity it enjoyed in the first part of the 20th century. And now, a quarter-century later, there are more than 100 performances of his works on CD, and this versatile scholar has uncovered more information for this second edition, clearly indicating that this gifted Afro-British composer was Black America's first cultural hero in music, a man who paved the way for the Harlem Renaissance.
— Dominique-Rene de Lerma, Lawrence University
Tortolano has written a painstaking, critical biography of an almost-forgotten composer regarded by many as a father figure of the Harlem Renaissance, which will particularly interest students of music and black studies.
— Vermont Sunday Magazine
This book offers a fresh, engaging and satisfying view of the short life and compositional output of Anglo-Black composer, Samuel Coleridge-Taylor. It will, no doubt, contribute to a revitalized interest in the composer whose compositions have been regrettably overlooked for over three quarters of a century...the combination of history, bibliography, and discography should make this book a valuable resource for anyone who seeks to know more about the life and works of this gifted but too little-known composer.
— Uzee Brown, Jr., Professor and Chair, Dept of Music, Morehouse College
Dr. Tortolano...shares a wealth of information about this brilliant and important musical figure. Coleridge-Taylor and his music had a powerful influence on American culture at the turn of the 20th century.Dr. Tortolano in his insightful and detailed work has beautifully illustrated how Coleridge-Taylor's influence moved and inspired so very many artists, writers, and musicians in the United States during his lifetime. W.E.B. Dubois, Booker T. Washington, Paul Laurence Dunbar, and Harry T. Burleigh are amongst many who are referenced in Dr. Tortolano's book as collaborators and admirers of this great musician.
— William E. Thomas, Director of Performance, Phillips Academy and Director of the Coleridge Music Society