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7 - A Fool for Beauty

Modernism and the Racial Semiotics of Crooning

from Part II - Aesthetic Movements

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 November 2023

Michael Borshuk
Affiliation:
Texas Tech University
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Summary

Crooning emerged as a style that contemporaneous audiences, black and white, read as “white”: it wasn’t until the early 1930s that African American crooners appeared on record. This delay is unusual in American music, where innovations in vernacular music ordinarily have African American origins. That delay is explicable, however, once we recover what crooning signified for black audiences and how that signified meant something different to white audiences. More interesting still is the fact that crooning continues to play a role in contemporary African American music, long after white audiences abandoned it as old-fashioned. The apotheosis of this pattern can be heard in the 1963 record, John Coltrane and Johnny Hartman. Trane then made his one record with a vocalist for fairly obvious reasons, but it is less clear why he chose to do so, not with a jazz singer, but a crooner.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2023

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