Anglo-American Popular Music Traditions Course at Athabasca University

Undergraduate Course> Athabasca University

Humanities (HUMN) 420
Anglo-American Popular Music Traditions (Revision 2)

Opened in Moodle March 27, 2008

Delivery mode: Individualized study.

Credits: 3 - Reading course - Humanities

Prerequisite: None. HUMN 285 or MUSI 285 and HUMN 286 or MUSI 286 are strongly recommended.

Precluded course: HUMN 420 is a cross-listed course—a course listed under 2 different disciplines—with MUSI 420. HUMN 420 may not be taken for credit by students who have obtained credit for HUMN 422 or MUSI 420.

Centre: Centre for Global and Social Analysis

HUMN 420 has a Challenge for Credit option

Overview

Anglo-American Popular Music Traditions examines the genesis and development of various folk and other popular music traditions in Britain and North America before World War I. Among the topics studied are English and Scottish ballads and folk lyrics, broadside ballads, industrial song, music hall, the transformation of Anglo-Celtic folk music when transplanted to North America, indigenous American folk music, Afro-American musical forms, spirituals, early blues, minstrel shows, and ragtime.

This course is designed for students in the last year of their degree program. It should normally be attempted only by students who have already completed six credits in the history of popular music (such as HUMN 285 and HUMN 286 or their equivalent at another university). It does not require more than a basic knowledge of music theory and terminology, but it is not an introductory course and it does demand a high level of reading and writing skills. Students are expected to make extensive use of library materials to complete the reading and written assignments.
Outline

Anglo-American Popular Music Traditions is divided into the following twelve units:

Unit 1: Old High Cultures? The Origins and Styles of Traditional Music

Unit 2: British Folk Music Traditions I: Ceremonial Songs and Narrative Ballads

Unit 3: British Folk Music Traditions II: Lyrical Songs and Later Ballads

Unit 4: North America and the Debt to Africa

Unit 5: Forms of Popular Music in America, 1620-1880

Unit 6: Parlour Music

Unit 7: Concert Music and the Music-Hall in Victorian England

Unit 8: Community Music in Victorian England

Unit 9: Politics, Patriotism, Social Comment, and Industrial Song

Unit 10: Africa and the Origins of the Blues

Unit 11: The Influence of the Blues in Popular Music

Unit 12: Ragtime

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