Duke Ellington (1899) birthday Apr 29 1899
https://youtu.be/1mne1rQ0rcw
https://youtu.be/jRelnWvKXw4
Volume 16, Issue 4, 1993, Pages 401–438
The United States of the blues: On the crossing of African and European cultures in the 20th century
- Available online 3 July 2002
Abstract
European-American
racism has used African America as a screen on which to project
repressed emotion, particularly sex and aggression. One aspect of this
projection is that whites are attracted to black music as a means of
expressing aspects of themselves they cannot adequately express through
music from European roots. Thus, twentieth-century expressive culture in
the United States has been dominated by an evolving socio-cultural
system in which blacks create musical forms and whites imitate them.
This happened first with jazz, and then with rock and roll. The sexual
revolution and the recent florescence of blacks in television and movies
suggests that white America has had some success in using black
American expressive forms to cure its affective ills. The emergence of
rap, from African America, and minimalism, from European America,
indicates that this system is at a point where it is ready to leave
Western expressive culture behind as history moves to the next
millennium.
Copyright © 1993 Published by Elsevier Inc.