Book Description
From Booklist
This encyclopedia is devoted to covering the blues as a musical form
while also exploring its historical and cultural foundations. The 2,100
entries, written by 140 scholars and musicians, are arranged
alphabetically and range in length from brief definitions (a couple of
sentences) to long, analytical articles (5,000 words). Access is aided
by both an alphabetical and a thematic list of entries as well as a
comprehensive subject, people, and song-title index. There is also some
cross-referencing between related entries. Although the text is
occasionally supplemented with black-and-white photographs, the
aesthetic appeal would have been greater with more pictures,
particularly given the large number of biographical entries. The
majority of entries are indeed biographical, covering performers,
historians, songwriters, and label owners. Coverage is also heavily
weighted toward record labels ( Irma, Matchbox). Other, less-represented areas of coverage include musical styles, forms, techniques, and instruments ( Field hollers, Funk, Scales); specific regions ( Africa, Chicago); the historiography of the blues ( Libraries, Periodicals); cultural aspects of the blues ( Racial issues and the blues, Women and the blues); business aspects ( Chitlin Circuit, Marketing); and individual songs (" Mustang Sally, " " Stormy Monday").
Each entry ends with a bibliography of further reading, and each
biographical entry also has a discography. In the case of major
musicians, a list of selected recordings and reissues is also included.
References rely heavily on a short list of "frequently cited sources"
that wisely includes the All Music Guide to the Blues (Backbeat, 2003) and Robert Santelli's The Big Book of Blues: A Biographical Encyclopedia (Penguin, 1993).
Libraries with access to the above-referenced blues titles or the Grove Music Online database already offer basic coverage for mainstream questions about the blues, but this encyclopedia clearly fills a gap by offering multifaceted coverage in one place. The blues, when treated as an encyclopedic subject, often gets lumped together with jazz, folk, or gospel; it is rare to see it stand on its own. This encyclopedia is more comprehensive than the last attempt at a solely blues encyclopedia, the same-titled Encyclopedia of the Blues (University of Arkansas, 1997). Recommended for all music libraries and all libraries supporting blues scholars. Susan Gardner
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
Libraries with access to the above-referenced blues titles or the Grove Music Online database already offer basic coverage for mainstream questions about the blues, but this encyclopedia clearly fills a gap by offering multifaceted coverage in one place. The blues, when treated as an encyclopedic subject, often gets lumped together with jazz, folk, or gospel; it is rare to see it stand on its own. This encyclopedia is more comprehensive than the last attempt at a solely blues encyclopedia, the same-titled Encyclopedia of the Blues (University of Arkansas, 1997). Recommended for all music libraries and all libraries supporting blues scholars. Susan Gardner
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
Review
'An impressive list of contributors ... Besides being rich with biographical entries, this Encyclopedia
also includes entries for important record labels, instruments, styles,
geographic regions, aspects of the business, and additional topics that
have been lacking in other encyclopedic efforts ... This is a valuable
addition to the reference shelf of blues literature ... Highly
recommended.' - Choice
'This
two-volume A-to-Z set effectively categorizes the history of the blues. A
great benefit is that the book features blues artists from all time
periods, and the number of obscure blues artists listed in remarkable.
Essential for any library collecting the history of the blues.' -- Library Journal
'In this two-volume Encyclopedia,
Komara provides about 2100 entries, both brief and extensive, on the
blues, its history, culture, roots, contemporary styles, artists,
historians, songwriters, record labels, forms, characteristics,
instruments, songs, regions, historiography, music business, and related
forms. Discographies and bibliographiesfor each entry are included, as
well as a thematic list of entries and an index in each volume.' --Reference & Research Book News
"A
great deal of useful material is enclosed within the two sets of
covers. It spreads a broader and deeper net than the late Sheldon
Harris’s Blues Who’s Who (1979), going
beyond individual musicians, and it includes broader headings such as
regions/states; musical styles and techniques; instruments; points of
cultural interest; historiography; record labels; related art forms;
specific 'major' songs. These longer entries are quite good,
well-researched and well-written, worth knowing about and using." --Peter B. Lowry, Western Folklore, volume 68, nos. 2-3 (2009)
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Gale.Building Blocks of Matter (MacMillan Science Library) | Publisher: Routledge (October 28, 2005) | 1440 pages | PDF | Language: English
Gale.Building Blocks of Matter (MacMillan Science Library) | Publisher: Routledge (October 28, 2005) | 1440 pages | PDF | Language: English
info: http://www.amazon.com/Encyclopedia-Blues-Set-Edward-Komara/dp/0415926998
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