HomeBiography & MemoirsBamboula!: The Life and Times of Louis Moreau Gottschalk
Skip to product information
1 of 1

Bamboula!: The Life and Times of Louis Moreau Gottschalk

HardcoverJanuary 5, 1995
Regular price $33.00 USD
Regular price Sale price $33.00 USD
Sale Sold out
Shipping calculated at checkout.
Free Shipping
Secure Checkout
Quality Guaranteed
New In Stock
ISBN-13: 9780195072372 ISBN-10: 0195072375
Publisher
Oxford University Press, USA
Binding
Hardcover
Published
January 5, 1995
Weight
2.3 lbs
Dimensions
24.10×4.70×16.40 cm

About this book

Bamboula!: The Life and Times of Louis Moreau Gottschalk by Starr, S. Frederick. Hardcover edition. ISBN: 9780195072372.

Louis Moreau Gottschalk was an American original. A spellbinding piano virtuoso, he was Americas first internationally recognized composer, whose "classical" works received accolades from Hector Berlioz and Victor Hugo, and whose arch-romantic melodies became for Americans the standard expressions of common emotions. Perhaps most important, his immensely popular Louisiana and Caribbean pieces--such as Danza, Pasquinade, or Bamboula--anticipated ragtime by fifty years. Indeed, the colorful and exotic textures of Gottschalks music establish him at the head of what is today the mainstream of popular American culture. In Bamboula!, S. Frederick Starr presents an authoritatively researched, engagingly written biography of Americas first authentic musical voice. Starr paints for us a striking portrait of Gottschalks childhood in 1830s New Orleans, a city madly devoted to music, where opera companies, music halls, fiddlers and banjo-pickers, church choirs, and Army bands all contributed to what Starr calls "the most stunning manifestation of Jacksonian democracy in the realm of culture to be found anywhere in America." We meet Gottschalks African-American nurse Sally, who regaled him with the creole songs, legends, and lore of her native Haiti, which would inform some of his finest music. We travel with Gottschalk to Paris, where he was a sensation, playing in fashionable salons for the likes of Lamartine, Gautier, and Dumas; and we join his flight from the Revolution of 1848 to a town north of Paris, where he composed his first great works--Bamboula, La Savane, Le Bananier, and Le Mancenillier--all published over the name "Gottschalk of Louisiana." Starr describes Gottschalks successful return to New York City in the early 1850s, where he enjoyed a degree of popularity never before accorded to an American performer or composer, becoming our first homegrown concert idol. But Starr also examines the life-long struggle between the Catholic Gottschalk and earnest Protestant champions of "serious" music, a battle that pitted the austere values of northern Europe against the brighter sensibilities of Paris, Louisiana, and the West Indies. Based on extensive research, including hundreds of letters written by Gottschalk (in French, Spanish, and English) which are used here for the first time, Bamboula! illuminates an exotic but tragic life, as well as one of the most democratic phases of American cultural life, a world of bustling impresarios and Americas first bohemian circle. A major biography in every sense, it will help reestablish Gottschalks place in American musical history.