Never without a Song: The Years and Songs of Jennie Devlin, 1865-1952 (Music in American Life)

by Katharine D. Newman

Other authorsAlan Lomax (Foreword)
Paperback, 1995

Publication

University of Illinois Press (1995), Edition: First Edition, 328 pages

Description

Never Without a Song focuses on the centrality of folksong in the life of Jennie Devlin, a woman who worked for fourteen years as a "bound-out girl" along the New York-Pennsylvania border and later lived in Philadelphia and Gloucester, New Jersey. Katharine Newman met Devlin in 1936 and compiled information about the older woman's life and music. Half a century later, Newman returned to her collection in retirement-with her own perspective of age.  The result is a unique biography of an American working-class woman, told with depth and candor. It includes "I Wish I'd Been Born a Boy," "James Bird," "Martha Decker," "My Grandmother's Old Armchair," and other pieces, both British and American, most with tunes.  

Language

Physical description

328 p.; 9 inches

ISBN

0252063716 / 9780252063718
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