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Summary
Listen to America's music and hear the story
of freedom. It's the story of people in a New World places they
have left behind, and ideas they have brought with them. It is the
story of people who were already here, but whose world is remade.
The distinct cultural identities of all of these people are carried
in song -- both sacred and secular. Their music tracks the unique
history of many peoples reshaping each other into one incredibly
diverse and complex people -- Americans. Their music is the roots
of American music.
The music that emerges is known by names like
blues, country western, folk ballads, and gospel. The sounds are
as sweet as mountain air, and as sultry as a summer night in Mississippi
delta country. The instruments vary from fiddle to banjo to accordian
to guitar to drum. But a drum in the hands of an African
sounds different than one in the hands of a European. And neither
is the drumbeat of an American Indian. Yet all the rhythms merge,
as do the melodies and harmonies, producing completely new sounds
-- new music. The musics merge because this is America. New waves
of music ride ashore in the hearts and heads of new immigrants and
they create still new sounds from what they have brought with them
and what they find here. And nothing expresses the tensions -- or
the triumphs -- of this journey into democracy quite like the music
that it spawns.
The main beat of the exhibition is the on-going
cultural process that has made America the birthplace of more music
than any place on earth. The exhibition provides a fascinating,
inspiring, and toe-tapping listen to the American story of multi-cultural
exchange. The story is full of surprises about familiar songs, histories
of instruments, the roles of religion and technology, and the continuity
of musical roots from "Yankee Doodle Dandy" to the latest
hip hop CD.
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