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قراءة كتاب Indian Story and Song, from North America
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Transcriber's Notes
This e-book contains passages in Native American dialects; hyphenation and accents have been preserved as they appear in the original. Obvious printer errors in English passages have been corrected, in particular the inconsistent use of "rythm" for "rhythm."
Midi, PDF, and MusicXML files have been provided for the songs in this e-book. To hear a song, click on the [Listen] link. To view a song in sheet-music form, click on the [PDF] link. To view MusicXML code for a song, click on the [MusicXML] link. All lyrics are set forth in text below the music images. Obvious errors in the notation have been corrected.
Full-page music illustrations have been slightly moved so as not to interrupt the flow of the text. Some page numbers are missing as a result. Page numbers in the List of Songs have been retained as they appear in the original, but the links point to the actual locations of the songs in this e-book.
INDIAN
STORY AND SONG
FROM NORTH AMERICA
By
ALICE C. FLETCHER
Holder of the Thaw Fellowship
Peabody Museum Harvard University
Boston
Small Maynard & Company
Publishers
Copyright, 1900,
By Alice C. Fletcher
Entered at Stationers' Hall
To
MY INDIAN FRIENDS
FROM WHOM I HAVE GATHERED
Story and Song
PREFACE.
At the Congress of Musicians held in connection with the Trans-Mississippi Exposition at Omaha in July, 1898, several essays upon the songs of the North American Indians were read, in illustration of which a number of Omaha Indians, for the first time, sang their native melodies to an audience largely composed of trained musicians.
This unique presentation not only demonstrated the scientific value of these aboriginal songs in the study of the development of music, but suggested their availability as themes, novel and characteristic, for the American composer. It was felt that this availability would be greater if the story, or the ceremony which gave rise to the song, could be known, so that, in developing the theme, all the movements might be consonant with the circumstances that had inspired the motive. In response to the expressed desire of many musicians, I have here given a number of songs in their matrix of story.
Material like that brought together in these pages has hitherto appeared only in scientific publications, where it has attracted the lively interest of specialists both in Europe and America. It is now offered in a more popular form, that the general public may share with the student the light shed by these untutored melodies upon the history of music; for these songs take us back to a stage of development antecedent to that in which culture music appeared among the ancients, and reveal to us something of the foundations upon which rests the art of music as we know it to-day.
Many of the stories and songs in this little book are now for the first time published. All have been gathered directly from the people, in their homes, or as I have listened to the earnest voice of the native priest explaining the ancient ceremonials of his fathers. The stories are close translations, losing only a certain picturesqueness and vigour in their foreign guise; but the melodies are exactly as sung by the Indians.
Indian myths embodying cosmic ideas have passages told in song, tribal legends have their milestones of song, folk-tales at dramatic points break into song; but into these rich fields I have not here entered. This collection reveals something of the wealth of musical and dramatic material that can be gleaned outside of myth, legend, and folk-lore among the natives of our country.
Aside from its scientific value, this music possesses a charm of spontaneity that cannot fail to please those who would come near to nature and enjoy the expression of emotion untrammelled by the intellectual control of schools. These songs are like the wild flowers that have not yet come under the transforming hand of the gardener.
ALICE C. FLETCHER.
Peabody Museum,
Harvard University.
CONTENTS.
Page. | |
Story and Song of the He-dhu´-shka | 3 |
Story and Song of Ish´-i-buz-zhi | 14 |
Story and Song of the Leader | 21 |
The Omaha Tribal Prayer | 26 |
Story and Song of the Bird's Nest | 30 |
A Trysting Love-song | 34 |
Story and Song of the Deathless Voice | 39 |
Story and Song of Zon´-zi-mon-de | 45 |
Love-song. Poetical Transcription by Miss E.D. Proctor | public@vhost@g@gutenberg@html@files@25140@[email protected]#Page_49" class="pginternal" |