Natalie Curtis
Natalie Curtis Burlin (26 April 1875 in New York City – 23 October 1921 in Paris) was an American ethnomusicologist. Curtis, along with Alice Cunningham Fletcher and Frances Densmore, was one of a small group of women doing important ethnological studies in North America at the beginning of the 20th century. She is remembered for her transcriptions and publication of traditional music of Native American tribes as well as for having published a four-volume collection of African-American music. With her young death in 1921, Curtis wasn't able to fully close out her career and bring her works together.[1]
Influence
After a trip to Arizona, Curtis grew fascinated by Native American music. She began to devote herself to the study of Native American music. Curtis studied music at the National Conservatory of Music of America in New York City. She also studied in France and Germany, studying prominent musicians, like Ferruccio Bussoni.
Theodore Roosevelt
Theodore Roosevelt was a family friend of Curtis, and one of her biggest influences. Curtis used Roosevelt as a helpful tool when it came to preserving the Native American culture. At one point, Curtis even entered Roosevelt's house to ask for tribal land rights with Mojave-Apache chief. Roosevelt addressed Curtis as one "... who has done so very much to give Indian culture its proper position." [1] He also contributed a brief forward to her collection of Native American music and folklore The Indians' Book, in which he remarked on "the depth and dignity of Indian thought".[2]
Career
Starting in 1903 she worked from the Hopi reservation in Arizona and produced transcriptions using both an Edison cylinder recorder and pencil and paper. At the time, such work with native music and language was in conflict with the policies of the federal Bureau of Indian Affairs, which discouraged natives on reservations from speaking their language, singing their music, dressing in native garb, etc. It was only after the personal intervention of her friend President Theodore Roosevelt that she could continue her work unhindered. Roosevelt himself visited the Hopi reservation in 1913 for the Hopi flute and snake ceremonies, which visit was detailed by Curtis in "Theodore Roosevelt in Hopi Land," an article Curtis wrote for Outlook magazine in 1919.[3]
Songs
In 1905, Curtis published The Songs of Ancient America, three Pueblo corn-grinding songs with piano accompaniment. Characterizing her own task as a transcriber, she wrote, “I have in nowise changed the melodies, nor have I sought to harmonize them in the usual sense, nor to make of them musical compositions…My one desire has been to let the Indian songs be heard as the Indians themselves sing them..."[4]
In 1907 Curtis published The Indians’ Book , a collection of songs and stories from 18 tribes, illustrated with handwritten transcriptions of songs as well as with artwork and photography. Most of the 200 songs are presented only in manuscript notation with no piano accompaniment at all. The book served as source for her former teacher Busoni's Indian Fantasy, a work for piano and orchestra, first performed in 1915 by the Philadelphia Orchestra under Leopold Stokowski.
Around 1910, Curtis broadened her research to include transcription and collection of African American music, working at the Hampton Institute in Hampton, Virginia, a college established in 1868 to educate former slaves. The work was funded by philanthropist George Foster Peabody. In 1911, she and David Mannes founded the Colored Music Settlement School in New York, and in 1912 she helped sponsor the first concert featuring black musicians at Carnegie Hall, a concert that featured the Clef Club orchestra, directed by James Reese Europe.
In 1918 and 1919 Curtis (now Curtis Burlin) published four volumes entitled Negro Folk-Songs; the volumes included spirituals, and “work-and play-songs." She published the songs in four-part harmony, a task that brought praise from composer Percy Grainger in 1918.[5] Proceeds from the volumes went to the Hampton Institute. Curtis also began to study the music of African tribes and in 1920 published Songs and Tales from the Dark Continent, in which she notated the written example of what is known as the standard pattern in ethnomusicology, and triple-pulse son clave in Afro-Latin music (1920: 98). In 1917 she had married artist Paul Burlin; they moved to France, where she died in a traffic accident in 1921.
Her published work often did not appear in “scholarly journals” of anthropology or folklore. For example, Curtis was published in the Southern Workman, The Craftsman, and The Outlook, as well as in general musical publications such as Musical America. Reviews of her work appeared in such magazines as well as in standard scholarly journals of the day.[6]
Original compositions
Curtis Burlin may be considered among a small group of US American composers who used native American material in her own compositions. Others are Charles Wakefield Cadman, Arthur Nevin, and Thurlow Lieurance. She composed about 15 short, original works, many based on native American or African American themes.
See also
- Native American music
References
- "Natalie Curtis Burlin, ethnomusicology and folklore". www.nataliecurtis.org. Retrieved 2017-05-18.
- Curtis, Natalie (1907). The Indians' Book. New York: Harper and Brothers Publishers. p. xix.
- Curtis, Natalie (March 5, 1919). "Mr. Roosevelt and Indian Music: A personal reminiscence". The Outlook: 399–400.
- Rahkonen, Carl (Autumn 1998). "Special Bibliography: Natalie Curtis (1875-1921)". Ethnomusicology. 42 (3): 511–522.
- Grainger, Percy. “Mrs. Burlin’s Study of Negro Folk-Music” in the New York Times Book Review, April 14, 1918.
- For example: Unsigned review of "Negro Folk Songs", book I in The Journal of Negro History, Vol.3, number 3, July 1918. pp. 330-331.
External links
Wikisource has original works written by or about: Natalie Curtis |
- "Natalie Curtis Burlin"
- "Frank Mead: 'A New Type of Architecture in the Southwest,' Part II, 1907-1920" for much on the lifelong friendship of Natalie and George Curtis with architect Frank Mead.
- Find-A-Grave memorial