Music History is a Beautiful Thing
Image taken from presentation |
This past weekend, on October 10th, I held the
Barbara A. Cooke Musical Theater Collection Showcase. This was my opportunity
to highlight one of the Archive’s special collections to the public, who might have
been unaware of its existence. This event was in cooperation with Chicago Area
Archivists and Chicago Open Archives:
Collecting and Connecting.
Alumna Barbara Cooke gave a wonderful presentation on the
history of sheet music, which she separated into three different time periods:
the Vintage Era (1860-1880), the Victorian Era (1880-1900), and the Golden Age
(1900-1935).
Selection of sheet music covers from 1900-1935 |
The Vintage Era produced sheet music with basic and
functional covers, primarily in black and white. These pieces are very rare
because it was expected that a sheet would be thrown away when the song’s
popularity faded. The Victorian Era was heavily influenced by European ideas,
especially from England’s Queen Victoria. Subject matter focused on the home,
sentimental love songs, and heartbreak.
Ms. Cooke explained how the dull sheet music covers
drastically changed when music publisher E.T. Paull (1858-1924) invented a way
to create covers with full color. Sales of sheet music skyrocketed because
people bought songs for the gorgeous covers, not for the songs within. This
marked the beginning of the Golden Age. Composers and lyricists wrote music
people could dance too, which meant incorporating jazz, blues, ragtime, and the
music of black minstrel shows. The covers reflected the subject matter.
Visitors listening to presenter Barbara A. Cooke |
The end of the Golden Age came when film studios sent
head-shots of actors to the music publishing houses, instead of paying an artist
to create a painting. Photographs were faster and cheaper to produce, but the
cover designs suffered as a result.
Archives Librarian Gloria Hendrickson and alumna Barbara A. Cooke |
After Ms. Cooke’s presentation, attendees viewed selected
covers and visited the room with the entire collection. People spent time
talking with Barbara and listening to her stories from her theater career, as
well.
I
want to thank everyone who attended and expressing interest in another one of
these sessions. As always, feel free to contact me at 815-740-3539 or libraryarchives@stfrancis.edu
if you have any questions.
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