Passamaquoddy Ceremonial Songs
272 pages, 6 x 9
10 b&w illus.
Hardcover
Release Date:20 Apr 2010
ISBN:9781558497184
CA$75.00 Back Order
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Passamaquoddy Ceremonial Songs

Aesthetics and Survival

University of Massachusetts Press
Based on extensive research across several disciplines, this book examines the songs and dances involved in public ceremonies of the Wabanaki Confederacy, a coalition of five Algonquian First Nations that figured importantly in the political history of New England and the Maritimes from the seventeenth century on. Ethnomusicologist Ann Morrison Spinney analyzes these ceremonial performances as they have been maintained in one of those nations, the Passamaquoddy community of Maine. She compares historical accounts with forms that have persisted to the present, showing how versions of the same songs, dances, and ritual speeches have continued to play a vital role in Passamaquoddy culture over time. A particular focus of the study is the annual Sipayik Indian Day, a public presentation of the dances associated with the protocols of the Wabanaki Confederacy. Spinney interprets these practices using melodic analysis and cultural contextual frameworks, drawing on a variety of sources, including written documents, sound and video recordings, interviews with singers, dancers, and other cultural practitioners, and her own fieldwork observations. Her research shows that Passamaquoddy techniques of song composition and performance parallel both the structure of the Passamaquoddy language and the political organizations that these ceremonies support.
The clearest, most detailed account of Passamaquoddy and Wabanaki history and musical culture that I have ever read. Original, informative, interesting, and well researched, this work makes an enormous contribution to the fields of ethnomusicology and related disciplines.'—Victoria Lindsay Levine, author of Writing American Indian Music: Historic Transcriptions, Notations, and Arrangements
'Original, informative, interesting, and well researched, this work makes an enormous contribution to the fields of ethnomusicology and related disciplines.'—Victoria Lindsay Levine
'Spinney patiently describes her methodologies and sources as well as the cultural contexts for the songs she has transcribed and collected.'—The New England Quarterly
'Spinney has written as comprehensive an account of the musical culture--both the present and its history--of a Native American nation as one can imagine. . . . Appropriate for a wide audience, this interesting book makes a significant contribution to the literature on ethnomusicology. Highly recommended.'—Choice
'By carefully attending to the words of elders as well as the historic sources, and by analyzing song structures and improvisatory practices, Spinney has been able to demonstrate how past and present performance practice functions as a symbolic and mimetic tool for diplomacy, for constructing and maintaining alliances, and in cross-cultural relationships. She uses research tools that are sometimes neglected today by ethnomusicologists—detailed analysis of song rhythms, melodic phrases, and phrase repetitions—but with a deep knowledge of the discourse and practices of contemporary singers and dancers and an excellent command of historical sources. Her book is a very significant contribution to ethnomusicology, American music studies, and Native American studies.'—Journal of the Society of American Music
Ann Morrison Spinney is assistant professor of music and Irish studies at Boston College.
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