- Eileen Southern
Eileen Jackson Southern (1920 in Minneapolis – October 13, 2002 in
Port Charlotte, Florida ) was anAfrican American musicologist , researcher, author and teacher.She attended
public schools in her hometown, Minneapolis, Minnesota, and inSioux Falls, South Dakota . In childhood, as she developed as apianist , young Eileen was introduced to and became partial to themusic of those she calls the "piano composers," includingJohann Sebastian Bach ,Ludwig van Beethoven , andClaude Debussy . In addition, her piano teachers, mostly white, were concerned that she would know music by black composers and introduced her to R. Nathaniel Dett's "In the Bottoms", among other such compositions.Southern majored in commercial art at
Chicago 'sLindblom High School . During the same period she won piano-performance andessay competitions, taught piano lessons, and directed musical activities at theLincoln Community Center . She gave her first piano recital at the age of twelve and made her debut inChicago Orchestra Hall at age eighteen, playing a Mozart concerto with thesymphony orchestra of theChicago Musical College .She attended and received degrees from the
University of Chicago (B.A. , 1940, and M. A., 1941) andNew York University (Ph.D., 1961). Her relationship with Cecil Smith encouraged her to further develop her interest inNegro folk music and he advised for her master's thesis.Southern also studied piano privately at Chicago Musical College, the
Juilliard School of Music , andBoston University . She was the first black woman to be appointed a tenured full professor atHarvard University . Her best known book is the seminal history "The Music of Black Americans " (1971). Her other work is "Biographical Dictionary of Afro-American and African Musicians " (1982). She foundedThe Black Perspective in Music in 1973, with her husband, Prof.Joseph Southern . It was the first musicological journal on the study of black music, and she was its editor until it ceased publication in 1990.She also discovered Frank Johnson, a black
Philadelphia bandleader who'd risen to fame at the end of the 1700s. He'd ledFrank Johnson's Colored Band and by 1818 had taken his band as far south asRichmond, Virginia , playing dances for white southerners. Johnson had played a command performance atBuckingham Palace , where he received a silver bugle in appreciation.Dr. Southern received a
National Humanities Medal in 2001 for having "helped transform the study and understanding of American music." She also received aLifetime Achievement Award from theSociety of American Music in 2000.She headed the Department of Afro-American Studies at
Harvard University from 1975 to 1979, and retired in 1987 as a professor emeritus to live inSt. Albans, New York .External links
* http://www.aaregistry.com/african_american_history/1982/A_true_music_historian_Eileen_Southern
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.