Stephen Foster fundamentally shaped the American music canon in the late 1800s and forward, penning songs that reached the masses.
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Read More »Stephen Foster fundamentally shaped the American music canon in the late 1800s and forward, penning songs that reached the masses. He built the foundation of American popular music as a genre; his songs reached larger audiences than any composer ever had before, and his melodies endured long after his death. Behind those famous melodies, however, Foster himself was an incongruous figure with many talents and flaws. By piecing together his few surviving personal letters and manuscripts and connecting these dots with remarks from Foster’s few friends, we can begin to paint a picture of the man. The creative team behind Paradise Square embraced this challenge, creating a musical that highlights both his demons and his unwavering desire to bridge together Americans from across the country during a time of deepening political and social strife. Stephen Foster was born on July 4, 1826: it seems inevitable that an attachment to the idea of American brotherhood would one day find itself at the core of much of his music. The Fosters, a family of Scots-Irish descent, settled in Pennsylvania. The Fosters remained intent on upholding their status in the community and searched for ways to bring joy into their household of nine children, with Stephen himself as the youngest. Stephen and his siblings created their own backyard minstrel show when he was just 9 years old. They would perform for neighbors, sparking his interest in entertaining. In one of his few surviving letters, a 10-year-old Stephen wrote to his father, asking for blank sheet music and black ink so that he might begin transcribing the songs he performed. The unbridled optimism that ran through the Foster family’s veins informed Stephen Foster’s own choice to leave behind formal schooling, instead choosing to settle in Pittsburgh to follow his childhood passion to be a songwriter. There, his greatest influences were Henry Kleber, his music tutor who immigrated from Germany, and Dan Rice, a traveling comedian who made his living performing in blackface minstrel shows. This eclectic pair of mentors shaped Foster’s own sensibility as he left Pennsylvania for Ohio in 1846. In Cincinnati, Foster began working as a bookkeeper for the Irwin and Foster Steamboat Company (managed by one of his brothers), and soon found himself artistically inspired by the industrial spirit of the local dockworkers and the convergence of cultures across the city. In 1848, Foster wrote “Oh Susanna” and soon after negotiated his first deal with New York publishers. The next decade saw Foster’s peak, both creatively and personally. He married Jane Denny McDowell, the muse behind his acclaimed “Jeanie with the Light Brown Hair,” in 1850. Around this time Foster left behind the business world to pursue music professionally through minstrel shows. Our contemporary understanding of minstrelsy acknowledges its racist roots: This musical style perpetuated harmful stereotypes with blackface performance. But in the 1800s, travelling minstrel troupes were popular among the working and middle classes, bringing musical performances to audiences across the country. Foster joined Christy’s Minstrels, the most popular troupe of the 1840s and 1850s, as their primary songwriter, living on the road and crafting new melodies and lyrics which he sold for profit. Deviating from other minstrel troupes at the time, Foster penned lyrics that were populist, stripping away the hypersexuality and politically suggestive materials that other songwriters used. By blending more contemporary arrangements with the traditional jigs and reels that had long served as the inspiration for minstrel music, his compositions similarly appealed to a broad range of audiences, welcoming the genteel to the minstrel aesthetic and proving popular beyond the stage. Stephen Foster mastered existing forms and innovated his own styles as one of the most prolific writers of the mid-1800s. In less than 20 years, Foster had written 286 songs. Much of his music felt idealistic and nostalgic, painting a picture of a carefree America in which the plantation was the center of peace and virtue; the fictional slaves at the core of many of his songs were happy-go-lucky—a naïve perspective, and one that provided white audiences with a sense of escapism. While the roots of this music and of blackface performance are inarguably based in racist stereotypes, Foster, in his own words, sought to create new form of music that united all citizens “in every effort to encourage a taste for this style of music.” In this way, his music offered the public, grappling with the deep-seated racism and political turmoil that gave way to the Civil War, a path to escape that difficult reality in favor of an idealized version of their country.
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Read More »As his minstrel career began to slow, Foster left his wife and child behind to continue writing in Manhattan, looking for a new sound inspired by the music and culture of immigrant communities living there. He settled quickly into the downtown music scene, composing for the bars that lined the streets of neighborhoods like Manhattan’s Five Points. The campy style of songs he wrote during his last years would eventually give rise to the vaudeville sounds of the early 1900s, further solidifying his position as a key voice in American popular culture. But his last four years were also marked by personal darkness for Foster who, separated from his family, notoriously abused alcohol and became a recluse. In 1863, chaos overcame the Five Points neighborhood just as Foster’s health began its rapid decline. As the Civil War intensified, Abraham Lincoln mandated a draft. Men could buy themselves out of serving, so the effects of the order disproportionately affected the poorest communities in Five Points. Anger over the draft quickly turned into a racist fervor as the Irish fought against their Black peers, who were excluded from the draft (see pg. 19 for more information on the 1863 Draft Riots). In many ways, this was the beginning of the end for Stephen Foster. In the words of biographer Ken Emerson, “the vast popular audience his work had inspired and united, were dividing and destroying each other: South against North, poor against rich, white against black.” Although minstrel shows were rooted in racism, some argued that Foster’s music had encouraged sympathy for the hardship that Black individuals faced across the country. Abolitionist Frederick Douglass once wrote that Foster’s music “awakens sympathies for the slave, in which antislavery principles take root, grow, and flourish” and the violence of the riots worked against that aim. As the world around him delved into violent chaos, Foster’s dreams of a more united America felt increasingly unattainable. While it’s impossible to know the exact circumstances of his passing, most accounts suggest that Foster found himself alone at the North American Hotel in the Bowery, battling a stomach illness. While trying to stand to get a drink of water, he fell, cutting his neck on a porcelain washbasin. A maid discovered Foster lying in a pool of his own blood and immediately called for his friend and writing partner George Cooper. Cooper took Foster to the nearby Bellevue hospital where he survived a few more painful days before dying on January 13, 1864, alone and penniless at the age of 37. When his family came from Pennsylvania to retrieve his body and few belongings, they worked diligently to conceal records of his time in New York, ashamed of the lifestyle he led. The destruction of nearly all of Foster’s personal artifacts renders it impossible to create a robust timeline of his life or a clear picture of his character, and this was further complicated by Foster’s aloof personality. Even one of Foster’s most intimate acquaintances wrote, “He would talk, eat, and drink with you, and yet always seem distant…. Whether it was a natural bashfulness, or a voluntary reserve, I cannot say, but those who knew him most intimately were never familiar.”
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Read More »Since his lifetime, Stephen Foster’s name and music have been widely recognized by Americans. Songs like “Oh Susanna” feel so intrinsically linked to the American psyche that they became regarded as folk songs. But today, it is impossible to separate the dark side of Foster from the lasting resonance of his music. Our task in the 21st century is to reconcile his personal history and the harm perpetuated by the minstrel aesthetic with the fact that his work did shape the landscape of American music. As the United States continues to find itself deeply divided, just as it did at Foster’s peak, the team behind Paradise Square seeks to do just that, reinventing his melodies for a contemporary audience, using music to offer a portrait of a man whose work reached the masses.
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