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Reminiscent of Charles Seeger

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 February 2019

Mantle Hood*
Affiliation:
Honolulu, Hawaii
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Extract

Over a span of twenty-five years, I had the privilege of an extraordinary association with Charles Seeger. It began with an introduction by Jaap Kunst, in 1954, and ended with a letter dictated by Seeger and typed by his secretary (but still unsigned), a few days before his death in February, 1979. In our first meeting he was a teacher. In his last letter he was a warm concerned friend, and still a teacher. To say he is missed would be as redundant as saying one misses a brother, a father, a comrade-in-arms, a colleague, a best friend.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © 1979 By the International Folk Music Council 

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References

The Writings of Charles Seeger: A Selection

[Editor's note: With special regard to Prof. Hood's concluding remarks, we have appended a selected list of Charles Seeger's writings, particularly for those who may not have ready access to such a bibliography.]Google Scholar
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1953 ∗“Folk Music in the Schools of a Highly Industrialized Society,” JIFMC 5:4044. Reprinted in David A. De Turk and A. Poulin, Jr., The American Folk Scene (New York: Dell Publishing Co., 1967), pp. 89-94. [. 330-34]Google Scholar
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N.B. The titles preceded by an asterick (∗) have been included among the essays in Studies in Musicology: 1935-75 (Berkeley and Los Angeles, 1977), with slight or thorough revisions. Their pages numbers in this work are enclosed in brackets at the close of the respective citations.Google Scholar