Melba Liston: “Renaissance Woman”

Emmett G. Price
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

The new Negro is a sober, sensible creature, conscious of his environment, knowing that not all is right, but trying hard to become adjusted to this civilization in which he finds himself by no will or choice of his own. He is not the shallow, vain, showy creature which he is sometimes advertised to be. He still hopes that the unreasonable opposition to his forward and upward progress will relent. But, at any rate, he is resolved to fight, and live or die, on the side of God and the Eternal Verities. --William Pickens "The New Negro" 1916 (1) (Gates, and Jarrett 2007, 84) All your life you have heard of the debt you owe 'Your People' because you have managed to have the things they have not largely had. --Marita O. Bonner "On Being Young-- A Woman--and Colored" 1925 (Wall 1995, 9) Melba Doretta Liston, the brilliant self-taught trombonist, composer/ arranger, and educator who challenged the gender status quo in jazz must be counted among those Black women whose tremendous accomplishments within the American musical landscape lay dormant for far too many years. A cultural nationalist, Liston utilized her own internal challenges as well as the pain and suffering of her people as muse, meaning, and manuscript for her artistic endeavors. This essay posits that we might better understand Liston's achievements, importance, influence, as well as her artistic and political motivations by viewing her and her work through the lens of the Harlem Renaissance. The movement's terms and cultural politics provide insight into Liston's personal experiences and professional realities. I hope to reveal Melba Liston as a "renaissance woman" as defined by an expanded reading of the intellectual Zeitgeist of the "New Negro" and glean historiographical insight about Liston (and by extension other jazz women) through the experiences of better-, but still under-documented Renaissance women writers. One may ask why it is important to understand Liston as a "renaissance woman." The answer is simple: in order to correct the historical chronicle, it is not enough to cut and paste missing biographical details or to quietly insert the comprehensive accomplishments and accolades of hidden or forgotten voices. Just as Liston influenced and supported many of the voices that have been chronicled as significant contributors to jazz and black music, her dynamic contributions should be equally visible and included within the historical narrative of the music that she loved, nurtured, and nourished. The term "renaissance woman" references comprehensive influence across a multitude of expressions or fields and reflects a life-long legacy of impact. Liston exemplifies the term, and as a practitioner, teacher, and leading voice of her generation, deserves placement among the ranks of those who have reached the upper echelons of black cultural expression. Renowned author, educator, actress, and activist Dr. Maya Angelou proudly referred to herself as a "global renaissance woman" (http://mayaangelou.com), and a brief exploration of the blogosphere suggests Patrice Rushen, Terri Lyne Carrington, Esperanza Spaulding, and other phenomenally talented women within the arts as "renaissance women." The latter three women are not only expanding the sound, presentation, and awareness of jazz and black music on a global stage but are among a greater number of brilliant, innovative, and expansively influential black women who, like Melba Liston before them, are augmenting the boundaries of black cultural expression. The Negro Renaissance has been most notably documented through the experiences of the men who codified, portrayed, composed, scripted, and choreographed during and beyond the period. Alain Locke, Aaron Douglas, Duke Ellington, Charles S. Johnson, and Charles Williams are among the brilliant men who have been heralded as the creative architects and archetypes of the period and its determined, self-reflexive identity, the New Negro. …
梅尔巴·利斯顿:“文艺复兴时期的女人”
新一代黑人是一种清醒、理智的生物,意识到他所处的环境,知道并非一切都是对的,但努力适应这种文明,在这种文明中,他发现自己不是出于自己的意愿或选择。他不像有时宣传的那样肤浅、虚荣、爱炫耀。他仍然希望对他前进和向上进步的无理反对将会缓和。但是,无论如何,他决心为上帝和永恒的真理而战斗,或生或死。——威廉·皮肯斯《新黑人》1916(1)(盖茨和贾勒特2007,84)你一生都听说过你欠“你的人民”的债,因为你设法拥有了他们基本上没有的东西。梅尔巴·多雷塔·利斯顿是一位才华横溢的自学成才的长号手、作曲家/编曲家和教育家,她挑战了爵士乐中的性别现状,她必须被列入那些在美国音乐界取得巨大成就的黑人女性之列,这些女性在美国音乐界的成就沉寂了太多年。作为一名文化民族主义者,利斯顿利用自己内心的挑战以及她的人民的痛苦和苦难作为她艺术创作的缪斯、意义和手稿。这篇文章认为,通过哈莱姆文艺复兴的视角来看待利斯顿和她的作品,我们可以更好地理解她的成就、重要性、影响,以及她的艺术和政治动机。这场运动的术语和文化政治为利斯顿的个人经历和职业现实提供了洞见。我希望通过对“新黑人”的知识分子时代精神的扩展阅读来揭示梅尔巴·利斯顿作为一个“文艺复兴女性”的定义,并通过对文艺复兴时期女性作家更好但仍然文献不足的经历,收集关于利斯顿(以及其他爵士女性)的历史见解。有人可能会问,为什么把利斯顿理解为“文艺复兴时期的女性”很重要。答案很简单:为了纠正历史编年史,剪切和粘贴缺失的传记细节或悄悄地插入隐藏或被遗忘的声音的全面成就和荣誉是不够的。正如利斯顿影响和支持了许多被记载为爵士和黑人音乐的重要贡献者的声音一样,她的动态贡献也应该同样可见,并包括在她所热爱、培养和滋养的音乐的历史叙述中。“文艺复兴女性”一词指的是对多种表达方式或领域的全面影响,反映了终身的影响。利斯顿是这一术语的典范,作为实践者、教师和她那一代的领军人物,她理应跻身于黑人文化表达的上层行列。著名作家、教育家、演员和活动家玛雅·安杰洛博士自豪地称自己为“全球文艺复兴女性”(http://mayaangelou.com),在博客圈的简短探索中,帕特里斯·鲁森、特丽·莱恩·卡灵顿、埃斯佩朗莎·斯鲍丁和其他在艺术领域具有非凡才华的女性被称为“文艺复兴女性”。后三位女性不仅在全球舞台上扩大了爵士乐和黑人音乐的声音、表现形式和意识,而且是众多才华横溢、具有创新精神和广泛影响力的黑人女性之一,就像她们之前的梅尔巴·利斯顿(Melba Liston)一样,扩大了黑人文化表达的界限。黑人文艺复兴最引人注目的记录是那些在这个时期和以后编纂、描绘、作曲、写剧本和编舞的人的经历。阿兰·洛克、亚伦·道格拉斯、艾灵顿公爵、查尔斯·s·约翰逊和查尔斯·威廉姆斯都是杰出的人物,他们被誉为这一时期的创造性建筑师和原型,以及这一时期坚定、自我反思的身份——新黑人。…
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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