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Country Music Scholar
Bill Malone, Tulane University


Overview:
Bill Malone
Distinguished historian of country music Bill Malone is interviewed by Southern Spaces editorial board member Charles Reagan Wilson at the University of Mississippi in October 2005. Malone offers a brief perspective on the beginnings of his career and discusses themes in his work.

Videography by Joe York, University of Mississippi.


Video:
Part 1 (3:57 min.)
Malone, born near Tyler, Texas in 1934, talks about the music that he and his family sang and listened to while he was a child: sentimental songs, gospel, and hillbilly. He similarly recounts what the family heard on local and Mexican "border" radio.
Part 2 (3:36 min.)
Malone enrolled at the University of Texas in 1956. He became a well- known local singer, performing the songs he grew up with. This folk revival in Austin included another Texas student, Janis Joplin. Malone's 1965 dissertation became Country Music, USA, the first serious history of the genre, published in 1968.
Part 3 (4:05 min.)
Country music style varies across the South. The honky tonk music and culture of the oil boom in Louisiana, Texas, and Oklahoma contrast with older Appalachian music. Malone addresses the effects of radio and recording on the multiplicity of local and regional styles.
Part 4 (3:25 min.)
Commercialized and marketed, rural southern music becomes "hillbilly," then "country" music. Whites and blacks exchanged music with each other in a variety of spaces and places.
Part 5 (4:02 min.)
The relationship between "southern" and "American" music is a close bond as so many kinds of American music have their origins in the South. Malone discusses how the music of new migrants and cultural fusions, and he addresses the question of authenticity.
Part 6 (4:18 min.)
Rootedness and rambling supply a tension in country music, exemplified by the appeal of the outlaw figure archetype and the idealized longing for home.
Part 7 (3:00 min.)
Contemporary country music represents the concerns of its largely nine-to-five audience.
Part 8 (1:28 min.)
Malone discusses country music as a current area of study.

About Bill Malone:
Bill Malone is Professor Emeritus of History at Tulane University. His books include Country Music, U.S.A.; Southern Music/American Music; Southern Culture and the Roots of Country Music; and Don't Get Above Your Raisin': Country Music and the Southern Working Class.


Published: 20 January 2006

© 2006 Center for the Study of Southern Culture, Bill Malone and Southern Spaces