She Always Said, “I Heard an Indian Drum”

Unsurprisingly for a woman who devoted more than fifty years of her life to the study of Native American music, Frances Densmore was often asked how and why she was drawn to the study of Indian music and cultures. Her reply, given to journalists, fellow scholars, and used in her own unpublished auto...

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description Unsurprisingly for a woman who devoted more than fifty years of her life to the study of Native American music, Frances Densmore was often asked how and why she was drawn to the study of Indian music and cultures. Her reply, given to journalists, fellow scholars, and used in her own unpublished autobiographies, was nearly always the same: “I heard an Indian drum.” Densmore would then relate the story of how as a young girl she often fell asleep to the distant sound of the drumming of her Dakota neighbors on an island near her hometown of Red Wing, Minnesota.
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subjects American minorities
American studies
Anthropology
Applied anthropology
Art education
Arts
Arts participation
Behavioral sciences
Communications
Communications media
Cultural anthropology
Ethnic groups
Ethnography
Ethnology
Ethnomusicology
Feminist anthropology
Music
Music analysis
Music education
Music theory
Musical expression
Musical notation
Native American music
Native American studies
Native Americans
Notated music
Performing arts
Print media
Scrapbooks
Social sciences
White people
title She Always Said, “I Heard an Indian Drum”
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