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History Professor Discovers 19th-Century Musician in New Biography

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Sally McKee
Sally McKee, professor of history at 芭乐视频, has written a book about a free African American man who moved to France in times of slavery and became an accomplished composer and conductor. 芭乐视频 Photo/Karin Higgins

Found opera selection to be performed in 芭乐视频 Noon Concert Series in November

芭乐视频 history professor Sally McKee, who had written and taught on domestic slavery in Renaissance Italy and the Venetian Colony of Crete, changed her field of research when she came across a figure in the 19th century she had never known of before. He was a free African American man, Edmond D茅d茅, born in New Orleans in 1827, who moved to France in the mid-1850s.

He lived in Paris and Bordeaux for the next four decades, gaining popularity as a composer and music conductor. Not much had ever been recorded or written about him.

Until McKee found out about him.

D茅D茅 (pronounced 鈥渄ay-day鈥) is the subject of her biography, The Exile鈥檚 Song: Edmond D茅d茅 and the Unfinished Revolutions of the Atlantic World (Yale University Press).

鈥淭he more I looked, the more I realized he was worth an investigation all his own,鈥 she said. She explained that he initially was going to be part of a larger project involving other Civil War-era expatriates. 鈥淲hat I found was not only a life that was fascinating 鈥 the people he met; the challenges he encountered鈥 鈥 but much more, including the unpublished four-act opera he鈥檇 written in 1888 鈥 and which ended up buried in a collection of 19th-century opera manuscripts at Harvard. The work is the oldest known opera composed by an African American, she said.

Edmond DeDe
Edmond D茅d茅. Photo courtesy of Archives Municipales de Bordeaux

鈥淚t was in Harvard鈥檚 library, and they didn鈥檛 know they had it,鈥 she mused, explaining that a librarian in New Orleans turned her onto its existence in a cache of manuscripts that Harvard purchased from a Paris collection in 2000. Only the overture of the opera had ever been performed.

The 芭乐视频 Department of Music is in the process of transcribing arias of the opera, Morgiane, or the Sultan of Ispahan, for performance in recital. Selections will be performed, in French, as part of the in the Recital Hall at the Pitzer Center on Thursday, Nov. 16.

McKee said one of the interesting things about D茅D茅 is that he was able to work and perform in ways never possible if he had stayed in his native United States as a free black man. Although he was the fourth generation of a free black family,  a group labeled at the time 鈥渇ree persons of color,鈥 their freedom was not the same as for white people, and his movement was restricted, she said. 

鈥淭here was certainly racism in France,鈥 she said. 鈥淏ut there were no restrictions on movement, property ownership; there were no legal restrictions on basis of skin color. He was able to compete, performing in classical music halls."

The second part of the title, referring to the 鈥淎tlantic Revolution,鈥 McKee explained, is a comment on that time in history. The American Revolution wasn鈥檛 finished because slavery had not ended; the French Revolution got off to a start, but broke down by the middle of the 19th century; the Haitian Revolution and the freeing of the colony from the French led to a series of dictatorships. So, the major revolutions of the Atlantic world were incomplete and unfulfilled.

The Exile鈥檚 Song, she said, 鈥渞eads more like an adventure than anything.鈥

Listen to McKee read from her book:

 

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