My Old Kentucky Home: The Astonishing Life and Reckoning of an Iconic American Song

My Old Kentucky Home: The Astonishing Life and Reckoning of an Iconic American Song

by Emily Bingham

Narrated by Emily Bingham

Unabridged — 10 hours, 38 minutes

My Old Kentucky Home: The Astonishing Life and Reckoning of an Iconic American Song

My Old Kentucky Home: The Astonishing Life and Reckoning of an Iconic American Song

by Emily Bingham

Narrated by Emily Bingham

Unabridged — 10 hours, 38 minutes

Audiobook (Digital)

$20.00
FREE With a B&N Audiobooks Subscription | Cancel Anytime
$0.00

Free with a B&N Audiobooks Subscription | Cancel Anytime

START FREE TRIAL

Already Subscribed? 

Sign in to Your BN.com Account


Listen on the free Barnes & Noble NOOK app


Related collections and offers

FREE

with a B&N Audiobooks Subscription

Or Pay $20.00

Overview

The long journey of an American song, passed down from generation to generation, bridging a nation's fraught disconnect between history and warped illusion, revealing the country's ever evolving self.

MY OLD KENTUCKY HOME, from its enormous success in the early 1850s, written by a white man, considered the father of American music, about a Black man being sold downriver, performed for decades by white men in blackface, and the song, an anthem of longing and pain, turned upside down and, over time, becoming a celebration of happy plantation life.

It is the state song of Kentucky, a song that has inhabited hearts and memories, and in perpetual reprise, stands outside time; sung each May, before every Kentucky Derby, since 1930.
 
Written by Stephen Foster nine years before the Civil War, “My Old Kentucky Home” made its way through the wartime years to its decades-long run as a national minstrel sensation for which it was written; from its reference in the pages of Margaret Mitchell's Gone with the Wind to being sung on The Simpsons and Mad Men.
 
Originally called “Poor Uncle Tom, Good-Night!” and inspired by America's most famous abolitionist novel, it was a lament by an enslaved man, sold by his "master," who must say goodbye to his beloved family and birthplace, with hints of the brutality to come: “The head must bow and the back will have to bend / Wherever the darky may go / A few more days, and the trouble all will end / In the field where the sugar-canes grow . . .” 
 
In My Old Kentucky Home, Emily Bingham explores the long, strange journey of what has come to be seen by some as an American anthem, an integral part of our folklore, culture, customs, foundation, a living symbol of a “happy past.” But “My Old Kentucky Home” was never just a song. It was always a song about slavery with the real Kentucky home inhabited by the enslaved and shot through with violence, despair, and degradation.
 
Bingham explores the song's history and permutations from its decades of performances across the continent, entering into the bloodstream of American life, through its twenty-first-century reassessment. It is a song that has been repeated and taught for almost two hundred years, a resonant changing emblem of America's original sin whose blood-drenched shadow hovers and haunts us still.

Editorial Reviews

Publishers Weekly

02/28/2022

The history behind Kentucky’s veneration of the Stephen Foster song “My Old Kentucky Home” is probed in this immersive and well-honed account. Journalist Bingham (Irrepressible) highlights the song’s enduring popularity despite the “pitiful tale” it tells of a “nameless ‘darky’ looks fondly on a once carefree life in slavery, submits to ‘Hard Times,’ and exits the world, head bowed, back bent, in song.” She notes that Foster, a white Pennsylvanian, aimed to make his blackface minstrel songs appealing to “refined audiences” by removing “‘Negro’ dialect” and “violent or sexual references” from his compositions. After Foster’s death in 1864, his relatives in Bardstown, Ky., circulated the false claim that he had composed “My Old Kentucky Home” at their estate, known as Federal Hill. Bingham documents the origins of the myth, which resulted in Federal Hill becoming Kentucky’s first state-owned park, and poignantly reflects on her memories of singing the song at the Kentucky Derby without thinking about what it might mean to Black listeners. Elsewhere, she astutely analyzes the song’s reinterpretation by Black artists and activists, and discusses how the 2020 police killing of Breonna Taylor cast Kentucky’s Lost Cause mythology in a harsh new light. The result is an invigorating and eye-opening cultural history. (May)

Joe Drape

Bingham tells a personal and passionate history of how a song revered in her home state has been understood and misunderstood for generations and what it says about America's continued struggle to understand race. Her writing is as lovely as the song's melody; her argument is as jarring as its lyrics.

Bobbie Ann Mason

Emily Bingham has painstakingly created a history quilt out of the intricacies of the profound effects of a single song on American culture. The result is wonder and dismay—and a lesson for today in how propaganda works. She delves into some of the deepest issues America has ever faced, issues that are still unresolved. This book is not simply about lyrics of a song but how that song has been used to tell a lie.

The Washington Post

A powerful story of how, exactly, we fool ourselves into thinking the past is past... taking us across a century of spinout marketing campaigns, protests and versions that emerged from Foster's lyrics... [Bingham's] identity—and its many complications—is vital to her authority as a needed writer of this book.

Chapter 16

Thoughtful... intensely moral... [Bingham] covers a spectacular amount of ground, from the origins of the song before the Civil War up to the present day... Engrossing twists and turns come with every chapter.

Emily Bernard

This is transformative work. Bingham has composed an engrossing narrative that reminds us that rarely is a song just a song.

Rosanne Cash

I was taken aback by how the song and its history, and Foster's own history, are so much a part of our ongoing story. Bingham's writing is compelling, and humbling, and moving.

Timothy Tyson

One song, in Emily Bingham's brilliant hands, brings history and memory together in ways all Americans must confront if we are ever truly to hear one another.

Louisville Courier Journal

Beautifully written... deeply personal... riveting... a love letter—but one with tears in the eyes—to the Commonwealth of Kentucky [that] has a serious and important national reach"

The New York Times

In an America at war with itself, this book seems to arrive just in time.

From the Publisher

People who love the song say there is . . . a kind of serenity, a sweet longing for something lost over the passing years, even if they cannot put into words what that something is. How this came to be, how the song so captured these people and a wider world, is the haunting question that the native Kentuckian Emily Bingham answers so thoroughly and forcefully in My Old Kentucky Home, her history of an American song . . . knowing its beginnings and long, tortured journey into a third century of painted-over suffering, [Bingham] reckoned that it did not belong to her, but to those wounded most by it; they should decide its future.”—Rick Bragg, The New York Times
 
“A powerful story of how, exactly, we fool ourselves into thinking the past is past . . . an account that is both riveting and thorough, taking us across a century of spinout marketing campaigns, protests and versions that emerged from Foster’s lyrics. Shirley Temple, Colonel Sanders, the country of Japan, Henrietta Vinton Davis, J.K. Lilly, Marian Anderson, Richard M. Nixon, the 31W Highway, “Mad Men”—and yes, the Kentucky Derby—are all summoned . . . Bingham’s research is finely detailed, extensive, complex. Further, her identity—and its many complications—is vital to her authority as a needed writer of this book.”—The Washington Post

“Beautifully written . . . deeply personal . . . riveting . . . Because [Bingham’s] personal and family experiences in so many ways parallel the song, this book can be characterized as a love letter — but one with tears in the eyes — to the commonwealth of Kentucky. The book also has a serious and important national reach.”—Courier Journal
 
“Thoughtful . . . intensely moral . . . [Bingham] covers a spectacular amount of ground, from the origins of the song before the Civil War up to the present day . . . Engrossing twists and turns come with every chapter.”—Chapter 16

“A beautiful book. I was taken aback by how the song and its history, and Foster’s own history, are so much a part of our ongoing story. Bingham’s writing is compelling, and humbling, and moving.”—Rosanne Cash, singer, songwriter, and author
 
“Immersive and well-honed . . . [Bingham] astutely analyzes the song’s reinterpretation by Black artists and activists . . . an invigorating and eye-opening cultural history.”—Publishers Weekly
 
“Bingham asks readers to think critically about a song cherished by many and to consider the price of nostalgia.”—Library Journal

“Emily Bingham has painstakingly created a history quilt out of the intricacies of the profound effects of a single song on American culture. The result is wonder and dismay—and a lesson for today in how propaganda works. The story is compelling because it is about us, all Americans. The song ties us together or divides us in ways that can make you shudder to know your part in it. And yet that seductive melody is there, drawing us along through our complicated history. Bingham doesn’t let us escape. We’re gripped by the story and enlightened by her telling. She delves into some of the deepest issues America has ever faced, issues that are still unresolved. This book is not simply about lyrics of a song but how that song has been used to tell a lie.”—Bobbie Ann Mason, author of In Country and Dear Ann
 
“One song, in Emily Bingham’s brilliant hands, brings history and memory together in ways all Americans must confront if we are ever truly to hear one another.”—Timothy Tyson, author of the New York Times bestseller The Blood of Emmett Till

Library Journal

03/01/2022

Drawing from extensive research and personal experience, Bingham (Irrepressible: The Jazz Age Life of Henrietta Bingham) explores the history of Stephen Foster's "My Old Kentucky Home," a pre-Civil War song about a Black man sold down the river, written by a white man and often performed by white men in blackface. Bingham unravels the false narratives that were created around Foster's song in the 20th century, meant to indulge myths about plantation life, encourage visits from white tourists eager to see an idyllic South, and foster sentimentality for a past overflowing with injustices. She uses sheet music covers, photographs, and illustrations to demonstrate the contradictions between the actual treatment of Black people in the American South and the stories about slavery told by and for white people. Bingham asks readers to think critically about a song cherished by many and to consider the price of nostalgia; she concludes that one can love a song and still relinquish it as a symbol of hope or compassion. VERDICT Bingham convincingly argues that listeners cannot disconnect "My Old Kentucky Home" from its fraught and dishonest history and that the only way forward is to stop performing it altogether. Readers familiar with the song will get the most out of this book, as will anyone with a deep interest in the intersections of music and history.—Elizabeth Berndt-Morris

Kirkus Reviews

2022-03-24
An author and historian with roots in Kentucky traces the fraught history of the song "My Old Kentucky Home."

Bingham interweaves several narratives in her exploration of American composer Stephen Foster’s famous song. The author traces the song’s history and how it evolved from a tale of an enslaved Black man to a sanitized, nostalgic look at plantation life. She follows the story of Foster, who died young but became known as “the father of American music.” Bingham chronicles how Kentucky’s identity evolved from that of a state whose soldiers fought mostly for the Union to one whose official song presents an elegiac portrait of Southern life. She plumbs personal reminiscences of her own family, from a Confederate ancestor to her crusading liberal father, who ran the Louisville Courier-Journal. Bingham delivers many sections of fierce cultural criticism of the White appropriation of Black music and laments how the song has become embedded in the psyche of Kentuckians. It’s a lot to hang on one song, and the results are mixed. Many readers will wish for a more in-depth musical analysis of what makes “My Old Kentucky Home” so compelling. Given the author’s privilege within an influential Kentucky family, some readers may be put off by implied criticism of Black leaders who endorsed the song and Black musicians who have played it. In this piece of her analysis, Bingham gives inadequate credit to the predicament of Black Americans trying to make their ways in a White world. This book is clearly a labor of diligent scholarship, conviction, and repentance for the author, who has apologized for her family’s slowness to respond to Black concerns when they owned the newspaper. Her conclusion that Black Americans decide the fate of the song should be the final word; only they can truly understand the weight of the history and what it means today.

A well-researched but uneven mixture of history, memoir, and cultural criticism.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940176071276
Publisher: Penguin Random House
Publication date: 05/03/2022
Edition description: Unabridged

Read an Excerpt

Chapter 1

’Tis Summer, the Darkies Are Gay

Stephen Foster, Ethiopian Songwriter

We begin 387 miles northwest of Louisville, Kentucky, in Pittsburgh, which is 186 miles mostly west and a little north of the gentle sloped battlefield outside Gettysburg, Pennsylvania. Chronologically, we are nearly a decade from the Confederate general Pickett’s failed charge up that slope, a failure that tipped the balance of the Civil War for the Union.

We begin in 1852. Stephen Foster’s brother owned a side-wheeler steamboat. Twenty-five-year-old Stephen, his wife, Jane, and a group of friends booked a discounted passage down the Ohio from Pittsburgh to the junction with the Mississippi and all the way to New Orleans. For more than five hundred miles each way, the passengers gazed at Kentucky’s muddy shore. The boat would have docked briefly at Louisville, and the party would have had the chance to disembark to stretch their river legs. But not much more than that.

In early 1852, Americans everywhere were thinking about Kentucky. Harriet Beecher Stowe’s just-published novel, Uncle Tom’s Cabin; or, Life Among the Lowly, the most talked-about piece of fiction in the young nation’s history, opened on a Kentucky “farm.” Foster doubtless heard and possibly read about the saintly Tom, sold to cover his enslaver’s speculations, who dies under the lash on a Louisiana sugar plantation just as his Kentucky master’s son arrives to buy him back and bring him “home.” Stowe was protesting the Fugitive Slave Act, which implicated the whole of the nation in upholding chattel slavery. With archetypal characters embodying pathos and ethos, and limned in Christian ethics, Stowe hoped to motivate an insufficiently incensed white electorate. She supplied her readers with white villains to blame and white heroes to claim. Consciously or not, Stowe also drew key character traits, such as Uncle Tom’s fondness for white folks and the Black child Topsy’s thickheaded haplessness, straight from the American blackface minstrel show.

In its first six weeks, the novel sold twenty thousand copies in Pittsburgh alone.

The Fosters were die-hard Democrats. They aligned politically with the slaveholding region that supplied the raw material that made the national economy hum, while Stowe stoked a controversy that threatened American peace and prosperity. But Americans had long been entertained by Black bodies and their afflictions, and in Uncle Tom, Stephen could detect echoes of his earlier minstrel works that referenced loyal Black men fond of loved ones, “masters,” and plantation homes. Uncle Tom’s Cabin undoubtedly fanned the flames of the slavery debate; it was also bound up with the economy of chattel slavery that it purported to oppose and touched off a bonanza of spin-offs—dolls, teaspoons, wallpaper. Songs, too.

Some time after the riverboat journey, Stephen composed a yearning melody in a somber adagio tempo with a lump-in-the-throat chorus. The opening lines of “Poor Uncle Tom, Good Night”—revised and published in 1853 as “My Old Kentucky Home, Good Night!”—reproduced Uncle Tom’s Cabin’s peaceful opening scene on a Kentucky plantation. While in the novel greed and foolish speculations lead Tom’s owner into debt, Foster used shorthand with “Hard Times.” The sale of an enslaved man was in this account nobody’s fault. “De time has come when de darkeys hab to part,” Foster wrote. In the chorus, moreover, Tom’s faith in a worthier world provided relief from earthly trials:

Oh good night, good night, good night

Poor uncle Tom

Grieve not for your old Kentucky home

You’r bound for a better land

Old Uncle Tom.

“Poor Uncle Tom, Good Night” resolved the burden of Tom and all Black people like him in death. Its final verse was the end of Tom. It called no one to task and signaled the perpetual subjugation of one race of people to another:

De head must bow and de back will hab to bend,

Whereber de darkey may go;

A few more days, and de troubles all will end,

In de field wha de cotton had grow;

A few more days for to tote de weary load,

No matter, it soon will be light;

A few more days for to totter on de road,

Den poor uncle Tom good night.

Stowe was driven by outrage at a man-made system that brutalized human beings. Whereas her praying protagonist is in the prime of manhood and dies by vicious lashings, the minstrel songwriter’s version does not call on God or perform good works. Foster’s Uncle Tom is “old” and undisturbing and succumbs, as if naturally, without drama. Foster’s musical translation of Stowe’s tale captured a measure of the slave trade’s pathos, but it also presented tragedy as fate.

Stowe’s book was Stephen Foster’s catalyst, but to make sense of this song and Foster’s musical portrayal of a Black man, we must step back further, almost two decades to 1835. For several weeks running, a small audience settled at the appointed hour onto benches in a musty carriage house in a Pittsburgh alley. A gaggle of neighborhood boys began playing a tune and dancing round while nine-year-old Stevie Foster, his face sooted dark, sang his little heart out on “Long Tail Blue.” “Jim Crow is courting a brown gal, / The white folks called her Sue; / But I guess she let the nigger drop / When she see my long tail blue.” The diminutive “star performer” regaled the spectators with the ballad of a free Black dandy competing with “Jim Crow” for a woman’s sexual favors—his double-entendre secret weapon being an outrageously long tailcoat/phallus.

Jim Crow got mad and swore he’d fight,

With sword and pistol too;

But I guess I back’d the nigger out,

When he saw my long tail blue.

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Now all you chaps that wants a wife, And don’t know what to do;

Just look at me and I’ll show you how

To swing your long tail blue.

The crowd grinned and hooted, for that was the point, and entertaining is how minstrel shows coaxed coin from white Americans.

The prepubescent impresario moved from “Long Tail Blue” to “Coal Black Rose” who is courted with a banjo and promises of “possum fat and hominy.” The tunes were naughty and irresistibly catchy. According to his older brother, Stephen’s performance of popular “Ethiopian” melodies was judged so “true to nature” that he won “uproarious applause.” Of course the opposite was true. Inauthenticity—silly and absurd, lampooning and derisive inauthenticity—was what drew forth the applause.

The shows went on three nights a week with the front man earning a guaranteed sum from ticket sales and the other boys dividing what was left. Feeling rich, they walked their coins downtown to the Pittsburgh Theater and bought cheap seats in the pit, where they heard (but couldn’t see) famous actors like Junius Brutus Booth hold forth. A dismissive contemporary critic tarred blackface songs as spawn of “the very lowest puddles of society.” But little Stephen Foster was hardly the spawn of society’s bottom rung. It is more accurate to say that the songs he performed were just one of the many spillways for the entertainment of white America. It is not at all surprising that a path went directly from a makeshift back-alley theater to Junius Booth performing Shakespeare on the city’s main stage to his son John Wilkes Booth murdering Abraham Lincoln at Ford’s Theatre decades later in hopes of preserving the Confederacy and slavery. This is not coincidence but ubiquity, a culture steeped in race.

Foster’s biographer Ken Emerson has suggested that Stephen and his pals sang and played in blackface “because it was popular, because it was ‘cool,’ and because it offered a freedom that white middle-class culture couldn’t furnish.” “Freedom” doesn’t seem at all apt. “License” seems more apt, in the sense that blackface afforded white performers and audiences license to express openly what white middle-class culture expressed constantly yet obliquely: the mix of superior power and fear and awe that came with thoughts of blackness. Perhaps this helps answer just why this type of entertainment, born in the 1830s, took the nation and world by storm in the 1840s and became the most significant American cultural creation up to the advent of Hollywood. The fraud of miming blackness served whites, then and ever since. The critic Saidiya Hartman has written of the way minstrelsy forged American conceptions of “blackness [that] aroused pity and fear, desire and revulsion, and terror and pleasure.” Stephen Foster soaked daily in this blackface way of seeing and acting and laughing and feeling, which denigrated Black people while it proved how fascinating, and useful, they were.

Foster’s promising 1835 debut represented his lone turn on the boards. He was too shy and his mild tenor too weak to reproduce that early theatrical success. Yet his life story, the history of popular music, and American culture itself are all inseparable from the framework set by the blackface minstrel show he imitated as a child.

Stephen was the next to last of ten children in a middle-class family whose fortunes had been sliding downward since his birth in 1826. His father, William B. Foster, invested in real estate, scrambled for political offices and appointments, and started businesses including a stagecoach company and a general store, failing more often than not. William also battled a drinking problem. At a high point in his career, Foster senior acquired land for a bucolic “White Cottage” in a suburb, now Pittsburgh’s Lawrenceville district. When Stephen was three, the house was sold to pay creditors.

Financial strain hung about the Fosters like the window curtains they carried from home to home. At the time of Stephen’s brief theatrical stint, they were renters. They clung to bourgeois comforts, such as domestic servants that they could ill afford. About the time Stephen was jumping Jim Crow, the grateful family received an “excellent coloured girl” as a “present” from a friend. This indentured servant with three years remaining on her contract required no pay. (Pennsylvania’s Gradual Abolition Act permitted binding the minor children of enslaved people to indentures until they were twenty-eight years old.) She labored in an often-unhappy home.

The eldest Foster daughter, Charlotte, had a flair for music. When Stephen was three, the family learned of her untimely death during a visit to distant kin in Louisville, Kentucky, and seven months later a baby brother Jim followed Charlotte to the grave. Stephen’s mother, Eliza, suffered a breakdown, and her careworn face was forever engraved in her children’s minds. “All my gone by hopes are nothing but a dream,” Eliza wrote mournfully to another son. Before folding her letter, she added that Stephen was marching around the room with a drum and a feather in his hat “whistling old lang syne.” He was trying to cheer her up. Early on, Stephen found in music both an escape and a means of channeling loss into joyful distraction.

Prosperity and security for aging, dependent parents required gainful careers for the Foster sons and good marriages for children of both sexes. One of Stephen’s brothers courted the daughter of a Maryland planter with 250 human chattel, but the flirtation fizzled out. His elder brother William Foster Jr. became a railroad engineer and began supporting the household when Stephen was still learning to talk. The duty of the youngest son was to work hard at his lessons. But “Stephen was not,” his brother Morrison observed drily, “a methodical student.” Instead, he adored music. At seven, he picked up a recorder-like flageolet and taught himself to play “Hail, Columbia,” a patriotic march composed for George Washington’s inauguration. Stephen’s earliest surviving letter begs his father to bring home a “commic [sic] songster,” a book of blackface tunes. Patriotism and white supremacy floated through the rented rooms.

Fooling around with music was a distraction if not an impediment to Stephen’s future. Sent off to a boys’ academy in northern Pennsylvania at fourteen, he wheedled the brother who paid the tuition his parents could not afford. If “Brother William” would send money, he promised to go at his books six hours a day and give “attention to my music” only before bed. Ultimately, Stephen revolted, ran away home to Pittsburgh, studied mathematics with a tutor, and succeeded in begging for enough lessons to learn the piano and how to write musical notation. Social life interested him no more than prospecting for a career; he devoted every free hour “to musick, for which,” the father conceded, “he possesses a strange talent.”

While Stephen avoided grown-up responsibilities, his older brothers were making their way in industrializing America as striving apprentices and “practical business men.” Morrison Foster, who was three years older, worked for Hope Cotton Factory, making long buying trips to the South. Indeed, cotton was Pittsburgh’s leading industry, and he managed to get Stephen a job inspecting bales on their way from the Pittsburgh wharf, but the young man struggled to keep it.

Music offered no conceivable path forward. At the time, respectable society regarded “a young man addicted to music” as “a worthless fellow whose fate was the poor-house.” Music teachers and dancing masters were ubiquitous, usually foreign, often scapegrace drifters. If some musicians were seen as predatory, others were deemed “a sort of third or harmless sex . . . ​to be relieved of responsibility for thus wasting their lives, because they knew no better.”

Foster turned twenty in 1846. Finally, he agreed to keep the books for his brother Dunning at his Cincinnati wholesale mercantile brokerage. The office near the river city’s wharves negotiated purchases and arranged shipments at another swollen node of the nation’s cotton-driven economy. The labor of more than a million enslaved laborers boosted cotton to more than 60 percent of U.S. exports. The historian Edward Baptist estimated that more than half of the national economy “derived directly or indirectly from cotton.” Slavery was the goose that laid the “golden egg” of prosperity.

The brothers who supported Stephen’s education, paid his wages, and later enabled him to focus on composing music were up to their armpits in the cotton trade and its derivative commerce. He grew up amid a surging economy—“slavery’s capitalism,” the economic historians Sven Beckert and Seth Rockman called it. In Pittsburgh and Cincinnati, Foster confronted a diurnal “blur of commodities and capital that flowed between” and crumbled distinctions between the regions. A few outspoken and committed abolitionists petitioned Congress and led boycotts, but they failed to dent the global demand for the durable, comfortable fabric, and the Fosters denounced them.

Stephen composed songs in his spare time to share with family and a few friends who gathered for amateur evening harmonies at home. In Cincinnati, Foster gravitated to the nearby music shop of W. C. Peters, who previously plied his trade in Pittsburgh and sold Stephen his first flute. Foster played on the shop’s piano, browsed the stock of sheet music, and spent his clerk’s wages. Peters was his first publisher, printing “Old Uncle Ned” in 1848 with a cover featuring a blackface minstrel troupe called the Sable Harmonists. The ode to an “ideal slave”mourned by the “massa” began in a moderate tempo:

From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews