Jazz and race in colonial India

The role of Anglo-Indian musicians in the diffusion of jazz in Calcutta

Authors

  • Stephane Dorin Université Paris 8

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/jazz.v4i2.123

Keywords:

Anglo-Indians, India, race, Roy Butler, Teddy Weatherford

Abstract

Musical forms such as ragtime and jazz were played in Calcutta’s hotels and clubs, important institutions in elites’ social life in colonial India. The musicians could be European or American, when a foreign band was hired for a season. Some of these formations tended to include Anglo-Indian members. Anglo-Indian musicians acted as go-betweens, passing down the theoretical knowledge of western harmony as well as the practice of western instruments to the generations of post-Independence India. Moreover, they were the first Indian musicians to perform jazz and blues standards in Calcutta or Bombay, around World War II. Thus, they played a major role in the diffusion of jazz and blues music in India.

Author Biography

  • Stephane Dorin, Université Paris 8

    Stéphane Dorin is a sociologist of music and culture. He worked on the globalization of jazz and rock music in India, and now develops a fieldwork on classical music audiences in France and in Europe, in order to understand the relations between highbrow and lowbrow cultures, the role of the media in cultural production and the changing omnivorous patterns of cultural consumption.

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Published

2012-03-28

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

Dorin, S. (2012). Jazz and race in colonial India: The role of Anglo-Indian musicians in the diffusion of jazz in Calcutta. Jazz Research Journal, 4(2), 123-140. https://doi.org/10.1558/jazz.v4i2.123