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Silas Seth Weeks (September 8, 1868 – December 1953) was an American composer who played , , and . Oxford African American Center, Weeks, SethSampson, Henry T., "Seth Weeks" From Banjo World, Vol. 8, No. 73, December, 1900, p. 20, in Blacks in Blackface: A Sourcebook on Early Black Musical Shows, Scarecrow Press, October 30, 2013, pp. 1439-1440. Although he played many instruments he concentrated professionally on the mandolin. He is considered to be the first to play mandolin during its golden period and was considered instrumental in bringing the mandolin to the prominent national standing that it had in the early 1900s. He was the first American known to write a mandolin (in 1900) and led a mandolin and guitar orchestra in Tacoma, Washington.


Biography
Weeks was born in Vermont, Illinois. One of his musical goals was to make the mandolin independent of other instruments, and his playing emphasized the duo style, a way of playing in which the mandolin takes the , and parts all at once. Properly done, duo style produces what sounds like "two or more instruments" instead of only one. ARCHIVED TOPIC: "Duo Method?", Banjo Hangout. A review of his music by Lyon and Healy of indicated success, saying that he had included harmony with the melody in most of his arrangements.

He toured America in "circuits" performing and teaching, including in public schools in Chicago, , Salt Lake City, and . He also performed in New York City, , Providence, Rhode Island, and internationally in , Canada.

He composed and arranged as well, performing his own works on tour. He became prominent enough that he was able to tour Europe (England, France and Russia) and live there periodically. He settled temporarily in Europe, living first in until World War I, when he returned with his family to New York and played in jazz bands. When he returned to Europe in 1920, he went to France, playing at the Apollo in . His place of death is unknown, but was reported in the January 9, 1954, edition of the New York Amsterdam News, on page 9.

He was an admirer of the performances of America's other mandolinists of his day, , W. Eugene Page, , J. W. Marler, W. L. Barney (a Chicago musician in the 1890s–1920s), and Fred Lewis.


Recordings
Weeks made recordings with in London and with Berliner Gramophone in while touring Europe. His recordings are mostly unknown or lost today and are available on compact disk only as part of box set about Black-people who made music in Europe.Lotz, Rainer, "Black Europe, Some early African-American recording artists outside the United States" (presented at the 2011 IAJRC Convention), IAJRC Journal, December 1, 2011. Recordings which have survived include: Black Europe compact disk track list

(Record companies and dates come from a list of lost music published by the Library of Congress National Recording Preservation Board, and not from the Black Europe compact disk set.)

  • Poet And Peasant
  • Concert Polka (Pioneer/Columbia/Edison) (1901/1903/1904)
  • Handicap March (Pioneer/Edison Bell/Pathe) (1901/1903/1904)
  • Georgia Camp Meeting (Pioneer/Columbia) (1901/1903)
  • Hungarian Dance (Pathe) (1904)
  • Poet And Peasant
  • Soldiers In The Park (Pioneer) (1903), (Pathe) (1904)

List by the Library of Congress National Recording Preservation Board of recordings feared lost:

  • Allegro (Pioneer/Columbia/Edison) (1901/1903)
  • The Charlatan March (Berliner) (1900)
  • Donauwellen (Pioneer) (1903)
  • Jeunesse Doree (Nicole) (1904)
  • Laburnum Gavotte (Pioneer/Columbia) (1903)
  • Lumbrin' Luke (Columbia) (1904)
  • Mazurka de Concert (Pioneer/Edison) (1901/1903)
  • Overture (Pioneer/Columbia/Edison) (1903)
  • Popular Airs Medley (Pioneer) (1903)
  • The Washington Post March (Pioneer/Pathe) (1903/1904)
  • Whistling Rufus (Pioneer) (1903)


Personal life
He is the father of Fay E. Allen, an accomplished musician in her own right. Father and daughter would frequently play together with on at least once occasion they were invited to perform before . She would later become a distinguished music educator and the first African American to serve on the Los Angeles Board of Education.


See also
  • List of mandolinists (sorted)
  • Mandolins in North America


External links

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