Luigi Monge is a freelance teacher and translator living in Genoa, Italy. In his native Italian, he has written Robert Johnson: I Got the Blues and Howlin' Wolf: I'm the Wolf. In English, he has published articles in Black Music Research, Journal of Texas Music History, and Popular Music. David Evans is author of several books and other publications and productions on blues music and has received two Grammy Awards for Best Album Notes. His musical performance career has taken him to twenty-three countries and resulted in six CDs. Evans taught at California State University, Fullerton, and the University of Memphis, where he retired as professor of music emeritus.
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{...] a thoroughly researched, engaging study that certainly offers a different perspective on the songs at hand. Hearty commendations to Luigi Monge for his devotion to completing this book!--Mark Thompson "Blues Blast Magazine" [This] masterful publication. . . proves to be an indispensable tool for any lover of the history of Afro-American popular music. Many thanks to Luigi Monge!--Jean Buzelin "Soul Bag" Luigi seems to have written as comprehensive a book as possible. It is an impressive piece of work, and those interested in the lyric content or concerns of older documented African American songs should certainly add this to their book-shelves.--Norman Darwen "Blues & Rhythm" For decades, folklorists and social historians have called upon vernacular music recordings to illustrate the impact of tragedies and disasters on the lives of middle- and working-class white Americans. Now, blues expert Luigi Monge offers us an unprecedentedly thorough study that demonstrates that the Black American community was just as creative in articulating its own responses to the many types of tragedies to which they fell victim. This volume is sure to find its place among those classics of scholarship that prove that songs and ballads are as important documents of American social history as are newspapers and magazines.--Norm Cohen, retired physical chemist and author of American Folk Songs: A Regional Encyclopedia The comprehensiveness of Wasn't That a Mighty Day: African American Blues and Gospel Songs on Disaster clearly makes this a valuable resource for future researchers in blues and more broadly African American studies.--Robert Cataliotti "Living Blues" Luigi Monge's account of African American songs about natural and human-caused disasters is as accurate as it is comprehensive and offers vivid and detailed depictions of the events that sparked the songs' creations. With insight and respect, Monge explores the ways that singers and their audiences found meaning in the meaningless, thought about the unthinkable, and bore the unbearable. Wasn't That a Mighty Day is a mighty achievement.--Chris Smith, freelance historian and discographer of blues and gospel music Luigi Monge's Wasn't That a Mighty Day is in the Category 5 of blues books! The blues may change, but the disasters will get bigger. Monge recovers from the rubble of time some of the greatest American tales, and he explains how--and why--these events and songs stay in the American memory. His book is also an engrossing read!--Edward Komara, distinguished librarian of music, State University of New York at Potsdam