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  1. Vor 6 Tagen · In 1980, 23-year-old Curtis, suffering from depression, hanged himself at his home in Macclesfield. early years. After his death, the widow and daughter of Ian Curtis did not attract the attention of the press. In 1982, Deborah remarried and gave birth to a son. Ian Curtis' daughters Natalie Curtis was 1 year old at the time of his death. The ...

  2. Natalie Curtis was born on April 26, 1876 in New York City. She was the daughter of socialites Edward Curtis of Providence, Rhode Island and August Lawler Stacy Curtis of Chester, Pennsylvania. Natalie Curtis’s family tree includes ties to two early colonists, Henry and Mary Curtis, who arrived in Sudbury, Massachusetts in 1636, and also to the prominent Curtis and Burrill families of ...

  3. Natalie Curtis Burlin (1876?1921) was born to a wealthy New York City family and initially trained for a career as a classical concert pianist. But in 1903, she left her family and training behind to study, collect, and popularize the music of American Indians in the Southwest and African Americans at the Hampton Institute in the belief that the music of these groups could help forge a ...

  4. 14. Mai 2018 · Natalie Curtis Burlin (1875-1921) was an American ethnomusicologist who began the movement to transcribe the traditional songs of Native American tribes. She also published a four-volume collection of African American spirituals. Her work helped preserve the folk songs of both groups. Born Natalie Curtis in New York City on April 26, 1875 ...

  5. Navajos: Natalie Curtis's Journey From Classical Music to Native and African American Folk Songs1 Michelle Wick Patterson, Mount St. Mary's University On the evening of New Year's Day 1903, Natalie Curtis, one of a "few privileged palefaces" who had led a group of about thirty Navajos to Pasadena, California, for the Tournament of Roses festi-

  6. 23. Sept. 2017 · Natalie Curtis was an American ethnomusicologist particularly interested in preserving American Indian and African American music by transcribing songs as accurately as possible. Her work is often recognized along with the work of Alice Fletcher and Frances Densmore as an essential contribution to the preservation of a “vanishing” culture. In 1907 she published “The Indians Book,” a ...

  7. Natalie Curtis Burlin (1876–1921) was born to a wealthy New York City family and initially trained for a career as a classical concert pianist. But in 1903, she left her family and training behind to study, collect, and popularize the music of American Indians in the Southwest and African Americans at the Hampton Institute in the belief that the music of these groups could help forge a ...