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  2. The first musicians anywhere in North America were Native Americans, who consist of hundreds of ethnic groups across the country, each with their own unique styles of folk music. Of these cultures, many, and their musical traditions, are now extinct, though some remain relatively vibrant in a modern form, such as Hawaiian music .

  3. 1737 First organ built in British North America by Johann G. Klemm (or Clemm) of Phildephia, for Trinity Church in New York City. 1747 First choral music collection from the press of the Ephrata Clositer, a Protestant monastic order in Pennsylvania: Paradisches Wunder-Spiel .

  4. Oct 11, 2021 · First premiered in London in 1728, the smash success debuted in the colonies sometime in the 1750s. Between the formality of music in church, structured dance music, and full musical productions of theater, folk music became yet another staple of culture in North America during this century.

  5. The first singing school in the United States is formed in Charleston, South Carolina, where music is taught by John Salter at a boarding school for girls run by his wife. [57][58] Salter is the first secular music teacher in the country.

  6. In 1766, Charlestown (Charleston), South Carolina became the home of the St. Cecilia Society, the first musical society in North America. At the time, Charleston was a cultural center, attracting a number of musicians from Europe.

  7. Feb 7, 2006 · A French-born priest, René Ménard, composed motets around 1640, and the second Canadian-born priest, Charles-Amador Martin, is credited with the plainchant music for the prose "Sacrae familiae felix spectaculum" (about 1700) in celebration of the Holy Family feast day.

  8. Understanding the music that early Americans chose to sing and play gives us a better understanding of the colonists themselves. Their music included ballads, dance tunes, folk songs and parodies, comic opera arias, drum signals, psalms, minuets, and sonatas.

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