Victor-Eugene McCarty

Victor-Eugene McCarty (also Macarty, McCarthy or Macarthy, born between 1817 and 1823),[1] a Louisiana Creole, was one of the first of several prominent free black composers in New Orleans, best-known for publishing Fleurs de salon: 2 Favorite Polkas in 1854.[2] He had earlier in the 1840s become among the first black men to study music abroad, at the Paris Conservatory.[3]

McCarty did not publish as widely as many of his fellow Creole composers of the era, but he was well-known for performing and organizing other musicians, and playing a role in Reconstruction-era politics.[4]

References

Notes

  1. ^ Kein, pg. 83; Kein notes that most researchers claim a specific year for McCarty's birth, but that it can not be determined conclusively.
  2. ^ Wright, Jacqueline R. B.. "Concert Music". The Garland Encyclopedia of World Music. pp. 603–613. 
  3. ^ Southern, pg. 252
  4. ^ Kein, pg. 83