Books and Databases for Celebrating African American Music Appreciation Month

"There's music in the air."
"There's music in the air." NYPL Digital Collections, Image ID: 832891

In June, we celebrate the contributions African Americans have made to the world of music and the African diaspora. Formerly known as National Black Music Month, African American Music Appreciation Month was established on June 7, 1979, by President Jimmy Carter to acknowledge musical genres like spiritual/gospel, blues, rock and roll, folk, jazz, rhythm and blues, and hip-hop/rap. These genres are infused into other music categories such as pop, country, disco, and classical music. 

Below is a list of inspiring nonfiction and fiction titles (many available in digital formats) and resources that introduce users of all ages to the world of African American music and the influences it has on our culture.

Books

Adults

Teens

Children

Databases

African American Experience – A full-text digital resource that explores the history and culture of African Americans.

Biography in Context – Provides biographical information on 650,000+ people throughout history, worldwide, and across all disciplines. 

BrainPop – Hundreds of BrainPop videos explain various concepts in Math, Science, Social Studies, English, Art & Music, Health, and Technology.

Music Index Online – Features over 1.4 million musical records. The searchable database is updated quarterly, with about 100,000 new records added annually. 

Musical America – A weekly newspaper of music and the music business.

Oxford Music Online – A gateway offering users the ability to access and cross-search multiple music reference resources in one location. Contains the Grove Music Online, the Oxford Dictionary of Music, and the Oxford Companion to Music.