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The name ?Tin Pan Alley? is attributed to a newspaper writer named Monroe Rosenfeld. While he was staying in New York, he coined the term to articulate the cacophony of dozens of pianos being pounded at once in publisher's demo rooms. He said it sounded like hundreds of people pounding on tin pans.
Origin of the name Rosenfeld in the New York Herald to the collective sound made by many "cheap upright pianos" all playing different tunes being reminiscent of the banging of tin pans in an alleyway.
Some place the start of the Tin Pan Alley era in 1885 or 1890 and claim that it was over as early as 1909 (ing to phone records and some facsimiles of sheet music covers, it would seem that most of the music publishers left the block by 1909.).
Types of primary sources include: Scores in general, but particularly manuscripts/facsimiles of scores or early printed editions of scores. Musical or spoken audio recording. Letters/correspondence.
Tin Pan Alley was a nickname given to West Twenty-eighth Street between Broadway and Sixth Avenue in Manhattan, where many of the fledgling popular music publishers had offices. In time, it became the generic term for all publishers of popular American sheet music, regardless of their geographic location.
The history of the name, Tin Pan Alley, is a mystery as well although there is an apocryphal story that the term was coined by Monroe H. Rosenfeld of the New York Herald comparing the constant sound of multiple pianos with questionable intonation on the block to children banging on tin pans.
The free form of music represents music composed with no specific guidelines laid down to follow. They often rely on improvisation rather than fixed music structures. This free form of music is known as fantasia. Fantasia is borrowed from Latin, and it denotes imagination, meaning no specific rules are laid down.
The term ?Tin Pan Alley? refers to the physical location of the New York City-centered music publishers and songwriters who dominated the popular music of the United States in the late 19th century and early 20th century. Tin Pan Alley was the popular music publishing center of the world between 1885 to the 1920s.