Portia Katrenia Maultsby | |
|---|---|
| Born | (1947-06-11)June 11, 1947 (age 78) Orlando, Florida, U.S. |
| Title | Professor emerita |
| Academic background | |
| Alma mater | University of Wisconsin, Madison |
| Academic work | |
| Discipline | Ethnomusicology |
| Sub-discipline | African American music |
| Institutions | Indiana University |
Portia Katrenia Maultsby (born June 21, 1947)[1] is an Americanethnomusicologist and educator. She is aprofessor emerita atIndiana University Bloomington and specializes inAfrican-American music. She founded the university'sArchives of African American Music and Culture in 1991.
Maultsby was born inOrlando, Florida,[1] to Maxie C. and Valdee Maultsby (later Maultsby-Williams),[2][3] and grew up in thesegregated American South.[4] Her older brother was psychiatristMaxie C. Maultsby, Jr. (1932–2016).[2][5] She also had a twin brother, Casel Hayes Maultsby (1947–1988), a pilot.[2][6]
Maultsby graduated fromJones High School in Orlando in 1964.[7] She attended Mount St Scholastica College (nowBenedictine College) inAtchison,Kansas, on a music scholarship,[7] graduating in 1968 with a bachelor's degree in piano, theory, and composition.[1] The following year, she earned amaster's degree in musicology from theUniversity of Wisconsin-Madison.[1] In 1974, she was awarded aPhD inethnomusicology from the University of Wisconsin-Madison;[7][8] she was the first African American to be awarded that degree in the United States.[1]
Maultsby began lecturing at Indiana University in 1971, while still a graduate student.[1][9] She was recruited by Dr. Herman Hudson and became the founding director of the Indiana University Soul Revue, a student ensemble dedicated to Black music.[9][7] By 1975, she was an assistant professor in the Department ofAfrican-American Studies.[7] In 1977 Maultsby produced a song called "Music is Just a Party" for her ensemble. This song would be selected as Billboard's top single in the First-Time-Around category.[10] She went on to become chair of the department (1985–91), then professor in the Department of Folklore and Ethnomusicology (from 1992).[1]
Maultsby's specialization in African-American music spans genres, includingfunk,soul,rhythm and blues, andspirituals.[9][11] She founded the university'sArchives of African American Music and Culture in 1991, and served as its director from 1991 through 2013.[9] The archives started as Maultsby's personal collection and grew to include more than 10,000 pieces of music and music-related items (including interviews, photographs, and recordings) by 2003.[4]
Maultsby co-edited two textbooks with her Indiana University colleagueMellonee V. Burnim:African American Music: An Introduction (2006)[12] andIssues in African American Music: Power, Gender, Race, Representation (2016).[13] She wrote the foreword to the 2018 bookBlack Lives Matter and Music: Protest, Intervention, Reflection, edited byFernando Orejuela andStephanie Shonekan.[14]
In 2011, Maultsby received an award from National Association for the Study and Performance of African American Music. Maultsby has also served as a consultant for museums (including serving as a senior scholar at theSmithsonian Institution in 1985) and as a researcher documentary films (including the PBS documentary seriesEyes on the Prize).[15][16] She has consulted on various different projects such as The Motown Sound, Wade in the Water, and Chicago’s Record Row: The Cradle of Rhythm and Blues.