The Resisting Muse: Popular Music and Social ProtestIan Peddie Ashgate, 2006 - 228 páginas Popular music has traditionally served as a rallying point for voices of opposition, across a huge variety of genres. This volume examines the various ways popular music has been deployed as anti-establishment and how such opposition both influences and responds to the music produced. Implicit in the notion of resistance is a broad adversarial hegemony against which opposition is measured. But it would be wrong to regard the music of popular protest as a kind of dialogue in league against 'the establishment'. Convenient though they are, such 'us and them' arguments bespeak a rather shop-worn stance redolent of youthful rebellion. It is much more fruitful to perceive the relationship as a complex dialectic where musical protest is as fluid as the audiences to which it appeals and the hegemonic structures it opposes. The book's contemporary focus (largely post-1975) allows for comprehensive coverage of extremely diverse forms of popular music in relation to the creation of communities of protest. Because such communities are fragmented and diverse, the shared experience and identity popular music purports is dependent upon an audience collectivity that is now difficult to presume. In this respect, The Resisting Muse examines how the forms and aims of social protest music are contingent upon the audience's ability to invest the music with the 'appropriate' political meaning. Amongst a plethora of artists, genres, and themes, highlights include discussions of Aboriginal rights and music, Bauhaus, Black Sabbath, Billy Bragg, Bono, Cassette culture, The Capitol Steps, Class, The Cure, DJ Spooky, Drum and Bass, Eminem, Farm Aid, Foxy Brown, Folk, Goldie, Gothicism, Woody Guthrie, Heavy Metal, Hip-hop, Independent/home publishing, Iron Maiden, Joy Division, Jungle, Led Zeppelin, Lil'Kim, Live Aid, Marilyn Manson, Bob Marley, MC Eiht, Minor Threat, Motown, Queen Latifah, Race, Rap, Rastafarianism, Reggae, The Roots, Diana Ross, Rush, Salt-n-Pepa, 7 Seconds, Roxanne Shanté, Siouxsie and the Banshees, The Sisters of Mercy, Michelle Shocked, Bessie Smith, Straight edge Sunrize Band, Bunny Wailer, Wilco, Bart Willoughby, Wirrinyga Band, Zines. |
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Página 86
... artists finds itself constricted by the ideological limitations of thug tropes and rhetoric . However , I have gone through this rushed genealogy from swing to hip - hop to make several points that seemed worth remembering for scholars ...
... artists finds itself constricted by the ideological limitations of thug tropes and rhetoric . However , I have gone through this rushed genealogy from swing to hip - hop to make several points that seemed worth remembering for scholars ...
Página 128
... artists . Bands such as The Areyonga Desert Tigers , Wedgetail Eagles , Warumpi ( Band ) and Coloured Stone , and solo artists Punch Thompson and Frankie Yamma ... have been able to utilise the airwaves to spread the word about ...
... artists . Bands such as The Areyonga Desert Tigers , Wedgetail Eagles , Warumpi ( Band ) and Coloured Stone , and solo artists Punch Thompson and Frankie Yamma ... have been able to utilise the airwaves to spread the word about ...
Página 199
... artists who couldn't care less about clean veins , clean lungs or clean consciences in terms of a carnivorous diet ? ' This question is in fact one of the major cruxes in straight edge . Again speaking as a platonic , rather than ...
... artists who couldn't care less about clean veins , clean lungs or clean consciences in terms of a carnivorous diet ? ' This question is in fact one of the major cruxes in straight edge . Again speaking as a platonic , rather than ...
Contenido
so many and so few | 3 |
The decline and rebirth of folkprotest music | 17 |
Michelle Shocked | 30 |
Derechos de autor | |
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Aboriginal Aboriginal cultures aesthetic African-American album American artists audience authenticity of ethos authenticity of genre Babylon band's bands become Billy Bragg bitch Black Country blues Bob Dylan cassette cassette-tape concerts contemporary critics decades doo wop Dreamtime drugs early Edgers example experience fans feminist folk music Goldie Goldie's gothic gothic music Guthrie's heavy metal hip-hop home recording Ian Curtis identity independent music individual issues Jamaican Joy Division listeners live mainstream Mermaid Avenue Mondegreens multiracial musicians performers political engagement popular music protest music protest songs punk quoted racial rappers Rastafarian reggae reggae songs resistance rock music rock protest songs rock songs role roll sense sexual Shocked Shocked's sing singer-songwriter singers Snipehunt social movements social protest song's songwriters Sound Choice Springsteen straight edge subculture suggests tape topical traditional underclass vision Wirrinyga women Woody Guthrie youth