Whose Music?
Title | Whose Music? PDF eBook |
Author | John Shepherd |
Publisher | Routledge |
Total Pages | 300 |
Release | 2017-07-12 |
Genre | Music |
ISBN | 135147166X |
Whose Music? combines historical, musicological, and sociological materials and styles of analysis in ways that connect to the field of sociology. The analyses of social class systems presented here speak in translatable ways to analyses of musical forms. Not only that, both are connected to an understanding of the organizations through which works are distributed to their audiences. Perhaps most importantly for the contemporary reader, this book depicts the part of the process by which dominant class groups justify their domination--cultural and otherwise.
Whose Blues?
Title | Whose Blues? PDF eBook |
Author | Adam Gussow |
Publisher | UNC Press Books |
Total Pages | 333 |
Release | 2020-09-28 |
Genre | Music |
ISBN | 1469660377 |
Mamie Smith's pathbreaking 1920 recording of "Crazy Blues" set the pop music world on fire, inaugurating a new African American market for "race records." Not long after, such records also brought black blues performance to an expanding international audience. A century later, the mainstream blues world has transformed into a multicultural and transnational melting pot, taking the music far beyond the black southern world of its origins. But not everybody is happy about that. If there's "No black. No white. Just the blues," as one familiar meme suggests, why do some blues people hear such pronouncements as an aggressive attempt at cultural appropriation and an erasure of traumatic histories that lie deep in the heart of the music? Then again, if "blues is black music," as some performers and critics insist, what should we make of the vibrant global blues scene, with its all-comers mix of nationalities and ethnicities? In Whose Blues?, award-winning blues scholar and performer Adam Gussow confronts these challenging questions head-on. Using blues literature and history as a cultural anchor, Gussow defines, interprets, and makes sense of the blues for the new millennium. Drawing on the blues tradition's major writers including W. C. Handy, Langston Hughes, Zora Neale Hurston, and Amiri Baraka, and grounded in his first-person knowledge of the blues performance scene, Gussow's thought-provoking book kickstarts a long overdue conversation.
Whose Country Music?
Title | Whose Country Music? PDF eBook |
Author | Paula J. Bishop |
Publisher | Cambridge University Press |
Total Pages | 323 |
Release | 2022-12 |
Genre | Music |
ISBN | 1108837123 |
Questions and challenges the systems of gatekeeping that have restricted participation in twenty-first century country music culture.
Volume of Proceedings of the Music Teachers' National Association ...
Title | Volume of Proceedings of the Music Teachers' National Association ... PDF eBook |
Author | Music Teachers National Association |
Publisher | |
Total Pages | 302 |
Release | 1927 |
Genre | Music |
ISBN |
With the report of the 16th meeting, 1894, was issued "The secretary's official report of the special meeting ... Chicago, 1893," containing a ršum ̌of the reports of meetings from 1876 to 1892.
Americana Music
Title | Americana Music PDF eBook |
Author | Lee Zimmerman |
Publisher | Texas A&M University Press |
Total Pages | 334 |
Release | 2019-01-23 |
Genre | Music |
ISBN | 1623497019 |
With roots in Appalachia, the Mississippi Delta, New Orleans, the Piedmont, Memphis, and the prairies of Texas and the American West, the musical genre called Americana can prove difficult to define. Nevertheless, this burgeoning trend in American popular music continues to expand and develop, winning new audiences and engendering fresh, innovative artists at an exponential rate. As Lee Zimmerman illustrates in Americana Music: Voices, Visionaries, and Pioneers of an Honest Sound, “Americana” covers a gamut of sounds and styles. In its strictest sense, it is a blanket term for bluegrass, country, mountain music, rockabilly, and the blues. By a broader definition, it can encompass roots rock, country rock, singer/songwriters, R&B, and their various combinations. Bob Dylan, Hank Williams, Carl Perkins, and Tom Petty can all lay valid claims as purveyors of Americana, but so can Elvis Costello, Solomon Burke, and Jason Isbell. Americana is new and old, classic and contemporary, trendy and traditional. Mining the firsthand insights of those whose stories help shape the sound—people such as Ralph Stanley, John McEuen (Nitty Gritty Dirt Band), Chris Hillman (Byrds, Flying Burrito Brothers), Paul Cotton and Rusty Young (Poco), Shawn Colvin, Kinky Friedman, David Bromberg, the Avett Brothers, Amanda Shires, Ruthie Foster, and many more—Americana Music provides a history of how Americana originated, how it reached a broader audience in the ’60s and ’70s with the merging of rock and country, and how it evolved its overwhelmingly populist appeal as it entered the new millennium.
The Story of Music
Title | The Story of Music PDF eBook |
Author | Paul Bekker |
Publisher | New York : W. W. Norton |
Total Pages | 300 |
Release | 1927 |
Genre | Music |
ISBN |
The New Music Review and Church Music Review
Title | The New Music Review and Church Music Review PDF eBook |
Author | |
Publisher | |
Total Pages | 552 |
Release | 1912 |
Genre | Church music |
ISBN |