The Rock Music Imagination
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The Rock Music Imagination
Author | : Robert McParland |
Publsiher | : Rowman & Littlefield |
Total Pages | : 219 |
Release | : 2019-08-09 |
Genre | : Music |
ISBN | : 9781498588539 |
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The Rock Music Imagination is an exploration of rock artists in their social and artistic contexts, particularly between 1964 and 1980, and of rock music in relation to literature, that is, creative expression, fantastic imagination, and contemporary fiction about rock. Robert McParland analyzes how rock music touches our imaginative lives by looking at themes that appear in classic rock music: freedom and liberation, utopia and dystopia, community, rebellion, the outsider, the quest for transcendence, monstrosity, erotic and spiritual love, imaginative vision, and mystery. The Rock Music Imagination explores blues imagination, countercultural dreams of utopia, rock’s critiques of society and images of dystopia, rock’s inheritance from romanticism, science fiction and mythic imagination in progressive rock, and rock’s global reach and potential to provide hope and humanitarian assistance.
Just Around Midnight
Author | : Jack Hamilton |
Publsiher | : Harvard University Press |
Total Pages | : 351 |
Release | : 2016-09-26 |
Genre | : History |
ISBN | : 9780674416598 |
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When Jimi Hendrix died, the idea of a black man playing lead guitar in a rock band seemed exotic. Yet ten years earlier, Chuck Berry had stood among the most influential rock and roll performers. Why did rock and roll become white? Jack Hamilton challenges the racial categories that distort standard histories of rock music and the 60s revolution.
Musical ImagiNation
Author | : Maria Elena Cepeda |
Publsiher | : NYU Press |
Total Pages | : 268 |
Release | : 2010 |
Genre | : Social Science |
ISBN | : 9780814716922 |
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Long associated with the pejorative cliches of the drug-trafficking trade and political violence, contemporary Colombia has been unfairly stigmatized. This study of the Miami music industry and Miami's growing Colombian community asserts that popular music provides an alternative common space for imagining and enacting Colombian identity.
Sounding the Color Line
Author | : Erich Nunn |
Publsiher | : University of Georgia Press |
Total Pages | : 224 |
Release | : 2015-06-01 |
Genre | : Music |
ISBN | : 9780820348353 |
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Sounding the Color Line explores how competing understandings of the U.S. South in the first decades of the twentieth century have led us to experience musical forms, sounds, and genres in racialized contexts. Yet, though we may speak of white or black music, rock or rap, sounds constantly leak through such barriers. A critical disjuncture exists, then, between actual interracial musical and cultural forms on the one hand and racialized structures of feeling on the other. This is nowhere more apparent than in the South. Like Jim Crow segregation, the separation of musical forms along racial lines has required enormous energy to maintain. How, asks Nunn, did the protocols structuring listeners' racial associations arise? How have they evolved and been maintained in the face of repeated transgressions of the musical color line? Considering the South as the imagined ground where conflicts of racial and national identities are staged, this book looks at developing ideas concerning folk song and racial and cultural nationalism alongside the competing and sometimes contradictory workings of an emerging culture industry. Drawing on a diverse archive of musical recordings, critical artifacts, and literary texts, Nunn reveals how the musical color line has not only been established and maintained but also repeatedly crossed, fractured, and reformed. This push and pull--between segregationist cultural logics and music's disrespect of racially defined boundaries--is an animating force in twentieth-century American popular culture.
Science Fiction in Classic Rock
Author | : Robert McParland |
Publsiher | : McFarland |
Total Pages | : 209 |
Release | : 2017-10-27 |
Genre | : Music |
ISBN | : 9781476630304 |
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As technology advances, society retains its mythical roots--a tendency evident in rock music and its enduring relationship with myth and science fiction. This study explores the mythical and fantastic themes of artists from the late 1960s to the mid-1980s, including David Bowie, Pink Floyd, Jefferson Airplane, Blue Oyster Cult, Iron Maiden, Led Zeppelin and Black Sabbath. Drawing on insights from Joseph Campbell, J.G. Frazer, Carl Jung and Mircea Eliade, the author examines how performers have incorporated mythic archetypes and science fiction imagery into songs that illustrate societal concerns and futuristic fantasies.
The Oxford Handbook of Sound and Imagination
Author | : Mark Grimshaw-Aagaard,Mads Walther-Hansen,Martin Knakkergaard |
Publsiher | : Oxford University Press |
Total Pages | : 752 |
Release | : 2019-07-26 |
Genre | : Music |
ISBN | : 9780190460174 |
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Whether social, cultural, or individual, the act of imagination always derives from a pre-existing context. For example, we can conjure an alien's scream from previously heard wildlife recordings or mentally rehearse a piece of music while waiting for a train. This process is no less true for the role of imagination in sonic events and artifacts. Many existing works on sonic imagination tend to discuss musical imagination through terms like compositional creativity or performance technique. In this two-volume Handbook, contributors shift the focus of imagination away from the visual by addressing the topic of sonic imagination and expanding the field beyond musical compositional creativity and performance technique into other aural arenas where the imagination holds similar power. Topics covered include auditory imagery and the neurology of sonic imagination; aural hallucination and illusion; use of metaphor in the recording studio; the projection of acoustic imagination in architectural design; and the design of sound artifacts for cinema and computer games.
Rock Music Icons
Author | : Robert McParland |
Publsiher | : Rowman & Littlefield |
Total Pages | : 237 |
Release | : 2022-08-12 |
Genre | : Music |
ISBN | : 9781666915327 |
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The music, performances, and cultural impact of some of the most enduring figures in popular music are explored in Rock Music Icons: Musical and Cultural Impacts. This collection investigates authenticity, identity, and the power of the voices and images of widely circulated and shared artists that have become the soundtrack of our lives.
Music the Brain and Ecstasy
Author | : Robert Jourdain |
Publsiher | : William Morrow |
Total Pages | : 410 |
Release | : 1997 |
Genre | : Music |
ISBN | : UOM:39015035735375 |
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At the evolution of music and introduces surprising new concepts of memory and perception, knowledge and attention, motion and emotion, all at work as music takes hold of us. Along the way, a fascinating cast of characters brings Jourdain's narrative to vivid life: "idiots savants" who absorb whole pieces on a single hearing, composers who hallucinate entire compositions, a psychic who claimed to take dictation from long-dead composers, and victims of brain damage who.