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Books > Music > Contemporary popular music
In this concise and engaging analysis of rock music, music theorist
Ken Stephenson explores the features that make this internationally
popular music distinct from earlier music styles. The author offers
a guided tour of rock music from the 1950s to the present,
emphasizing the theoretical underpinnings of the style and, for the
first time, systematically focusing not on rock music's history or
sociology, but on the structural aspects of the music itself. What
structures normally happen in rock music? What theoretical systems
or models might best explain them? The book addresses these
questions and more in chapters devoted to phrase rhythm, scales,
key determination, cadences, harmonic palette and succession, and
form. Each chapter provides richly detailed analyses of individual
rock pieces from groups including Chicago; the Beatles; Emerson,
Lake, and Palmer; Kansas; and others. Stephenson shows how rock
music is stylistically unique, and he demonstrates how the features
that make it distinct have tended to remain constant throughout the
past half-century and within most substyles. For music students at
the college level and for practicing rock musicians who desire a
deeper understanding of their music, this book is an essential
resource.
In Do You Remember? Celebrating Fifty Years of Earth, Wind &
Fire, Trenton Bailey traces the humble beginning of Maurice White,
his development as a musician, and his formation of Earth, Wind
& Fire, a band that became a global phenomenon during the
1970s. By the early 1980s, the music industry was changing, and
White had grown weary after working constantly for more than a
decade. He decided to put the band on hiatus for more than three
years. The band made a comeback in 1987, but White's health crisis
soon forced them to tour without him. During the twenty-first
century, the band has received numerous accolades and lifetime
achievement and hall of fame awards. The band remains relevant
today, collaborating with younger artists and maintaining their
classic sound. Earth, Wind & Fire stood apart from other soul
bands with their philosophical lyrics and extravagant visual art,
much of which is studied in the book, including album covers,
concerts, and music videos. The lyrics of hit songs are examined
alongside an analysis of the band's chart success. Earth, Wind
& Fire has produced twenty-one studio albums and several
compilation albums. Each album is analyzed for content and quality.
Earth, Wind & Fire is also known for using ancient Egyptian
symbols, and Bailey thoroughly details those symbols and Maurice
White's fascination with Egyptology. After enduring many personnel
changes, Earth, Wind & Fire continues to perform around the
world and captivate diverse audiences.
'A masterpiece, as fresh and shocking as if it were written
yesterday' Craig Brown "I've been told that no one sings the word
'hunger' like I do. Or the word 'love'." Lady Sings the Blues is
the inimitable autobiography of one of the greatest icons of the
twentieth century. Born to a single mother in 1915 Baltimore,
Billie Holiday had her first run-in with the law at aged 13. But
Billie Holiday is no victim. Her memoir tells the story of her life
spent in jazz, smoky Harlem clubs and packed-out concert halls, her
love affairs, her wildly creative friends, her struggles with
addiction and her adventures in love. Billie Holiday is a wise and
aphoristic guide to the story of her unforgettable life.
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Jamboree in Wheeling
(Hardcover)
Ivan M. Tribe, Jacob L Bapst; Foreword by Barbara "peeper Williams" Smik
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From the Minds of Jazz Musicians: Conversations with the Creative
and Inspired celebrates contemporary jazz artists who have toiled,
struggled and succeeded in finding their creative space. The volume
was developed through transcribing and editing selected interviews
with 35 jazz artists, conducted by the author between 2009 and 2012
in New York City, with a historical essay on each artist to provide
context. The interviews feature musicians from a broad range of
musical styles and experiences, ranging from Gerald Wilson, born in
1918, to Chris Potter, born in 1971. Topics range from biographical
life histories to artists' descriptions of mentor relationships,
revealing the important life lessons they learned along the way.
With the goal to discover the person behind the persona, the author
elicits conversations that speak volumes on the creative process,
mining the individualistic perspectives of seminal artists who
witnessed history in the making. The interviews present the
artists' candid and direct opinions on music and how they have
succeeded in pursuing their unique and creative lives.
This book reviews the period from the unification of Italy to the
fascist era through significant Neapolitan performers such as Gilda
Mignonette and Enrico Caruso. It traces the transformation of a
popular tradition written in dialect into a popular tradition,
written in Italian, that contributed to the production of
"American" identity.
Originally written in Danish in 1980, Pink Moon was the first
biography of Nick Drake, and remains the only one to include
exclusive interviews with the singer's parents, Rodney and Molly
Drake. In this new, significantly updated edition, available in
English for the first time, author and poet Gorm Henrik Rasmussen
reveals more from his visits to the Drakes in their home Far Leys -
the first, just five years after the death of their troubled son.
Rasmussen includes new interviews with Nick's friends and
collaborators plus extracts taken from his eight-year
correspondence with the Drakes, and from telephone conversations he
had with Rodney every month over four years. Full of intimate
detail about the last three years of Nick's life spent at his
childhood home, Pink Moon - A Story about Nick Drake is a personal,
original, and moving retelling of the life, death, and posthumous
rise of a poet and guitarist who was strangely unsuited for his own
time, and is more popular now than he ever was in life. -- .
Relocating Popular Music uses the lens of colonialism and tourism
to analyse types of music movements, such as transporting music
from one place or historical period to another, hybridising it with
a different style and furnishing it with new meaning. It discusses
music in relation to music video, film, graphic arts, fashion and
architecture.
The Explosive New York Times Bestseller A backstage pass to the
wildest and loudest party in rock history--you'll feel like you
were right there with us! --Bret Michaels of Poison Nothin' But a
Good Time is the definitive, no-holds-barred oral history of 1980s
hard rock and hair metal, told by the musicians and industry
insiders who lived it. Hard rock in the 1980s was a hedonistic and
often intensely creative wellspring of escapism that perfectly
encapsulated--and maybe even helped to define--a spectacularly
over-the-top decade. Indeed, fist-pumping hits like Twisted
Sister's "We're Not Gonna Take It," Moetley Crue's "Girls, Girls,
Girls," and Guns N' Roses' "Welcome to the Jungle" are as
inextricably linked to the era as Reaganomics, PAC-MAN, and E.T.
From the do-or-die early days of self-financed recordings and
D.I.Y. concert productions that were as flashy as they were
foolhardy, to the multi-Platinum, MTV-powered glory years of
stadium-shaking anthems and chart-topping power ballads, to the
ultimate crash when grunge bands like Nirvana forever altered the
entire climate of the business, Tom Beaujour and Richard
Bienstock's Nothin' But a Good Time captures the energy and excess
of the hair metal years in the words of the musicians, managers,
producers, engineers, label executives, publicists, stylists,
costume designers, photographers, journalists, magazine publishers,
video directors, club bookers, roadies, groupies, and hangers-on
who lived it. Featuring an impassioned foreword by Slipknot and
Stone Sour vocalist and avowed glam metal fanatic Corey Taylor, and
drawn from over two hundred author interviews with members of Van
Halen, Moetley Crue, Poison, Guns N' Roses, Skid Row, Bon Jovi,
Ratt, Twisted Sister, Winger, Warrant, Cinderella, Quiet Riot and
others, as well as Ozzy Osbourne, Lita Ford, and many more, this is
the ultimate, uncensored, and often unhinged, chronicle of a time
where excess and success walked hand in hand, told by the men and
women who created a sound and style that came to define a musical
era--one in which the bands and their fans went looking for nothin'
but a good time...and found it.
This book highlights the role of Romani musical presence in Central
and Eastern Europe, especially from Krakow in the Communist period,
and argues that music can and should be treated as one of the main
points of relation between Roma and non-Roma. It discusses Romani
performers and the complexity of their situation as conditioned by
the political situations starkly affected by the Communist regime,
and then by its fall. Against this backdrop, the book engages with
musician Stefan Dymiter (known as Corroro) as the leader of his own
street band: unwelcome in the public space by the authorities,
merely tolerated by others, but admired by many passers-by and
respected by his peer Romain musicians and international music
stars. It emphasizes the role of Romani musicians in Krakow in
shaping the soundscape of the city while also demonstrating their
collective and individual strategies to adapt to the new
circumstances in terms of the preferred performative techniques,
repertoire, and overall lifestyle.
The early swing era of jazz, from 1930 to 1941, represents both
an extension of developments of the previous decade and an
introduction of new tendencies that influenced subsequent periods
of jazz history. Major big bands and individual artists established
important styles that brought wide popularity to the music, while
small groups created innovative approaches that determined the
directions jazz would take in the years to come. This was a time
marked by colorful band leaders, flashy instrumental soloists,
showy orchestras, and engaging singers, and Oliphant's reference
guide to this period is an invaluable source of information on its
artists, methods, innovations, and recordings.
Directing readers to outstanding performances available on
compact disc, it serves not only as a scholarly historical and
cultural overview, but also as a helpful guide for the layman.
Organized in a biographical format, the volume discusses many
individuals and groups that have not been considered so fully
before, and provides a critical assessment of a major period in
American music.
When Freddie Mercury died in 1991, aged just 45, the world was
rocked by the vibrant and flamboyant star's tragic secret that he
had been battling AIDS. The announcement of his diagnosis reached
them less than 24-hours before his death, shocking his millions of
fans, and fully opening the eyes of the world to the destructive
and fatal disease. In Somebody to Love, biographers Mark Langthorne
and Matt Richards skilfully weave Freddie's pursuit of musical
greatness with Queen, his upbringing and endless search for love,
with the origins and aftermath of a terrible disease that swept
across the world in the 1980s. With brand new perspectives from
Freddie's closest friends and fellow musicians, this unique and
deeply moving tribute casts a very different light on his death. An
intimate read, like Freddie and his art, it will stay with you for
a long time to come.
The Grateful Dead are perhaps the most legendary American rock band
of all time. For thirty years, beginning in the hippie scene of San
Francisco in 1965, they were a musical institution, the original
jam band that broke new ground in so many ways. From the music to
their live concert sound systems and fan recordings, they were
forward-thinking champions of artistic control and outlaw artists
who marched to the beat of their own drums. In Deal, Bill
Kreutzmann, one of their founding members and drummer for every one
of their over 2,300 concerts has written an unflinching and wild
account of playing in the greatest improvisational band of all
time. Everything a rock music fan would expect is here, but what
sets this apart is Bill's incredible life of adventure that was at
the heart of the Grateful Dead experience. This was a band that
knew no limits and Bill lived life to the fullest, pushing the
boundaries of drugs, drums and high times, through devastating
tragedy and remarkable triumph. But at this book's beating heart is
the music--theirs and others. Some of the greatest musicians and
concerts were a part of the Grateful Dead's career, from sharing
the stage with Janis Joplin, Bob Dylan, and The Who, to playing in
the Acid Tests, The Monterey Pop Festival, Woodstock and Altamont.
Bill's life is a chronicle of American music and pop culture
history and his epic personal journey is one of sonic discovery and
thrilling experiences.
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