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Books > Arts & Architecture > Music > Contemporary popular music > Rock & pop > General
"Hymns to the Silence" is a thoroughly informed and enlightened
study of the art of a pop music maverick that will delight fans the
world over.In 1991, Van Morrison said, "Music is spiritual, the
music business isn't". Peter Mills' groundbreaking book
investigates the oppositions and harmonies within the work of Van
Morrison, proceeding from this identified starting point."Hymns to
the Silence" is a detailed investigative study of Morrison as
singer, performer, lyricist, musician and writer with particular
attention paid throughout to the contradictions and tensions that
are central to any understanding of his work as a whole.The book
takes several intriguing angles. It looks at Morrison as a writer,
specifically as an Irish writer who has recorded musical settings
of Yeats poems, collaborated with Seamus Heaney, Paul Durcan and
Gerald Dawe, and who regularly drops quotes from James Joyce and
Samuel Beckett into his live performances. It looks at him as a
singer, at how he uses his voice as an interpretive instrument. And
there are chapters on his use of mythology, on his stage
performances, and on his continuing fascination with America and
its musical forms.
This in-depth, research-based book profiles the band that shaped a
generation and changed the face of music forever. What makes a
legend? The Beatles: A Musical Biography attempts to answer that
question by taking an in-depth look at the band that changed pop
music. Examining the events and ideas that influenced each album
and many songs, the book seeks to explain what drove the Beatles to
make music, as well as what drove the music itself. While the
biography covers the musical history and achievements of the band,
it also looks at what was happening in the lives of John, Paul,
George, and Ringo during the Beatle years, exploring their personal
drives and aspirations and their relationships with each other.
Readers will come away from this book with a far better
appreciation of the Lads from Liverpool-and of what was really
going on underneath those oh-so-controversial haircuts. Ten
original photos depict the Beatles from their humble beginnings to
the height of their success An epilogue discusses the period after
the breakup A timeline features major events and achievements of
the Beatles Includes discographies of singles and albums and a list
of awards
Through an examination of her music, videos, philanthropic work,
and biographical details, this book gives insight into Alanis
Morissette's musical career and day-to-day life, from her early pop
beginnings in Canada to her work today. As a whole, Alanis
Morissette's work has never been critically analyzed. The Words and
Music of Alanis Morissette addresses this oversight through its
examination of Morissette's work in the context of biographical
facts, its relationship to other cultural trends, and its
reflection of the female perspective. This book merges biographical
information with a critical examination of the music that she
produced and performed during all periods of her life, thereby
providing a needed overview of Morissette's body of work. All
Morissette fans will appreciate learning about the details of her
life, but the author's melding of the star's personal life story
with an informed analysis of popular music will also appeal to a
wider audience-readers interested in music, culture, women's
studies, or female musicians, for example. The book provides
entertaining and engrossing reading for any Alanis Morissette fan
and serves as a resource that documents her broad contributions to
the music industry. Provides a study of subject matter far beyond
Morissette's blockbuster album, Jagged Little Pill, with coverage
extending to 2012's Havoc and Bright Lights Situates Morissette
alongside noteworthy female singer-songwriters with roots extending
back to the 1960s Traces the origins of Morissette's music in pop,
grunge, and electronic dance music Explains how Morissette's
enormous appeal among fans lies largely in their identification
with details that she shared about her life and experiences
It is common to hear people say rock and roll music has lost its
edge. Disillusioned by the sound of modern pop radio, many fans
wonder why a revolutionary voice has not yet emerged to define
these tumultuous times the way Bob Dylan, The Clash, and Public
Enemy once did. In many people's minds, rock and roll is dead,
killed off by Britney Spears and an MTV that has taken the music
out of television.
"Rock 'N' Politics" aims to breathe new life into the spirit of
rock and roll. It explains how the virtues of great political
action are present in great rock music. By surveying the
contemporary music scene in chapters about Bruce Springsteen, Green
Day, Bono, Madonna, indie rock, and OutKast, "Rock 'N' Politics"
reveals how rock music recently lost touch with its political
ambitions and explains how musicians and fans can-and must-restore
rock and roll's revolutionary voice.
In an era characterized by lackluster rock music and uninspiring
politics, "Rock 'N' Politics" captures the excitement of
world-changing rock and roll for a generation longing for music
that matters. Written with intelligence and a passion for rock and
roll music from all styles and eras, "Rock 'N' Politics" offers
readers a new perspective on a subject crucial to our times.
Combining the International Who's Who in Classical Music 2023 and
the International Who's Who in Popular Music 2023, this two-volume
set provides a complete view of the whole of the music world.
Within the International Who's Who in Classical Music, each
biographical entry comprises personal information, principal career
details, repertoire, recordings and compositions, and full contact
details where available. Appendices provide contact details for
national orchestras, opera companies, music festivals, music
organizations and major competitions and awards. The International
Who's Who in Popular Music boasts detailed entries, including full
biographical information, such as principal career details,
recordings and compositions, honours and contact information.
Since 1973, Queen have captivated listeners through the intense
sonic palette of voices and guitars, the sprawling and epic
journeys of songs, and charismatic splendour of their live
performances. Rock and Rhapsodies is the first book to undertake a
musicological study of the band's output, with a fundamental aim of
discovering what, exactly, gave Queen's songs their magical and
distinct musical identity. Focusing on the material written,
recorded, and released between 1973 and 1991, author Nick Braae
provides readers with an in-depth and nuanced analytical account of
the group's individual musical style (or "idiolect"), and
illuminates the multifaceted stylistic and historical contexts in
which Queen's music was created. Aspects of Queen's songs are also
used as a springboard for exploring a range of further analytical
and discursive issues: the nature of a musical style; the
conceptual relationship between an artist, style, and genre; form
in popular songs; and the character and identity of a singing
voice. Following an introduction and "primer" on Queen's idiolect,
Rock and Rhapsodies presents ten further chapters, each of which
offers a snapshot of a particular musical element (form, the
voice), a particular subset of repertoire (Freddie Mercury's
large-scale 1970s songs), or a particular era (post-1991), thus
painting a rich overall picture of both the band's history and
their ongoing presence in popular culture. Along the way, there is
an underlying focus on interrogating and substantiating the themes
and ideas that emerge from the writing, documentaries and other
media on Queen, using a variety of analytical tools and close
readings of songs, to demonstrate how aspects of critical reception
align (or not) with musical details. Rock and Rhapsodies will
reward any reader who has been enchanted by the myriad and complex
musical components that make up any Queen song.
This book is open access and available on
www.bloomsburycollections.com. It is funded by Knowledge Unlatched.
Many critics have interpreted Bob Dylan's lyrics, especially those
composed during the middle to late 1960s, in the contexts of their
relation to American folk, blues, and rock'n'roll precedents; their
discographical details and concert performances; their social,
political and cultural relevance; and/or their status for
discussion as "poems." Dylan's Autobiography of a Vocation instead
focuses on how all of Dylan's 1965-1967 songs manifest traces of
his ongoing, internal "autobiography" in which he continually
declares and questions his relation to a self-determined
existential summons.
The term jam band" is used to categorize a type of music that
favours improvisation and musicianship over concise riffs, hooks,
and traditional songwriting structure. The term also helps define
the fiercely dedicated fans of the music as accurately as it does
the bands. Much as with the Grateful Dead,the progenitors of the
jam band scene,the survival of the scene depends upon a symbiotic
relationship with fans. Jam bands nurture a close relationship with
their fans, fostered through constant touring and the mutual belief
that each performance is a unique, shared event. JAMerica tells the
story of the roots, evolution, values, and passion of the jam band
scene in the words of those who know it best. Modeling itself on
such books as Edie: American Girl by George Plimpton and Jean Stein
(an oral history of the life of Edie Sedgewick ) and Please Kill
Me: The Uncensored Oral History of Punk by Legs McNeil and Gillian
McCain, the book is an oral history of the jam band scene,
integrating stories from such bands as the Grateful Dead, Phish,
Widespread Panic, Dave Matthews Band, moe., Leftover Salmon, String
Cheese Incident, Umphrey's McGee, and dozens more. Interviews focus
on the history of individual bands and how they communally shaped
the larger jam band community, along with songwriting,
relationships with fans, business models, and the importance
(including the joys and war stories) of touring, including early
gigs and venues (e.g. the Wetlands in New York City and the
landmark H.O.R.D.E. Festival) that supported the emergence of the
jam band scene.
The definitive biography of Chuck Berry, legendary performer and inventor of rock and roll.
Best known as the groundbreaking artist behind classics like "Johnny B. Goode," "Maybellene," "You Never Can Tell" and "Roll Over Beethoven," Chuck Berry was a man of wild contradictions, whose motives and motivations were often shrouded in mystery. After all, how did a teenage delinquent come to write so many songs that transformed American culture? And, once he achieved fame and recognition, why did he put his career in danger with a lifetime's worth of reckless personal behaviour? Throughout his life, Berry refused to shed light on either the mastery or the missteps, leaving the complexity that encapsulated his life and underscored his music largely unexplored--until now.
In Chuck Berry, biographer RJ Smith crafts a comprehensive portrait of one of the great American entertainers, guitarists, and lyricists of the 20th century, bringing Chuck Berry to life in vivid detail. Based on interviews, archival research, legal documents, and a deep understanding of Berry's St. Louis (his birthplace, and the place where he died in March 2017), Smith sheds new light on a man few have ever really understood. By placing his life within the context of the American culture he made and eventually withdrew from, we understand how Berry became such a groundbreaking figure in music, erasing racial boundaries, crafting subtle political commentary, and paying a great price for his success. While celebrating his accomplishments, the book also does not shy away from troubling aspects of his public and private life, asking profound questions about how and why we separate the art from the artist.
Berry declined to call himself an artist, shrugging that he was good at what he did. But the man's achievement was the rarest kind, the kind that had social and political resonance, the kind that made America want to get up and dance. At long last, Chuck Berry brings the man and the music together.
'Shadowman is an emotional and powerful read, deeply honest and
very personal, and at times made bearable only by Johnny Daukes'
ability to find comedy in horrific circumstances. An astonishing
piece of work' - David Quantick This is no ordinary autobiography.
In 2003 Johnny Daukes acknowledged to himself and confessed to his
younger brother that he had been sexually abused as a child. This
was by a man in charge of a boys' club in Oxford, run by the
Catholic organisation Opus Dei. In 1984 the abuser married their
older sister and the couple went on to have ten children. In 1992
Johnny formed the band FIN and they released records, toured
extensively and received a great deal of press and national
airplay. He also went on to become a successful voice-over artist,
screenwriter and director. Later in life Johnny came to realise
that these projects his lyrics, sketches and scripts were in fact
the documents, or records, of a life that had been corrupted.
Shadowman is an extraordinary memoir about childhood abuse and one
man's unwitting attempt to examine and understand the past through
creativity and art. 'What a unique book Johnny Daukes' Shadowman
is. On the surface it's memoir but at its heart it's a book that
wrestles with big questions about pain, art, memory and love' - Mat
Osman 'Johnny Daukes' compelling memoir navigates both darkness and
exhilaration with intensity and painful candour but also joy and
wit. This is a book that is often melancholy but never mawkish and
at its heart is an affirming appetite for life.' - Stuart Maconie
AUTHOR: Johnny Daukes is a writer, musician, film editor, voice
artist. He was the singer/songwriter of 90s indie-band FIN, became
a comedy writer with sketch shows on BBCR4 (Radio9 & The
Scanner), BBC3TV (The Message) and voiced 16 series of C4's
Eurotrash. He wrote and directed the 2011 feature film Acts of
Godfrey (starring Simon Callow), released solo albums including
Promise that was album of the week in The Sunday Times and Rough
Trade. His sitcom Cracking Up ran for two series on BBCR4 and he
has latterly cut feature films including Finding Your Feet,
Fisherman's Friends and Settlers.
Liverpool Football Club, in stark contrast to its competitors,
remains locally owned, not a conglomerate or media business. Unlike
its main rivals, the Liverpool club has been loathe to pursue
global markets for merchandizing - though it attracts a huge fandom
around the world - and its ambitions remain resolutely fixed on
footballing success. No football club has ever had such an extended
period of dominance in the English game, nor extended that
dominance to Europe so effectively.
Many of the current crop of top young players are locally born and
are a central feature of the city's nightlife, as well as national
icons in pop/football/youth culture. But there are fears that the
Club's great days have now passed. At the height of its powers in
the 1980s, Liverpool FC was the site of two catastrophic crowd
disasters, which effectively transformed the sport and added to
wounding perceptions about the city's alleged sentimentality,
fatalism and irreversible decline. The legacy of the Heysel and
Hillsborough tragedies continues to shape the self-image of the
Club and those who support it. A seething rivalry with nearby
corporate giant Manchester United is a constant reminder of
football's new order.
Addressing all of these concerns, as well as Liverpool's global
reputation as the home of the Beatles and the 'Mersey sound', this
book takes an original approach to the study of football by
examining its links with other important popular culture forms,
especially pop music, but also television and youth styles. In
particular, however, it looks at the very special meaning of
football in Liverpool.
Many books have been written about Tin Pan Alley--the colloquial
name assigned to popular music before the advent of rock 'n'
roll--yet little is available about the individual songs defining
this enormously significant style of American music. This
encyclopedia of over 1,200 songs written from the middle of the
19th century through the 1950s provides information and commentary
on the music embraced by the American public.
No other single volume contains as much information on the
subject. Author Thomas Hischak provides an exhaustive yet highly
readable guide to the songs, their periods, their styles, and their
performers. His study explains in layman's language how this music
survived over time, and how it came to play such an influential
role in American popular culture. Ideal for researchers and
browsers alike, this encyclopedia is a long overdue examination of
an American musical institution.
These songs were not written for stage or screen, but for
saloons, singalongs, dance orchestras, sheet music, piano player
rolls, recordings, nightclubs, concerts, and radio broadcasts. They
colored the fabric of American popular culture for centuries, from
early American folk songs to Civil War melodies, 19th-century
sentimental ballads, minstrel songs, ragtime, and jazz.
THE LEGENDARY GUITAR GOD WHO EXCEEDED ALL LIMITS AND LIVED TO TELL
TAKES FANS ON A WILD RIDE THROUGH "KISS"TORY.
He was just a boy from the Bronx with stars in his eyes. But when
he picked up his guitar and painted stars on his face, Ace Frehley
transformed into "The Spaceman"--and helped turn KISS into one of
the top-selling bands of all time. Now, for the first time, the
beloved rock icon reveals his side of the story with
no-holds-barred honesty . . . and no regrets.
For KISS fans, Ace offers a rare behind-the-makeup look at the
band's legendary origins, including the lightning-bolt logo he
designed and the outfits his mother sewed. He talks about the
unspoken division within the band--he and Peter Criss versus Paul
Stanley and Gene
Simmons--because the other two didn't "party every day." Ace also
reveals the inside story behind his turbulent break-up with KISS,
their triumphant reunion a decade later, and his smash solo career.
Along the way, he shares wild stories about dancing at Studio 54
with "The Bionic Woman," working as a roadie for Jimi Hendrix, and
bar-flying all night with John Belushi. In the end, he comes to
terms with his highly publicized descent into alcohol, drugs, and
self-destruction--ultimately managing to conquer his demons and
come out on top.
This is Ace Frehley. No makeup. No apologies. No regrets.
*THE SUNDAY TIMES TOP TEN BESTSELLER* As seen on Apple TV - 1971:
The Year That Music Changed Everything The Sixties ended a year
late - on New Year's Eve 1970, when Paul McCartney initiated
proceedings to wind up The Beatles. Music would never be the same
again. The next day would see the dawning of a new era. 1971 saw
the release of more monumental albums than any year before or since
and the establishment of a pantheon of stars to dominate the next
forty years - Led Zeppelin, David Bowie, the Rolling Stones, Pink
Floyd, Marvin Gaye, Carole King, Joni Mitchell, Rod Stewart, the
solo Beatles and more. January that year fired the gun on an
unrepeatable surge of creativity, technological innovation,
blissful ignorance, naked ambition and outrageous good fortune. By
December rock had exploded into the mainstream. How did it happen?
This book tells you how. It's the story of 1971, rock's golden
year.
The definitive account of Jeff Beck's journey from his childhood in
1940s South London to the world-wide success of 2010's album
Emotion and Commotion and beyond.Author Martin Power has talked to
former Yardbirds members Chris Dreja and Jim McCarty as well as
manager Simon Napier-Bell and fellow musicians including Max
Middleton, Stanley Clarke, Simon Phillips, Jimmy Hall, Mo Foster,
Doug Wimbish and many others. Supported by full album reviews, rare
photographs and an up-to-date discography, Hot Wired Guitar is the
most complete and comprehensive account of the life and times of
Jeff Beck, the man who took the electric guitar and showed the
world just what could be done with just six strings and 'one hell
of an attitude'.
Prince's early albums Dirty Mind, 1999, and Purple Rain,
established him as a major force in American pop music. His
combination of rock and funk was unique, and drew both critical
praise and commercial attention. The 1990s found Prince forming a
new group, moving back in the direction of R&B, and eventually
adopting an unpronounceable symbol as his moniker. By the end of
the millennium, he was again exploring an eclectic collection of
musical styles and enjoying a resurgence of interest in his
well-known song "1999." Prince is one of the few artists of the
entire rock era who successfully bridged the gap between
traditional R&B and rock audiences with his musical
eclecticism. He now stands among the best-selling pop musicians of
the rock era. In this revealing study, author James Perone
highlights the complexities and ambiguities of Prince's life work,
while at the same time clarifying why it is that Prince remains
such a widely popular figure in American music. After a brief
introductory biographical treatment, Perone goes on to analyze all
of Prince's musical output-both as specific pieces, and as part of
a larger body of work. Perone doesn't allow any of the elements of
Prince's entertainment career (including his early contractual
problems, his series of proteges, his name change, and his views on
gender and race) to pass without reflection. As a result The Words
and Music of Prince operates as a sort of creative biography for
both the man and the artist. The work also includes six
illustrations, a bibliography, a discography, and an index.
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