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Books > Music
The first scholarly discussion on the band, Pearl Jam and
Philosophy examines both the songs (music and lyrics) and the
activities (live performances, political commitments) of one of the
most celebrated and charismatic rock bands of the last 30 years.
The book investigates the philosophical aspects of their music at
various levels: existential, spiritual, ethical, political,
metaphysical and aesthetic. This philosophical interpretation is
also dependent on the application of textual and poetic analysis:
the interdisciplinary volume puts philosophical aspects of the
band's lyrics in close dialogue with 19th- and 20th-century
European and American poetry. Through this widespread philosophical
examination, the book further looks into the band's immense
popularity and commercial success, their deeply loyal fanbase and
genuine sense of community surrounding their music, and the pivotal
place the band holds within popular music and contemporary culture.
This second updated edition of Notes from a Jazz Life includes
Digby Fairweather's career since the year 2000 as a jazz cornetist,
band leader, educator and broadcaster, working with George Melly
and leading his band the Half-Dozen. The book has much to offer to
people who are even marginally interested in jazz in all its wide
variety of forms as well as providing insights for regular jazz
readers. The author provides revealing reflections on the personal
life and career of a musician and, with a wealth of warm, hilarious
anecdotes, he writes honestly about all the challenges,
frustrations and rich rewards of being part of the jazz world.
This collection of seventeen essays newly identifies contributions
to musical culture made by women before 1500 across Europe. You
will learn about repertoire from such diverse locations as Iceland,
Spain, and Italy, and encounter examples of musicianship from the
gender-fluid professional musicians at the Islamicate courts of
Syria to the nuns of Barking Abbey in England. The book shows that
women drove musical patronage, dissemination, composition, and
performance, including within secular and ecclesiastical contexts,
and also reflects on the reception of medieval women's musical
agency by both medieval poets and by modern recording artists.
Contributors are David Catalunya, Lisa Colton, Helen Dell, Annemari
Ferreira, Rachel Golden, Gillian L. Gower, Anna Kathryn Grau,
Carissa M. Harris, Louise McInnes, Lisa Nielson, Lauren
Purcell-Joiner, Megan Quinlan, Leah Stuttard, Claire Taylor Jones,
Melissa Tu, Angelica Vomera, and Anne Bagnall Yardley.
Keith Hatschek tells the story of three determined artists: Louis
Armstrong, Dave Brubeck, and Iola Brubeck and the stand they took
against segregation by writing and performing a jazz musical titled
The Real Ambassadors. First conceived by the Brubecks in 1956, the
musical's journey to the stage for its 1962 premiere tracks
extraordinary twists and turns across the backdrop of the civil
rights movement. A variety of colorful characters, from Broadway
impresarios to gang-connected managers, surface in the compelling
storyline. During the Cold War, the US State Department enlisted
some of America's greatest musicians to serve as jazz ambassadors,
touring the world to trumpet a so-called "free society." Honored as
celebrities abroad, the jazz ambassadors, who were overwhelmingly
African Americans, returned home to racial discrimination and
deferred dreams. The Brubecks used this double standard as the
central message for the musical, deploying humor and pathos to
share perspectives on American values. On September 23, 1962, The
Real Ambassadors's stunning debut moved a packed arena at the
Monterey Jazz Festival to laughter, joy, and tears. Although
critics unanimously hailed the performance, it sadly became a
footnote in cast members' bios. The enormous cost of reassembling
the star-studded cast made the creation impossible to stage and
tour. However, The Real Ambassadors: Dave and Iola Brubeck and
Louis Armstrong Challenge Segregation caps this jazz story by
detailing how the show was triumphantly revived in 2014 by Jazz at
Lincoln Center. This reaffirmed the musical's place as an integral
part of America's jazz history and served as an important reminder
of how artists' voices are a powerful force for social change.
By reinterpreting 20th-century poetry as a listening to and writing
through noise, The Poetics of Noise from Dada to Punk constructs a
literary history of noise through poetic sound and performance.
This book traces how poets figure noise in the disfiguration of
poetic voice. Materializing in the threshold between the heard and
the unheard, noise emerges in the differentiation and otherness of
sound. It arises in the folding of an "outside" into the "inside"
of poetic performance both on and off the page. Through a series of
case studies ranging from verse by ear-witnesses to the First World
War, Dadaist provocations, jazz modernist song and poetry, early
New York City punk rock, contemporary sound poetry, and noise
music, The Poetics of Noise from Dada to Punk describes productive
failures of communication that theorize listening against the grain
of sound's sense.
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