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Books > Arts & Architecture > Music > Contemporary popular music > Rock & pop
Play everyone's favorite songs with this collection of the most
memorable hits of the 1960s, '70s, and early '80s Classic rock fans
will have a blast applying their talent to more than 40 enduring
songs made famous by legendary artists like The Beatles, David
Bowie, Journey, Led Zeppelin, Pink Floyd, The Rolling Stones, Rush,
The Who, and more. The arrangements in this collection capture the
essence of the original recordings in fun, easy piano renditions
that are great for solo performance or sing-alongs. Titles: 50 Ways
to Leave Your Lover (Paul Simon) * Africa (Toto) * All Along the
Watchtower (Jimi Hendrix) * All My Love (Led Zeppelin) * Behind
Blue Eyes (The Who) * Big Yellow Taxi (Joni Mitchell) * Blinded by
the Light (Manfred Mann's Earth Band) * Blowin' in the Wind (Bob
Dylan) * Born to Run (Bruce Springsteen) * Bridge Over Troubled
Water (Simon and Garfunkel) * Closer to the Heart (Rush) * Dancing
in the Moonlight (King Harvest) * Do You Feel Like We Do (Peter
Frampton) * Don't Stop Believin' (Journey) * Faithfully (Journey) *
Fool in the Rain (Led Zeppelin) * From Me to You (The Beatles) *
Give Up the Funk (Tear the Roof Off the Sucker) (Parliament) *
Going Up the Country (Canned Heat) * The Great Gig in the Sky (Pink
Floyd) * I Love L.A. (Randy Newman) * I Saw Her Standing There (The
Beatles) * Like a Rolling Stone (Bob Dylan) * Live and Let Die
(Paul McCartney) * Love Reign O'er Me (The Who) * Money (Pink
Floyd) * Nights in White Satin (The Moody Blues) * Paranoid (Black
Sabbath) * P-Funk (Wants to Get Funked Up) (Parliament) * Pinball
Wizard (The Who) * River (Joni Mitchell) * Saturday in the Park
(Chicago) * She Loves You (The Beatles) * She's a Rainbow (The
Rolling Stones) * The Sound of Silence (Simon and Garfunkel) *
Space Oddity (David Bowie) * St. Stephen (Grateful Dead) * Stairway
to Heaven (Led Zeppelin) * Thunder Road (Bruce Springsteen) * Tom
Sawyer (Rush) * Uncle John's Band (Grateful Dead) * A Whiter Shade
of Pale (Procol Harum) * Wild Hors
Sprung from the roots of 70s hard rock, Metallica defined the
look and sound of 1980s heavy metal, just as Led Zeppelin had for
hard rock and the Sex Pistols for punk before them. Inventors of
thrash metal--Slayer, Anthrax and Megadeth followed--it was always
Metallica who led the way, who pushed to another level, who became
the last of the superstar rockers.
Though plagued by adversities, including the death of their
bassist in a bus crash, infighting and substance abuse, they
survived to became the biggest-selling band in the world. With 100
million records sold worldwide, their music has extended its reach
beyond rock and metal, and into the pop mainstream, as they went
from speed metal to MTV with their hit single "Enter Sandman."
Until now there hasn't been a critical, authoritative, in-depth
portrait of the band. Mick Wall's thoroughly researched, insightful
work is enriched by his interviews with band members, record
company execs, roadies, and fellow musicians. He tells the story of
how a tennis-playing, music-loving Danish immigrant named Lars
Ulrich created a band with singer James Hetfield and made his
dreams a reality. "Enter Night" delves into the various
incarnations of the band, and the personalities of all key members,
past and present--especially Ulrich and Hetfield--to produce the
definitive word on the biggest metal band on the planet
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Trouble Bored
(Hardcover)
Matthew Ryan Lowery; Cover design or artwork by Scott White
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The Bloomsbury Handbook of Popular Music and Youth Culture provides
a comprehensive and fully up-to-date overview of key themes and
debates relating to the academic study of popular music and youth
culture. While this is a highly popular and rapidly expanding field
of research, there currently exists no single-source reference book
for those interested in this topic. The handbook is comprised of 32
original chapters written by leading authors in the field of
popular music and youth culture and covers a range of topics
including: theory; method; historical perspectives; genre;
audience; media; globalization; ageing and generation.
The quintessential Mod band, notorious for their theatricality and
destructiveness on stage, The Who rate alongside the Beatles, Bob
Dylan and the Rolling Stones as one of the most successful and
innovative rock bands of the sixties and seventies, who captured
the voice of youth. Following on from the successful Led Zeppelin
Revealed and Pink Floyd Revealed, this new, glossy, visually
stimulating coffee-table book covers all the major events in their
20-year career accompanied by revealing and evocative images.
This edited collection provides an in-depth and wide-ranging
exploration of pragmatist philosopher Richard Shusterman's
distinctive project of "somaesthetics," devoted not only to better
understanding bodily experience but also to greater mastery of
somatic perception, performance, and presentation. Against
contemporary trends that focus narrowly on conceptual and
computational thinking, Shusterman returns philosophy to what is
most fundamental-the sentient, expressive, human body with its
creations of living beauty. Twelve scholars here provide
penetrating critical analyses of Shusterman on ontology,
perception, language, literature, culture, politics, aesthetics,
cuisine, music, and the visual arts, including films of his work in
performance art.
The 1960s saw the nexus of the revolution in popular music by a
post-war generation amid demographic upheavals and seismic shifts
in technology. Over the past two decades, musicians associated with
this period have produced a large amount of important
autobiographical writing. This book situates these works -- in the
forms of formal autobiographies and memoirs, auto-fiction, songs,
and self-fashioned museum exhibitions -- within the context of the
recent expansion of interest in autobiography, disability, and
celebrity studies. It argues that these writings express anxiety
over musical originality and authenticity, and seeks to dispel
their writers' celebrity status and particularly the association
with a lack of seriousness. These works often constitute a
meditation on the nature of postmodern fame within a
celebrity-obsessed culture, and paradoxically they aim to regain
the private self in a public forum.
Bella Ciao is the album that kick-started the Italian folk revival
in the mid-1960s, made by Il Nuovo Canzoniere Italiano, a group of
researchers, musicians, and radical intellectuals. Based on a
contested music show that debuted in 1964, Bella Ciao also featured
a double version of the popular song of the same title, an
anti-Fascist anthem from World War II, which was destined to become
one of the most sung political songs in the world and translated
into more than 40 languages. The book reconstructs the history and
the reception of the Bella Ciao project in 1960s' Italy and, more
broadly, explores the origins and the distinctive development of
the Italian folk revival movement through the lens of this pivotal
album.
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.
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.
Following the success of Complete Rock Family Trees, Pete Frame
documents the story of The Beatles. The trees unfold alongside
photographs and memorabilia to document the Liverpool scene. Other
froups featured are Gerry and the Pacemakers, The Searchers, and
The Swinging Blue Jeans.
Andy Darlington has been interviewing Rock's luminaries and legends
for several decades-spurred on as a child in the late-sixties by
testosterone, the napalm that was Elvis and hopes to bed hippie
chicks. "I Was Elvis Presley's Bastard Love-Child "collects
together his timeless and engaging conversations with a diverse
selection of artists and band members, amongst whom are included:
Led Zeppelin, Fleetwood Mac, Country Joe McDonald, Grace Slick,
Kraftwerk, Cabaret Voltaire, The Byrds, Can, The Kinks, Mott The
Hoople, The Fall, Siouxie And The Banshees, The Stone Roses, and
Skunk Anansie.
Once the domain of a privileged few, the art of record production
is today within the reach of all. The rise of the ubiquitous DIY
project studio and internet streaming have made it so. And while
the creative possibilities available to everyday musicians are
seemingly endless, so too are the multiskilling and project
management challenges to be faced. In order to demystify the
contemporary popular-music-making phenomenon, Marshall Heiser
reassesses its myriad processes and wider sociocultural context
through the lens of creativity studies, play theory and cultural
psychology. This innovative new framework is grounded in a diverse
array of creative-practice examples spanning the CBGBs music scene
to the influence of technology upon modern-day music. First-hand
interviews with Jerry Harrison (Talking Heads), Bill Bruford (King
Crimson, Yes) and others whose work has influenced the way records
are made today are also included. Popular Music, Power and Play is
as thought provoking as it will be indispensable for scholars,
practitioners and aficionados of popular music and the arts in
general.
Bob Dylan's ways with words are a wonder, matched as they are with
his music and verified by those voices of his. In response to the
whole range of Dylan early and late (his songs of social
conscience, of earthly love, of divine love, and of contemplation),
this critical appreciation listens to Dylan's attentive genius,
alive in the very words and their rewards.
"Fools they made a mock of sin." Dylan's is an art in which sins
are laid bare (and resisted), virtues are valued (and manifested),
and the graces brought home. The seven deadly sins, the four
cardinal virtues (harder to remember?), and the three heavenly
graces: these make up everybody's world -- but Dylan's in
particular. Or rather, his worlds, since human dealings of every
kind are his for the artistic seizing. Pride is anatomized in "Like
a Rolling Stone," Envy in "Positively 4th Street," Anger in "Only a
Pawn in Their Game" ... But, hearteningly, Justice reclaims "Hattie
Carroll," Fortitude "Blowin' in the Wind," Faith "Precious Angel,"
Hope "Forever Young," and Charity "Watered-Down Love."
In The "New Yorker, Alex Ross wrote that "Ricks's writing on
Dylan is the best there is. Unlike most rock critics --
'forty-year-olds talking to ten-year-olds, ' Dylan has called them
-- he writes for adults." In the "Times (London), Bryan Appleyard
maintained that "Ricks, one of the most distinguished literary
critics of our time, is almost the only writer to have applied
serious literary intelligence to Dylan ..."
Dylan's countless listeners (and even the artist himself, who
knows?) may agree with W.H. Auden that Ricks "is exactly the kind
of critic every poet dreams of finding."
How did Melbourne earn its place as one of the world's 'music
cities'? Beginning with the arrival of rock 'n' roll in the 1950s,
this book explores the development of different sectors of
Melbourne's popular music ecosystem in parallel with broader
population, urban planning and media industry changes in the city.
The authors draw on interviews with Melbourne musicians, venue
owners and policy-makers, documenting their ambitions and
experiences across different periods, with accompanying spotlights
on the gendered, multicultural and indigenous contexts of playing
and recording in Melbourne. Focusing on pop and rock, this is the
first book to provide an extensive historical lens of popular music
within an urban cultural economy that in turn investigates the
contemporary nature and challenges of urban music activities and
policy.
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