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British Rock Modernism, 1967-1977 - The Story of Music Hall in Rock (Paperback)
Loot Price: R1,496
Discovery Miles 14 960
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British Rock Modernism, 1967-1977 - The Story of Music Hall in Rock (Paperback)
Series: Ashgate Popular and Folk Music Series
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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British Rock Modernism, 1967-1977 explains how the definitive
British rock performers of this epoch aimed, not at the youthful
rebellion for which they are legendary, but at a highly
self-conscious project of commenting on the business in which they
were engaged. They did so by ironically appropriating the
traditional forms of Victorian music hall. Faulk focuses on the mid
to late 1960s, when British rock bands who had already achieved
commercial prominence began to aspire to aesthetic distinction. The
book discusses recordings such as the Beatles' Magical Mystery Tour
album, the Kinks' The Village Green Preservation Society, and the
Sex Pistols' Never Mind the Bollocks, Here's the Sex Pistols, and
television films such as the Beatles' Magical Mystery Tour and the
Rolling Stones' Rock and Roll Circus that defined rock's early high
art moment. Faulk argues that these 'texts' disclose the primary
strategies by which British rock groups, mostly comprised of young
working and lower middle-class men, made their bid for aesthetic
merit by sampling music hall sounds. The result was a symbolically
charged form whose main purpose was to unsettle the hierarchy that
set traditional popular culture above the new medium. Rock groups
engaged with the music of the past in order both to demonstrate the
comparative vitality of the new form and signify rock's new art
status, compared to earlier British pop music. The book
historicizes punk rock as a later development of earlier British
rock, rather than a rupture. Unlike earlier groups, the Sex Pistols
did not appropriate music hall form in an ironic way, but the band
and their manager Malcolm McLaren were obsessed with the meaning of
the past for the present in a distinctly modernist fashion.
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