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Feedback - The Who and Their Generation (Hardcover)
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Feedback - The Who and Their Generation (Hardcover)
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In Feedback: The Who and Their Generation, historian Casey Harison
offers a cultural and social history of one of the most successful
bands of the 1960s British Invasion. In this historically sensitive
account of the superband's impact during its first decade, Harison
describes the key role played by The Who in the formation of the
"Atlantic Generation" of rock 'n' roll fans. When the band first
burst onto the scene, they quickly established their reputation for
amping up the volume, pushing distortion effects (feedback), and
destroying instruments on stage at the end of performances. If The
Who did nothing else for their generation, they would have easily
secured a place in rock 'n' roll history for high volume, smashed
guitars, and kicked over drum sets. Ever since, The Who's stage
antics have achieved iconic status in rock 'n' roll. But we should
not forget how startling this on-stage violence was and what it
signified. Audiences had never experienced music so loud, a band so
energetic, and stage destruction so redolent of the frustrations
they shared. If anything, who'd have thought the three in
combination-with excellent songwriting and studio production-would
emerge as a formula for success? Feedback: The Who and Their
Generation begins with the roots of rock music, setting the stage
for The Who when its four band members came together in 1964 to
produce their most successful work over the next decade.
Throughout, Harison looks at the musical and social cross-Atlantic
feedback that characterized The Who's reception and impact. From
distorted guitars to "big sound" drum solos, The Who mirrored youth
culture-its anger and its frustrations, from the class conflicts of
England and Europe to the Vietnam protest movements of the United
States. The Who, like no other British Invasion band, assumed a
signal role in the transatlantic cultural traffic. From the
American music traditions they borrowed-rock, blues, R&B-they
transformed and returned to America the very music that served as
their source of anger, echoing audiences' angst while developing
enormous fan bases in Europe and America.
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