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"Do You Have a Band?" - Poetry and Punk Rock in New York City (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R2,121
Discovery Miles 21 210
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"Do You Have a Band?" - Poetry and Punk Rock in New York City (Hardcover)
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During the late 1960s, throughout the 1970s, and into the 1980s,
New York City poets and musicians played together, published each
other, and inspired one another to create groundbreaking art. In
"Do You Have a Band?", Daniel Kane reads deeply across poetry and
punk music to capture this compelling exchange and its challenge to
the status of the visionary artist, the cultural capital of poetry,
and the lines dividing sung lyric from page-bound poem. Kane
reveals how the new sounds of proto-punk and punk music found their
way into the poetry of the 1960s and 1970s downtown scene, enabling
writers to develop fresh ideas for their own poetics and
performance styles. Likewise, groups like The Fugs and the Velvet
Underground drew on writers as varied as William Blake and Delmore
Schwartz for their lyrics. Drawing on a range of archival materials
and oral interviews, Kane also shows how and why punk musicians
drew on and resisted French Symbolist writing, the vatic resonance
of the Beat chant, and, most surprisingly and complexly, the New
York Schools of poetry. In bringing together the music and writing
of Richard Hell, Patti Smith, and Jim Carroll with readings of
poetry by Anne Waldman, Eileen Myles, Ted Berrigan, John Giorno,
and Dennis Cooper, Kane provides a fascinating history of this
crucial period in postwar American culture and the cultural life of
New York City.
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