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Recorded Music in American Life - The Phonograph and Popular Memory, 1890-1945 (Paperback, New Ed)
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Recorded Music in American Life - The Phonograph and Popular Memory, 1890-1945 (Paperback, New Ed)
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Have records, compact discs, and other sound reproduction equipment
merely provided American listeners with pleasant diversions, or
have more important historical and cultural influences flowed
through them? Do recording machines simply capture what's already
out there, or is the music somehow transformed in the dual process
of documentation and dissemination? How would our lives be
different without these machines? Such are the questions that arise
when we stop taking for granted the phenomenon of recorded music
and the phonograph itself.
Now comes an in-depth cultural history of the phonograph in the
United States from 1890 to 1945. William Howland Kenney offers a
full account of what he calls "the 78 r.p.m. era"--from the
formative early decades in which the giants of the record industry
reigned supreme in the absence of radio, to the postwar
proliferation of independent labels, disk jockeys, and changes in
popular taste and opinion. By examining the interplay between
recorded music and the key social, political, and economic forces
in America during the phonograph's rise and fall as the dominant
medium of popular recorded sound, he addresses such vital issues as
the place of multiculturalism in the phonograph's history, the
roles of women as record-player listeners and performers, the
belated commercial legitimacy of rhythm-and-blues recordings, the
"hit record" phenomenon in the wake of the Great Depression, the
origins of the rock-and-roll revolution, and the shifting place of
popular recorded music in America's personal and cultural memories.
Throughout the book, Kenney argues that the phonograph and the
recording industry served neither to impose a preference for high
culture nor a degraded popular taste, but rather expressed a
diverse set of sensibilities in which various sorts of people found
a new kind of pleasure. To this end, Recorded Music in American
Life effectively illustrates how recorded music provided the focus
for active recorded sound cultures, in which listeners shared what
they heard, and expressed crucial dimensions of their private
lives, by way of their involvement with records and record-players.
Students and scholars of American music, culture, commerce, and
history--as well as fans and collectors interested in this phase of
our rich artistic past--will find a great deal of thorough research
and fresh scholarship to enjoy in these pages.
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