0
Your cart

Your cart is empty

Browse All Departments
  • All Departments
Price
  • R50 - R100 (1)
  • R100 - R250 (1)
  • R250 - R500 (1)
  • -
Status
Brand

Showing 1 - 3 of 3 matches in All Departments

Last Night At The Bassline (Paperback): David Coplan, Oscar Gutierrez Last Night At The Bassline (Paperback)
David Coplan, Oscar Gutierrez 1
R295 R231 Discovery Miles 2 310 Save R64 (22%) Ships in 5 - 10 working days

In 1994, Brad and Paige Holmes opened a small, live-music venue in the bohemian suburb of Melville in Johannesburg. They called it Bassline, which very soon became synonymous with cigarette smoke, great jazz and nights you wished would never end. They later moved the club to Newtown where it grew in prominence as the ultimate venue for live music, hosting amazing artists like Thandiswa Mazwai, Jimmy Dludlu, Lira, The Soil and Grammy Award-winning group Ladysmith Black Mambazo.

In 2016 word spread like wildfire that everyone’s favourite club was closing its doors forever; this place that held all the promises of a new South Africa, a place where people of all races could come together, share a drink, dance and fall in love was to be no more. But as Bassline starts its new journey with Live @ the Bassline, yet another great story begins with Last Night At The Bassline.

In this book, esteemed music historian Professor David Coplan tells the story of Bassline and the Holmes’s journey in it, thus giving musicians and jazz fans something to hold on to even after its closure. This book is a tangible piece of the magic to take home and savour. And those who were never there will be given a chance to experience this dream.

With more than fifty iconic photographs from Oscar Gutierrez and other great photographers, the book is more than just a memoir. It is a gritty, smoky, passionate slice of time. Bassline will always be a reminder of what it feels like to live the impossible.

Composing Apartheid - Music for and against apartheid (Paperback): Lara Allen, Gary Baines, Ingrid Byerly, Christopher... Composing Apartheid - Music for and against apartheid (Paperback)
Lara Allen, Gary Baines, Ingrid Byerly, Christopher Cockburn, David Coplan, …
R83 R65 Discovery Miles 650 Save R18 (22%) Ships in 5 - 10 working days

""This is one of the best books to have emerged from South African musicology in the last decadeIt opens up a new level of discourse about music during the apartheid era: a level on which the theoretical, the ethical, the historical and the aesthetic play against each other in newly meaningful ways.""
--Roger Parker, Cambridge University (UK)

""Composing Apartheid endeavors to trace the relationships between names, concepts and realities as they variously interacted, and continue to interact, on the musical landscape, and it does so as historically and socially responsible scholarship.""
--Grant Olwage, from the Introduction

"Composing Apartheid" is the first book ever to chart the musical world of a notorious period in world history, apartheid South Africa. It explores how music was produced through, and was productive of, key features of apartheid's social and political topography. The collection of essays is intentionally broad, and, the contributors include historians, sociologists, and anthropologists, as well as ethnomusicologists, music theorists, and historical musicologists.

The essays focus on a variety of music (jazz, music in the Western art tradition, popular music), major composers (such as Kevin Volans) and works (Handel's "Messiah"). Musical institutions and previously little-researched performers (such as the African National Congress's troupe-in-exile Amandla) are explored. The writers move well beyond their subject matter, intervening in debates on race, historiography, and postcolonial epistemologies and pedagogies.

This book includes contributions by Lara Allen, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg; Gary Baines, Rhodes University (South Africa); Ingrid Byerly, Duke University; Christopher Cockburn, University of KwaZulu-Natal; David Coplan, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg (South Africa); Michael Drewett, Rhodes University; Shirli Gilbert, University of Southampton; Bennetta Jules-Rosette, University of California, San Diego; Christine Lucia, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg; Carol A. Muller, University of Pennsylvania; Stephanus Muller, University of Stellenbosch (South Africa); Brett Pyper, New York University; and Martin Scherzinger, Princeton University.

"Grant Olwage" is a senior lecturer at the School of Arts at the University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg.

A Long Way Home - Migrant worker worlds 1800-2014 (Paperback): William Beinart, Julia Charlton, David Coplan, Peter Delius,... A Long Way Home - Migrant worker worlds 1800-2014 (Paperback)
William Beinart, Julia Charlton, David Coplan, Peter Delius, Jacob Dlamini, …
R450 R351 Discovery Miles 3 510 Save R99 (22%) Ships in 5 - 10 working days

In no other society in the world have urbanisation and industrialization been as comprehensively based on migrant labour as in South Africa. Rather than focusing on the well-documented narrative of displacement and oppression, A Long Way Home captures the humanity, agency and creative modes of self-expression of the millions of workers who helped to build and shape modern South Africa. The book spans a three-hundred-year history beginning with the exportation of slave labour from Mozambique in the eighteenth century and ending with the strikes and tensions on the platinum belt in recent years. It shows not only the age-old mobility of African migrants across the continent but also, with the growing demand for labour in the mining industry, the importation of Chinese indentured migrant workers. Contributions include 18 essays and over 90 artworks and photographs that traverse homesteads, chiefdoms and mining hostels, taking readers into the materiality of migrant life and its customs and traditions, including the rituals practiced by migrants in an effort to preserve connections to "home" and create a sense of "belonging". The essays and visual materials provide multiple perspectives on the lived experience of migrant labourers and celebrate their extraordinary journeys. A Long Way Home was conceived during the planning of an art exhibition entitled 'Ngezinyawo: Migrant Journeys' at Wits Art Museum. The interdisciplinary nature of the contributions and the extraordinary collection of images selected to complement and expand on the text make this a unique collection.

Free Delivery
Pinterest Twitter Facebook Google+
You may like...
I Remember My Breath - Mindful Breathing…
Lynn Rummel Hardcover R443 R364 Discovery Miles 3 640
Because You Loved Me
Celine Dion Book R104 R80 Discovery Miles 800
The Not-So-Friendly Friend - How to Set…
Christina Furnival Hardcover R471 R395 Discovery Miles 3 950
How Things Fall Apart - What Happened to…
Elizabeth Dore Paperback R353 R291 Discovery Miles 2 910
Fire And Fury - Inside The Trump White…
Michael Wolff Hardcover  (3)
R818 R680 Discovery Miles 6 800
When Force Meets Fate - A Mission to…
Jamison Hill Paperback R540 R456 Discovery Miles 4 560
A Tango With Death - Tolletjie Botha And…
Giancarlo Coccia Paperback R310 Discovery Miles 3 100
Dreams Never Dreamed - A Mother's…
Kalman Samuels Paperback R426 Discovery Miles 4 260
Research Methods in Digital Food Studies
Jonatan Leer, Stinne Gunder Strom Krogager Hardcover R4,147 Discovery Miles 41 470
Sea Prayer
Khaled Hosseini Hardcover  (1)
R424 R306 Discovery Miles 3 060

 

Partners