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The 1950s marked a radical transformation in American popular music
as the nation drifted away from its love affair with big band swing
to embrace the unschooled and unruly new sounds of rock 'n' roll.
The sudden flood of records from the margins of the music industry
left impressions on the pop soundscape that would eventually
reshape long-established listening habits and expectations, as well
as conventions of songwriting, performance, and recording. When
Elvis Presley claimed, I don't sound like nobody, a year before he
made his first commercial record, he unwittingly articulated the
era's musical Zeitgeist. The central story line of I Don't Sound
Like Nobody is change itself. The book's characters include not
just performers but engineers, producers, songwriters, label
owners, radio personalities, and fans---all of them key players in
the decade's musical transformation.Written in engaging, accessible
prose, Albin Zak's I Don't Sound Like Nobody approaches musical and
historical issues of the 1950s through the lens of recordings and
fashions a compelling story of the birth of a new musical language.
The book belongs on the shelf of every modern music aficionado and
every scholar of rock 'n' roll. Albin J. Zak III is Professor of
Music at the University at Albany, State University of New York. He
is the editor of The Velvet Underground Companion and the author of
The Poetics of Rock: Cutting Tracks, Making Records, a
groundbreaking study of rock music production. Zak is also a record
producer, songwriter, singer, and guitarist.
After a hundred years of recording, the process of making records
is still mysterious to most people who listen to them. Records hold
a fundamental place in the dynamics of modern musical life, but
what do they represent? Are they documents? Snapshots? Artworks?
Fetishes? Commodities? Conveniences? "The Poetics of Rock" is a
fascinating exploration of recording consciousness and
compositional process from the perspective of those who make
records. In it, Albin Zak examines the crucial roles played by
recording technologies in the construction of rock music and shows
how songwriters, musicians, engineers, and producers contribute to
the creative project, and how they all leave their mark on the
finished work.
Zak shapes an image of the compositional milieu by exploring its
elements and discussing the issues and concerns faced by artists.
Using their testimony to illuminate the nature of record making and
of records themselves, he shows that the art of making rock records
is a collaborative compositional process that includes many skills
and sensibilities not traditionally associated with musical
composition. Zak connects all the topics--whether technical,
conceptual, aesthetic, or historical--with specific artists and
recordings and illustrates them with citations from artists and
with musical examples. In lively and engaging prose, "The Poetics
of Rock" brilliantly illustrates how the musical energy from a
moment of human expression translates into a musical work wrought
in sound.
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