|
|
Showing 1 - 3 of
3 matches in All Departments
Winner of the Ralph J. Gleason Music Book Award, Rock & Roll
Hall of Fame Winner of the American Book Award, Before Columbus
Foundation Winner of the PEN Oakland-Josephine Miles Award Winner
of the MAAH Stone Book Award A Pitchfork Best Music Book of the
Year A Rolling Stone Best Music Book of the Year A Boston Globe
Summer Read "Brooks traces all kinds of lines...inviting voices to
talk to one another, seeing what different perspectives can offer,
opening up new ways of looking and listening." -New York Times "A
wide-ranging study of Black female artists, from elders like Bessie
Smith and Ethel Waters to Beyonce and Janelle Monae...Connecting
the sonic worlds of Black female mythmakers and truth-tellers."
-Rolling Stone "A gloriously polyphonic book." -Margo Jefferson,
author of Negroland How is it possible that iconic artists like
Aretha Franklin and Beyonce can be both at the center and on the
fringe of the culture industry? Daphne Brooks explores more than a
century of music archives to bring to life the critics, collectors,
and listeners who have shaped our perceptions of Black women both
on stage and in the recording studio. Liner Notes for the
Revolution offers a startling new perspective, informed by the
overlooked contributions of other Black women artists. We discover
Zora Neale Hurston as a sound archivist and performer, Lorraine
Hansberry as a queer feminist critic of modern culture, and Pauline
Hopkins as America's first Black female cultural commentator.
Brooks tackles the complicated racial politics of blues music
recording, song collecting, and rock and roll criticism in this
long overdue celebration of Black women musicians as radical
intellectuals.
The power and influence of Grace increases with each passing year.
Here, Daphne Brooks traces Jeff Buckley's fascinating musical
development through the earliest stages of his career, up to the
release of the album. With access to rare archival material, Brooks
illustrates Buckley's passion for life and hunger for musical
knowledge, and shows just why he was such a crucial figure in the
American music scene of the 1990s. EXCERPT: Jeff Buckley was
piecing together a contemporary popular music history for himself
that was steeped in the magic of singing. He was busy hearing how
Dylan channeled Billie Holiday in Blonde On Blonde and how Robert
Plant was doing his best to sound like Janis Joplin on early Led
Zeppelin recordings. He was thinking about doo-wop and opera and
Elton John and working at developing a way to harness the power of
the voice...In the process, he was re-defining punk and grunge
attitude itself by rejecting the ambivalent sexual undercurrents of
those movements, as well as Led Zeppelin's canonical cock rock
kingdom that he'd grown up adoring. He was forging a one-man
revolution set to the rhythms of New York City and beyond. And he
was on the brink of recording his elegant battle in song for the
world to hear.
In Bodies in Dissent Daphne A. Brooks argues that from the
mid-nineteenth century to the early twentieth, black transatlantic
activists, actors, singers, and other entertainers frequently
transformed the alienating conditions of social and political
marginalization into modes of self-actualization through
performance. Brooks considers the work of African American, Anglo,
and racially ambiguous performers in a range of popular
entertainment, including racial melodrama, spectacular theatre,
moving panorama exhibitions, Pan-Africanist musicals, Victorian
magic shows, religious and secular song, spiritualism, and dance.
She describes how these entertainers experimented with different
ways of presenting their bodies in public-through dress, movement,
and theatrical technologies-to defamiliarize the spectacle of
"blackness" in the transatlantic imaginary.Brooks pieces together
reviews, letters, playbills, fiction, and biography in order to
reconstruct not only the contexts of African American performance
but also the reception of the stagings of "bodily insurgency" which
she examines. Throughout the book, she juxtaposes unlikely texts
and entertainers in order to illuminate the complicated
transatlantic cultural landscape in which black performers
intervened. She places Adah Isaacs Menken, a star of spectacular
theatre, next to Sojourner Truth, showing how both used similar
strategies of physical gesture to complicate one-dimensional
notions of race and gender. She also considers Henry Box Brown's
public re-enactments of his escape from slavery, the Pan-Africanist
discourse of Bert Williams's and George Walker's musical In Dahomey
(1902-04), and the relationship between gender politics,
performance, and New Negro activism in the fiction of the novelist
and playwright Pauline Hopkins and the postbellum stage work of the
cakewalk dancer and choreographer Aida Overton Walker. Highlighting
the integral connections between performance and the construction
of racial identities, Brooks provides a nuanced understanding of
the vitality, complexity, and influence of black performance in the
United States and throughout the black Atlantic.
|
You may like...
Stalin's Priests
Erik Brandin, Rita Brandin
Paperback
R335
Discovery Miles 3 350
|