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This book is a lively, comprehensive and timely reader on the music
video, capitalising on cross-disciplinary research expertise, which
represents a substantial academic engagement with the music video,
a mediated form and practice that still remains relatively
under-explored in a 21st century context. The music video has
remained suspended between two distinct poles. On the one hand, the
music video as the visual sheen of late capitalism, at the
intersection of celebrity studies and postmodernism. On the other
hand, the music video as art, looking to a prehistory of
avant-garde film-making while perpetually pushing forward the
digital frontier with a taste for anarchy, controversy, and the
integration of special effects into a form designed to be
disseminated across digital platforms. In this way, the music video
virally re-engenders debates about high art and low culture. This
collection presents a comprehensive account of the music video from
a contemporary 21st century perspective. This entails revisiting
key moments in the canonical history of the music video, exploring
its articulations of sexuality and gender, examining its
functioning as a form of artistic expression between music, film
and video art, and following the music video's dissemination into
the digital domain, considering how digital media and social media
have come to re-invent the forms and functions of the music video,
well beyond the limits of "music television".
Once conduits to new music, frequently bypassing the corporate
music industry in ways now done more easily via the Internet,
record stores championed the most local of economic enterprises,
allowing social mobility to well up from them in unexpected ways.
Record stores speak volumes about our relationship to shopping,
capitalism, and art. This book takes a comprehensive look at what
individual record stores meant to individual people, but also what
they meant to communities, to musical genres, and to society in
general. What was their role in shaping social practices, aesthetic
tastes, and even, loosely put, ideologies? From women-owned and
independent record stores, to Reggae record shops in London, to
Rough Trade in Paris, this book takes on a global and
interdisciplinary approach to evaluating record stores. It collects
stories and memories, and facts about a variety of local stores
that not only re-centers the record store as a marketplace of
ideas, but also explore and celebrate a neglected personal history
of many lives.
Once conduits to new music, frequently bypassing the corporate
music industry in ways now done more easily via the Internet,
record stores championed the most local of economic enterprises,
allowing social mobility to well up from them in unexpected ways.
Record stores speak volumes about our relationship to shopping,
capitalism, and art. This book takes a comprehensive look at what
individual record stores meant to individual people, but also what
they meant to communities, to musical genres, and to society in
general. What was their role in shaping social practices, aesthetic
tastes, and even, loosely put, ideologies? From women-owned and
independent record stores, to Reggae record shops in London, to
Rough Trade in Paris, this book takes on a global and
interdisciplinary approach to evaluating record stores. It collects
stories and memories, and facts about a variety of local stores
that not only re-centers the record store as a marketplace of
ideas, but also explore and celebrate a neglected personal history
of many lives.
Although "Exile in Guyville" was celebrated as one of the year's
top records by "Spin" and the "New York Times," it was also, to
some, an abomination: a mockery of the Rolling Stones' most revered
record and a rare glimpse into the psyche of a shrewd, independent,
strong young woman. For these crimes, Liz Phair was run out of her
hometown of Chicago, enduring a flame war perpetrated by writers
who accused her of being boring, inauthentic, and even a poor
musician. With "Exile in Guyville," Phair spoke for all the girls
who loved the world of indie rock but felt deeply unwelcome there.
Like all great works of art, "Exile" was a harbinger of the shape
of things to come: Phair may have undermined the male ego, but she
also unleashed a new female one. For the sake of all the female
artists who have benefited from her work--from Sleater-Kinney to
Lana Del Rey and back again--it's high time we go back to Guyville.
This book is a lively, comprehensive and timely reader on the music
video, capitalising on cross-disciplinary research expertise, which
represents a substantial academic engagement with the music video,
a mediated form and practice that still remains relatively
under-explored in a 21st century context. The music video has
remained suspended between two distinct poles. On the one hand, the
music video as the visual sheen of late capitalism, at the
intersection of celebrity studies and postmodernism. On the other
hand, the music video as art, looking to a prehistory of
avant-garde film-making while perpetually pushing forward the
digital frontier with a taste for anarchy, controversy, and the
integration of special effects into a form designed to be
disseminated across digital platforms. In this way, the music video
virally re-engenders debates about high art and low culture. This
collection presents a comprehensive account of the music video from
a contemporary 21st century perspective. This entails revisiting
key moments in the canonical history of the music video, exploring
its articulations of sexuality and gender, examining its
functioning as a form of artistic expression between music, film
and video art, and following the music video's dissemination into
the digital domain, considering how digital media and social media
have come to re-invent the forms and functions of the music video,
well beyond the limits of "music television".
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