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Black Popular Music in Britain Since 1945 provides the first broad
scholarly discussion of this music since 1990. The book critically
examines key moments in the history of black British popular music
from 1940s jazz to 1970s soul and reggae, 1990s Jungle and the
sounds of Dubstep and Grime that have echoed through the 2000s.
While the book offers a history it also discusses the ways black
musics in Britain have intersected with the politics of race and
class, multiculturalism, gender and sexuality, and debates about
media and technology. Contributors examine the impact of the local,
the ways that black music in Birmingham, Bristol, Liverpool,
Manchester and London evolved differently and how black popular
music in Britain has always developed in complex interaction with
the dominant British popular music tradition. This tradition has
its own histories located in folk music, music hall and a constant
engagement, since the nineteenth century, with American popular
music, itself a dynamic mixing of African-American, Latin American
and other musics. The ideas that run through various chapters form
connecting narratives that challenge dominant understandings of
black popular music in Britain and will be essential reading for
those interested in Popular Music Studies, Black British Studies
and Cultural Studies.
Black Popular Music in Britain Since 1945 provides the first broad
scholarly discussion of this music since 1990. The book critically
examines key moments in the history of black British popular music
from 1940s jazz to 1970s soul and reggae, 1990s Jungle and the
sounds of Dubstep and Grime that have echoed through the 2000s.
While the book offers a history it also discusses the ways black
musics in Britain have intersected with the politics of race and
class, multiculturalism, gender and sexuality, and debates about
media and technology. Contributors examine the impact of the local,
the ways that black music in Birmingham, Bristol, Liverpool,
Manchester and London evolved differently and how black popular
music in Britain has always developed in complex interaction with
the dominant British popular music tradition. This tradition has
its own histories located in folk music, music hall and a constant
engagement, since the nineteenth century, with American popular
music, itself a dynamic mixing of African-American, Latin American
and other musics. The ideas that run through various chapters form
connecting narratives that challenge dominant understandings of
black popular music in Britain and will be essential reading for
those interested in Popular Music Studies, Black British Studies
and Cultural Studies.
Popular music culture serves as an arena for debates on English and
British national identity in this lively discussion of English
popular music of the 1980s and 1990s. Against the background of his
own upbringing as a Pakistani Brit, Nabeel Zuberi deftly combines a
detailed account of the development of this music with a
sophisticated assessment of its relation to the politics of
cultural identity in Britain. Zuberi looks at how the sounds,
images, and lyrics of English popular music generate and critique
ideas of national belonging, recasting the social and even the
physical landscapes of cities like Manchester and London. The
Smiths and Morrissey play on romanticized notions of the (white)
English working class, while the Pet Shop Boys map a "queer urban
Britain" in the AIDS era. The techno-culture of raves and dance
clubs incorporates both an anti-institutional do-it-yourself
politics and emergent leisure practices, while the potent mix of
technology and creativity in British black music includes local
conditions as well as a sense of global diaspora. British Asian
musicians, drawing on Afrodiasporic and South Asian traditions,
seek a sense of place in Britain as commercial interests try to pin
down an image of them to market. Sounds English shows how popular
music complicates cherished notions of Englishness as it activates
cultural outsiders and taps into a sense of not belonging. Alert
and readable, Zuberi's wide-ranging discussion includes the
performers Oasis, Blur, Tricky, Massive Attack, Goldie, A Guy
Called Gerald, Roni Size, Bally Sagoo, Fundamental, Echobelly,
Cornershop, Talvin Singh, and others.
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