False Prophet: Field Notes from the Punk Underground

Voorkant
Wesleyan University Press, 2003 - 332 pagina's

On the road with a punk rock band.

From 1988 through 1993, guitarist/vocalist Steven Taylor toured the U.S. and Europe with the alternative rock group False Prophets, keeping a detailed journal with the intent of documenting the role of musicians in the international anarchist youth movement. His fieldnotes form the core of the book, accounting with honesty and aplomb the sometimes hilarious, sometimes harrowing, always engaging highs and lows of life on the road.

False Prophet situates punk, and the diary itself, in relation to contemporary critiques of identity and ethnographic representation, and links punk's emergence to the oral poetry renaissance of the 1950s, free jazz, and the do-it-yourself trend set by underground filmmakers in the 1960s. This innovative ethnography provides a theoretically informed account of a little understood genre of popular music, and a rare, intimate view into the everyday life of a working band. The audio CD contains some of False Prophets' most popular cuts.

 

Inhoudsopgave

Punk Paradox and the Problem
7
Who You Calling a Punk Punk?
15
Identity Is the Crisis Cant You See?
21
The Rock Alternative
31
Punks Origin Myths
38
Baudelaires Dandy and a Chick Who Looks Like a Crow
58
No Future
64
Hardcore
71
Book
81
Invisible People Lyrics to accompanying CD
303
Bibliography
321
Copyright

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Over de auteur (2003)

STEVEN TAYLOR is a musician, poet and ethnomusicologist; for twenty years, he was Allen Ginsberg's primary musical collaborator. Since 1984 he has been a member of the Fugs, a seminal poetry/rock group. He is Chair of the Department of Writing and Poetics at Naropa University in Boulder Colorado.

Bibliografische gegevens