Putting Popular Music in Its Place

Voorkant
Cambridge University Press, 1995 - 390 pagina's
This volume of essays by the distinguished musicologist Charles Hamm focuses on the context of popular music and its interrelationships with other styles and genres, including classical music, the meaning of popular music for audiences, and the institutional appropriation of this music for hegemonic purposes. Specific topics include the use of popular song to rouse anti-slavery sentiment in mid-nineteenth-century America, the reception of such African-American styles and genres as rock 'n' roll and soul music by the black population of South Africa, the question of genre in the early songs of Irving Berlin, the attempts by the governments of South Africa and China to impose specific bodies of music on their populations, and the impact of modernist modes of thought on writing about popular music.
 

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Inhoudsopgave

Rock and the facts of life
41
the US since
55
or The Hutchinson Family
98
Some thoughts on the measurement of popularity
116
Elvis a review
131
Rock n roll in a very strange society
150
Separate
210
music
249
Music and radio in the Peoples Republic of China
270
Towards a new reading of Gershwin
306
A blues for the ages
325
The last minstrel show?
354
The Role of Rock a review
367
Genre performance and ideology in the early songs
370
John Cage revisited
381
Copyright

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