The Resisting Muse: Popular Music and Social ProtestIan Peddie The contributors in this volume examine the various ways in which popular music has been deployed as anti-establishment and how such opposition both influences and responds to the music produced. |
Contents
so many and so few | 3 |
The decline and rebirth of folkprotest music | 17 |
Michelle Shocked | 30 |
from Belafonte to Bono | 49 |
hiphop in the aftermath of postmodernity | 65 |
popular music race and the articulation | 75 |
women in rap | 89 |
reggae music the Rastafarian | 105 |
The bleak country? The Black Country and the rhetoric of escape | 132 |
heavy metal as a reinvention of social | 149 |
cassettetapes authorship and the privatization | 163 |
Gothic music and the decadent individual | 177 |
the failure of protest in straight edge | 189 |
Bibliography | 206 |
Discography | 222 |
popular music as a representation of Australian | 119 |
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Aboriginal Aboriginal cultures aesthetic African-American album American artists audience authenticity of ethos authenticity of genre Babylon band's bands Billy Bragg bitch Black Country blues Bob Dylan cassette cassette-tape concerts contemporary critics decades doo wop Dreamtime drugs early Edgers example fans feminist folk music Goldie Goldie's gothic gothic music Guthrie's heavy metal hip-hop home recording Ian Curtis identity independent music individual issues Jamaican Joy Division listeners live mainstream Mermaid Avenue Mondegreens multiracial musicians performers political engagement popular music protest music protest songs punk quoted racial rappers Rastafarian Rastafarian movement reggae reggae songs resistance rock music rock protest songs rock songs role roll sense sexual Shocked Shocked's sing singer-songwriter singers Snipehunt social movements social protest song's songwriters Sound Choice Springsteen straight edge subculture suggests tape topical traditional underclass vision Wirrinyga women Woody Guthrie youth
References to this book
Making Music in Japan s Underground: The Tokyo Hardcore Scene Jennifer Milioto Matsue No preview available - 2008 |