Fr. 29.90

Funk is its Own Reward - From R&B to Hip Hop

English · Paperback / Softback

Will be released 31.03.2020

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Informationen zum Autor Lloyd Bradley is one of the UK's leading experts on modern black music. He has worked as a music journalist for over thirty years and is the author of the bestselling Bass Culture: When Reggae Was King and the internationally acclaimed Sounds Like London: 100 Years of Black Music in the Capital. He splits his time between London and Florida. Klappentext The 1960s marked the dawning of a new era - and nowhere was this more manifest than in black America. Social shifts and artistic attitudes fuelled by flower power! as well as opportunities afforded by the economic boom! saw black Americans make astonishing gains! paving the way for a reimagining of modern culture. By the 1970s! new wealth! higher aspirations and a visible black middle class had begun to reshape the arts! most noticeably the music scene. The seeds of a new music were sown! and Funk flourished in the new! fertile cultural climate. A vocal celebration and embracing of blackness! it became the soundtrack that drove and illuminated the social and artistic revolution.As its audience moved on up Funk relocated mainstream black music from the ghetto to suburbia. But its roots were never forgotten. Nobody ever doubted that this was a self-sustaining and self-defining black music - an awareness that enabled Funk to keep on developing its own rhythms. Soul's passion! jazz's adventure and the discipline of R&B came together with a confidence! financial basis and sense of purpose to produce some of the best and biggest black music! from James Brown to Curtis Mayfield.An intimate portrait of a defining sound! Funk Is Its Own Reward draws on contributions from a cast of musicians and producers! writers and directors! designers and executives! including George Clinton! Bootsy and Stevie Wonder! to weave together a rich social and cultural history. Astute and thoughtful! Lloyd Bradley examines Funk's significant contribution to and influence on modern culture - and the America that helped it thrive. An intimate, definitive exploration of Funk, the sound of a generation, that tells its stories, its triumphs and excesses. Zusammenfassung From 1968 to 1978; from 'Say It Loud - I'm Black and I'm Proud' to Off The Wall ; from the Third Harlem Cultural Festival to the P-Funk Earth Tour: Funk Is Its Own Reward plots the journey of an African American cultural movement that was always about far more than simply music. With roots in the poetry, art, theatre, intellectualism and jazz of the celebrated 1960s Black Arts Movement, and made possible by the shifts in thinking brought about by the Black Panthers, the rise of HBSUs and black political involvement, funk was the Second Great Black Renaissance. Funk Is Its Own Reward makes the connections between the literature, films, television, black arts collectives, theatre groups and media and analyses how they fed into a cultural wave that made a music confident enough to embrace the likes of Barry White, Bill Withers, 24 Carat Black, Bootsy, Mandrill, the O'Jays, the Fatback Band, Miles Davis, and the Brides of Funkenstein not just possible but inevitable. It looks at how, once African American popular music reconnected with and fully expressed the culture that created it, it had to freedom to express itself in any way it saw fit and still be funky. The music gave itself to the scope to be acoustic, to be vocal harmony, to be brassy, to make social comment, to be orchestral, to be headed for the bedroom, to be all about the rhythm, to be electronic . . . and still be funky. It was never about where a piece of music hoped to end up, but where, to coin a phrase, it be coming from. By putting the music firmly in the context of the movement, Funk Is Its Own Reward drags a vibrant art from out from under the notion it only existed to help white people dance, and shines a light on the skill, experimentation, sense of co...

Product details

Authors Lloyd Bradley
Publisher Constable
 
Languages English
Product format Paperback / Softback
Release 31.03.2020, delayed
 
EAN 9781472123428
ISBN 978-1-4721-2342-8
No. of pages 480
Dimensions 153 mm x 234 mm x 22 mm
Subjects Humanities, art, music > Music > General, dictionaries

Popular Culture, MUSIC / General, Easy listening

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