Fr. 156.00

Media Narratives in Popular Music

English · Hardback

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Description

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List of contents

List of Figures
Notes on Contributors

Introduction
Chris Anderton and Martin James (Solent University, UK)

SECTION 1 – Narratives of Identity

1. Hidden in Plain Sight: Stories of Gender, Generation and Political Economy on the Northern Soul Scene
Tim Wall (Birmingham City University, UK) and Sarah Raine (Edinburgh Napier University, UK)
2. Paid My Dues: Key Debates in the 1970s Feminist Music Press
Ann-Marie Hanlon (Dundalk Institute of Technology, Ireland)

3. “They’re Not In It Like The Man Dem”: How Gendered Narratives Contradict Patriarchal Discourse in Electronic Dance Music
Julia Toppin (University of Hertfordshire, UK)

4. "Who Controls the Present Controls the Past. Who Controls the Past Controls the Future”: Washing Islam from the Media Narratives of Hip-Hop
Martin James (Solent University, UK)

SECTION 2 – Narratives of Genre
5. “Exiles in Madison Square Garden”: Critical Reception and Journalistic Narratives of Progressive Rock in Melody Maker Magazine, 1971–1976
Chris Anderton (Solent University, UK)

6. Alternative Before Alternative: The Pre-Punk History of a ‘90s Genre
Theo Cateforis (Syracuse University, USA)

7. Never Mind the B…, Here’s Three Minutes of Prog: Rethinking Punk’s Impact on Progressive Rock in Britain During the Late 1970s
Andy Bennett (Griffith University, Australia)

8. “There’s a Crack in the Union Jack.” Questioning National Identity in the 1990s: the Britpop Counter-narrative
Johnny Hopkins (Solent University, UK)

SECTION 3 – Narratives Constructed

9. Compromised Histories: The Impact of Production Pressures on the Construction of Historical Narratives in Popular Music Documentaries
Lauren Istvandity (University of the Sunshine Coast, Australia), Sarah Baker (Griffith University, Australia), Zelmarie Cantillon (Western Sydney University, Australia) and Shane Homan (Monash University, Australia)

10. When a History of Gender Representation Meets the Nostalgic Storytelling of Hot Press Magazine
Yvonne Kiely (Independent Scholar, Ireland)

11. Punk Fanzines, Subcultural Consecration, and Hidden Female Histories in Early British Punk
Karen Fournier (University of Michigan, USA)

12. Tales from the Turntables: “Narrating” and “Narrativizing” the “First Club DJ”
Maren Hancock (York University, Canada)

Acknowledgments
Index

About the author

Chris Anderton is Associate Professor in Cultural Economy at Solent University, UK. He has published on a variety of topics including the recorded and live music industries, music festivals, music history, music culture, music marketing, music cities, event management, and the intersection of fan practices and intellectual property law. He is the author of Music Festivals in the UK: Beyond the Carnivalesque (2019) and co-author of both Understanding the Music Industries (2013) and Music Management, Marketing and PR: Creating Connections and Conversations (in press). He is also co-editor of Researching Live Music: Gigs, Tours, Concerts and Festivals (in press).Martin James is Professor of Creative and Cultural Industries at Solent University, UK. His areas of specialist interest include music journalism and the music press, music and cultural cities, and late twentieth-century alternative music; specifically punk, post punk and electronic musics. Martin’s publications have focused on hidden histories in the mediated narratives of popular music. He is author of several critically acclaimed books about music, including French Connections: From Discotheque to Discovery (2003), State of Bass: Jungle – The Story So Far (1997; 2020) and co-authored Understanding the Music Industries (2013).

Summary

The historical significance of music-makers, music scenes, and music genres has long been mediated through academic and popular press publications such as magazines, films, and television documentaries. Media Narratives in Popular Music examines these various publications and questions how and why they are constructed. It considers the typically linear narratives that are based on simplifications, exaggerations, and omissions and the histories they construct - an approach that leads to totalizing “official” histories that reduce otherwise messy narratives to one-dimensional interpretations of a heroic and celebratory nature. This book questions the basis on which these mediated histories are constructed, highlights other, hidden, histories that have otherwise been neglected, and explores a range of topics including consumerism, the production pressure behind documentaries, punk fanzines, Rolling Stones covers, and more.

Additional text

Media Narratives in Popular Music is a transformative collection of powerful chapters. It shifts the trajectories and tributaries of melody and memory, counterculture and compromise, loss and location. This remarkable book reveals how we are all exiles in our pop present, demanding accuracy and authenticity and yet valuing tweets and TikTok. As our affinities and belongings fray and decay, Media Narratives in Popular Music reveal the longing in our nostalgia for ‘Classic Albums’ but our potential for change, alternatives and defiant difference as we welcome alternative rhythms.

Product details

Authors Chris Anderton, Martin James
Assisted by Chris Anderton (Editor), Anderton Chris (Editor), Martin James (Editor)
Publisher Bloomsbury Academic
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 13.01.2022
 
EAN 9781501357275
ISBN 978-1-5013-5727-5
No. of pages 256
Subjects Humanities, art, music > Music > Miscellaneous

MUSIC / History & Criticism, Easy listening, MUSIC / Business Aspects, MUSIC / Philosophy & Social Aspects, Music reviews & criticism, Popular Music, Music reviews and criticism, Popular music, easy listening

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