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Downtown, 1956-1965--the first volume of
Sixties British Pop, Outside In--describes the rise of London's music and recording cultures through the stories of those who empowered Britain's youth to be young. As the generations born in the postwar world entered adolescence and demanded a say in their lives, British musicians responded by creating music reflecting youth's quest for love and recognition. With waves of technological innovation sweeping through a world where political and economic superpowers postured for domination, deep-seated English values helped shape both pop music and its audiences.
List of contents
- Preface
- Introduction
- Part One Before the Flood, 1950-1962
- Chapter 1 Common Roots
- Chapter 2 First Responders
- Chapter 3 Channeling English Pop
- Chapter 4 Behind the Stars
- Chapter 5 The Beatles as English
- Part Two A Door Opens, 1963
- Chapter 6 The Beatles: Outside In
- Chapter 7 Northwest Passage
- Chapter 8 Capital Connections
- Chapter 9 Where Stones Roll
- Part Three Frontiers, 1964
- Chapter 10 Consuming the Beatles
- Chapter 11 Northern Waves
- Chapter 12 Middle English
- Chapter 13 Independents Movement
- Part Four The Feminine Musique
- Chapter 14 The Problem That Has No Name
- Chapter 15 Women: The Next Wave
- Part Five Transitions, 1964-1965
- Chapter 16 Scenes
- Chapter 17 Down the Road a Piece
- Chapter 18 Meet the Rolling Stones
- Chapter 19 Modifications
- Chapter 20 Uncommon Folks
- Appendices
- Discography
- Media Sources
- Sources
- Music Index
- Subject Index
About the author
Gordon Ross Thompson has taught classes on the musics of India, popular music culture, and media studies at Skidmore College and has served as editor of the Society for Ethnomusicology's Newsletter and as webmaster for the Society for Asian Music. The author of Please Please Me: Sixties British Pop, Inside Out, he has been interviewed by National Public Radio, the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, and the Australian Broadcasting Corporation among other radio and television broadcasts. At Skidmore College, he also produced a popular annual Beatles concert by students, staff, and faculty.
Summary
Downtown, 1956-1965--the first volume of Sixties British Pop, Outside In--describes the rise of London's music and recording cultures through the stories of those who empowered Britain's youth to be young. As the generations born in the postwar world entered adolescence and demanded a say in their lives, British musicians responded by creating music reflecting youth's quest for love and recognition. With waves of technological innovation sweeping through a world where political and economic superpowers postured for domination, deep-seated English values helped shape both pop music and its audiences.
The music that reverberated in hundreds of local clubs and halls began as fervent attempts to imitate an ongoing American cultural invasion that television helped bring into front rooms across Britain. The emergence of British blues and rock 'n' roll began when broadcasters allowed teens to discover Tommy Steele, Cliff Richard and the Shadows, Adam Faith, Helen Shapiro, and others. These pioneers provided an opening for the Beatles to lead a northwest invasion of an unsuspecting London. Soon, from across the nation, the Rolling Stones, the Animals, the Kinks, and a host of other groups, and singers such as Petula Clark, Tom Jones, and Donovan were feeding their music into the same media stream that the US had dominated. Americans, reeling from the assassination of a president, embraced the unmitigated joy and optimism they heard and called it the British invasion.
Based on extensive research and drawing on vintage and original interviews, Downtown, 1956-1965 frames the extraordinary rise of British pop in an era when pharmaceutical discoveries and electromagnetic innovation were altering lives. A community of musicians, producers, music directors, engineers, songwriters, publishers, promoters, broadcasters, and journalists provided songs, made and played recordings, organized concerts, and wrote about music expressing the exuberance of youth culture. They brought audiences together and gave individuals identity. Moreover, the fruits of their efforts set in motion the musical world in which we live today.