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Informationen zum Autor Carey Fleiner is currently a senior lecturer in classical and early medieval history at the University of Winchester. She has taught classes in both ancient history and the history of rock and roll. Klappentext Emerging from the same British music boom that birthed the Beatles and the Rolling Stones, Dave and Ray Davies's band, the Kinks, became one of England's most influential groups. Remembered best for such singles as "You Really Got Me," "Lola," and "Sunny Afternoon," the Kinks produced 24 studio albums between 1964 and 1996. The Kinks' prolific and varied catalog have made them both a mirror of and a counterfoil to nearly five decades of British and American culture.The Kinks: A Thoroughly English Phenomenon examines the music and performance of this quintessentially English band and shows how aspects of everyday life such as work, play, buying a house, driving a car, drinking tea, getting drunk, and getting laid, affected and shaped their creative output. Through an investigation of their music, lyrics, and image, Carey Fleiner shows how the Kinks reflected both the ordinary and the absurd, sometimes confronting topics with anger and sometimes with self-deprecating humor. The Kinks follows the band's trajectory more or less chronologically and explores themes such as growing up in post-war Britain, the packaging and exploitation of the "British Invasion" bands, satire and self-consciousness, sexuality and gender-bending, social and political pessimism, the comforts of family, and the effects of fame and fandom.Fleiner's investigation into the influences on and impact of the Kinks' music takes readers on an engaging adventure through the musical culture of the '60s, '70s, and '80s, revealing how the Kinks created an undeniable sound and image that still attracts new followers today. Zusammenfassung Carey Fleiner examines English rock group the Kinks and their social and cultural influences both on and by the group from the early '60s to present day. In and around the biographical survey of the band's career, The Kinks looks at the several contexts in which the Kinks--and more recently, band founders and brother Ray and Dave Davies as solo acts--created and performed their work. Inhaltsverzeichnis Preface: Ordinary LivesChapter 1: Introduction: Around the DialChapter 2: Something Better Beginning: Rock and Roll in the late '50s and Early '60s in Great BritainChapter 3: 'Top of the Pops:' Packaging, Marketing, and Image in the British Invasion 1964-1965Chapter 4: Everybody's Gonna Be Happy: Humour and the KinksChapter 5: I Know What I Am, and I'm Glad I'm a Man: Sexuality and Gender in the Music of theKinksChapter 6: Here Comes Mr Flash: Anti-Utopia, Politics, and Social ConsciousnessChapter 7: I Miss the Village Green: The Past as RefugeChapter 8: Rock and Roll Celluloid Heroes: The Legacy of the Kinks...