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Analyzing Popular Music

Analyzing Popular Music

Analyzing Popular Music

Editor:
Allan F. Moore, University of Surrey
Allan F. Moore, Robert Walser, Dai Griffiths, Robynn J. Stilwell, Stan Hawkins, Rob Bowman, Adam Krims, Allan F. Moore, John Covach, Chris Kennett, Martin Stokes
Published:
June 2003
Availability:
Available
Format:
Hardback
ISBN:
9780521771207

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    How do we know music? We perform it, we compose it, we sing it in the shower, we cook, sleep and dance to it. Eventually we think and write about it. This book represents the culmination of such shared processes. Each of these essays, written by leading writers on popular music, is analytical in some sense, but none of them treats analysis as an end in itself. The books presents a wide range of genres (rock, dance, TV soundtracks, country, pop, soul, easy listening, Turkish Arabesk) and deals with issues as broad as methodology, modernism, postmodernism, Marxism and communication. It aims to encourage listeners to think more seriously about the 'social' consequences of the music they spend time with and is the first collection of such essays to incorporate contextualisation in this way.

    Reviews & endorsements

    "Popular music experts will certianly be stimulated by the scholarship contained in this volume." Notes

    See more reviews

    Product details

    January 2009
    Paperback
    9780521100359
    288 pages
    229 × 152 × 16 mm
    0.42kg
    35 music examples
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • Acknowledgement
    • Contributors
    • 1. Introduction Allan F. Moore
    • 2. Popular music analysis: ten apothegms and four instances Robert Walser
    • 3. From lyric to anti-lyric: analysing the words in pop songs Dai Griffiths
    • 4. The sound is 'out there': score, sound design and exoticism in The X-Files Robynn J. Stilwell
    • 5. Feel the beat come down: house music as rhetoric Stan Hawkins
    • 6. The determining role of performance in the articulation of meaning: the case of 'Try a Little Tenderness' Rob Bowman
    • 7. Marxist music analysis without Adorno: popular music and urban geography Adam Krims
    • 8. Jethro Tull and the case for modernism in mass culture Allan F. Moore
    • 9. Pangs of history in late 1970s new-wave rock John Covach
    • 10. Is anybody listening? Chris Kennett
    • 11. Talk and text: popular music and ethnomusicology Martin Stokes
    • Bibliography
    • Discography
    • Film/Videography
    • Index.
      Contributors
    • Allan F. Moore, Robert Walser, Dai Griffiths, Robynn J. Stilwell, Stan Hawkins, Rob Bowman, Adam Krims, Allan F. Moore, John Covach, Chris Kennett, Martin Stokes

    • Editor
    • Allan F. Moore , University of Surrey

      Allan F. Moore is Professor of Popular Music and Head of the School of Performing Arts at the University of Surrey. He is author of Rock: The Primary Text and editor of The Cambridge Companion to Blues and Gospel Music. He is also co-editor of the journals Popular Music and Twentieth-Century Music