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[ecrea] New book: Black Popular Music in Britain since 1945, edited by Jon Stratton and Nabeel Zuberi
Tue Nov 18 05:47:19 GMT 2014
Black Popular Music in Britain since 1945 provides the first broad
scholarly discussion of this music since 1990. The book critically
examines key moments in the history of black British popular music from
1940s jazz to 1970s soul and reggae, 1990s Jungle and the sounds of
Dubstep and Grime that have echoed through the 2000s. While the book
offers a history it also discusses the ways black musics in Britain have
intersected with the politics of race and class, multiculturalism,
gender and sexuality, and debates about media and technology.
Contributors examine the impact of the local, the ways that black music
in Birmingham, Bristol, Liverpool, Manchester and London evolved
differently and how black popular music in Britain has always developed
in complex interaction with the dominant British popular music
tradition. This tradition has its own histories located in folk music,
music hall and a constant engagement, since the nineteenth century, with
American popular music, itself a dynamic mixing of African-American,
Latin American and other musics. The ideas that run through various
chapters form connecting narratives that challenge dominant
understandings of black popular music in Britain and will be essential
reading for those interested in Popular Music Studies, Black British
Studies and Cultural Studies.
Contents:
Black popular music in Britain since 1945: an introduction
Jon Stratton and Nabeel Zuberi
Race, Identity and the meaning of jazz in 1940s Britain
Catherine Tackley
Melting pot: the making of black British music in the 1950s and 1960s
Jon Stratton
Revisiting Britain’s ‘afro trend’ of the 1960s and 1970s: musical
journeys, fusions, and African stereotypes
Markus Coester
Britfunk: black British popular music, identity and the recording
industry in the early 1980s Robert Strachan
Black music and cultural exchange in Bristol
Rehan Hyder
Bass culture: an alternative soundtrack to Britishness
Mykaell Riley
‘Men cry too:’ black masculinities and the feminisation of lovers rock
in the UK
Lisa Amanda Palmer
The sounding of the Notting Hill carnival: music as space, place and
territory
Julian Henriques and Beatrice Ferrara
Voodoo rage: blacktronica from the north
Hillegonda C. Rietveld
Break/flow/escape/capture: the energy and impotence of the hardcore
continuum
Jeremy Gilbert
‘New throat fe chat’: the voices and media of MC culture
Nabeel Zuberi
Dr Nabeel Zuberi
Media, Film and Television
University of Auckland
Private Bag 92019 (18 Symonds Street)
Auckland 1142
Aotearoa / New Zealand
Tel: (+64 9) 923 7722
Fax: (+64 9) 373 8764
http://artsfaculty.auckland.ac.nz/staff/?UPI=nzub001
twitter: @nabeelz
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