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E-grāmata: Analyzing Recorded Music: Collected Perspectives on Popular Music Tracks

Edited by (Chairperson, Department of Music at the University of Massachusetts Lowell), Edited by , Edited by
  • Formāts: 446 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 29-Dec-2022
  • Izdevniecība: CRC Press
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781000819663
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  • Formāts: 446 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 29-Dec-2022
  • Izdevniecība: CRC Press
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781000819663

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Analyzing Recorded Music: Collected Perspectives on Popular Music Tracks is a collection of essays dedicated to the study of recorded popular music, with the aim of exploring "how the record shapes the song" (Moylan, Recording Analysis, 2020) from a variety of perspectives. Introduced with a Foreword by Paul Théberge, the distinguished editorial team has brought together a group of reputable international contributors to write about a rich collection of recordings.

Examining a diverse set of songs from a range of genres and points in history (spanning the years 19362020), the authors herein illuminate unique attributes of the selected tracks and reveal how the recording develops the expressive content of song performance.

Analyzing Recorded Music will interest all those who study popular music, cultural studies, and the musicology of record production, as well as popular music listeners.

Recenzijas

2023 Winner of the Society for Music Theory Award for Outstanding Multi-Author Collection

'Moylans analytical framework provides a flexible yet coherent structure for this wonderfully eclectic and useful collection. Analyses of the recorded texts of popular music are woven together with the ethnography of practice and cultural theory to provide an excellent range of case studies which, when combined, also provide a unifying methodology for future work.'

Simon Zagorski-Thomas, University of West London

'This essential collection beautifully illustrates how close sonic analysis can feed interpretations that skillfully enlighten how music impacts, and is in constant dialogue with, cultural, social, aesthetic, historical, technological, and other fundamental aspects of our lives. It makes us better understand why we love music so much.'

Serge Lacasse, Laval University

'In this expansive edited volume, Moylan, Burns & Alleyne invite a broad range of engineers, historians, theorists, and analysts to apply Moylans listening approach (2020) to a specific track within the history of recorded popular music. Analyzing Recorded Music provides a rich and diverse addition to any musical bookshelf for readers who seek to understand the interconnected elements and conditions that contribute to the creation of a recording.'

Paul Thompson, Leeds Beckett University

'We have thankfully arrived at a moment in the history of serious musical scholarship when the implements and artistry of the recording studio are understood to be as central to the creation of music as are the traditional considerations of pitches, harmonies, rhythms, song forms and "traditional" musical instruments. Mike Alleyne, Lori Burns and William Moylan have assembled an excellent collection of essays that will force and inspire music scholars across genres to come to terms with the ways our soundscape has been not only mediated, but shaped, by the creativity and ingenuity of the recording studio. The essays here span the analog and digital eras, brilliantly summarizing the interplay of studio technologies, aesthetics, histories and identities at the end of the twentieth century and into the twenty-first.'

Michael Veal, Yale University

List of Figures and Examples
ix
List of Tables
xiii
List of Contributors
xv
Foreword xxiv
Paul Theberge
Disclaimer and Credits xxix
Introduction: Analyzing and Interpreting Recorded Song Tracks 1(20)
Lori Burns
Mike Alleyne
William Moylan
SECTION I Musical Genre, Culture, and Technology
21(36)
1 "I Been Studying Rain": What do We Hear When We Listen to the Blues of Robert Johnson? ("Preachin' Blues," 1936)
23(15)
Tom Attah
2 Analyzing Hip-Hop Hacktivism and Automobility in Injury Reserve's (2019) "Jailbreak the Tesla" (feat. Amine)
38(19)
Steven Gamble
Justin Williams
SECTION II Track Revelations and Aural Mirrors
57(48)
3 Hearing through the Grapevine: Marvin Gaye, Norman Whitfield, and the Long Journey of Motown's Biggest Hit, "I Heard it Through the Grapevine" (1968)
59(12)
Andrew Flory
4 "Let the Music Play" (1975): Hearing the Disco Mainstream in Barry White
71(19)
John Howland
5 Reaching for Stardom: Live and Studio Sound in Prince's "Purple Rain" (1984)
90(15)
Steve Waksman
SECTION III Layers Make the Record
105(74)
6 "In a Sky Full of People": Spatial and Cinematic Staging in Seal's "Crazy" (1990)
107(20)
Mike Alleyne
7 Come Together: Feeling the Distemper of Murk and Elation with the Beatles (1969) and with Sheila E. and Ringo Starr (2017; 2020)
127(17)
Walter Everett
Katie Kapurch
8 "A Tsunami of Voices": 10cc's "I'm Not in Love" (1975)
144(17)
Mark Spicer
Stephen Spencer
9 Counterpoint and Expression in the Music of U2: "Gloria" (1981)
161(18)
Timothy Koozin
SECTION IV Sonic Journeys
179(50)
10 On the Structure of Feeling in Bob Dylan's "I've Made Up My Mind to Give Myself to You" (2020)
181(22)
Michael Millner
William Moylan
11 "You Never Give Me Your Money": The Abbey Road Medley (1969)
203(13)
Albin Zak
12 Listening Beyond the Record: The Judds' "John Deer Tractor" (1984)
216(13)
Jocelyn R. Neal
SECTION V Sampling and Reframing
229(46)
13 Sonic Materiality and Boom-Bap Embodiment in Conway's "Biscotti Biscuit" (2018): An Autoethnography of Recording Analysis
231(17)
Michail Exarchos Faka Stereo Mike
14 "It Ain't But One Kind of Blues": Kid Koala's Bluesy Embrace of the Fragmented ("1 bit Blues," 2012)
248(11)
Ragnhild Brevig
15 "Three and a Half Minutes of Attitude": Vocal Delivery, Groove, and Production in Azealia Banks' "212" (2014)
259(16)
Anne Danielsen
Thea Sorli Paulsrud
SECTION VI Deconstructing the Mix and Production Process
275(46)
16 Can You Hear the Thunder?: The Tech-Processual Construction of Environmental and Emotional Situ in Ghost's "Cirice" (2015)
277(17)
Satnantha Bennett
17 Three-Dimensional Doom: My Dying Bride's "Your Broken Shore" (2020)
294(11)
Mark Mynett
18 Transforming a Pop Song: The Journey of the Extended Club Remix (Taz Vegas' "Am I Dreaming," 2019)
305(16)
Phil Harding
SECTION VII Voicing identity through Genre
321(82)
19 Framing the Female Voice in Doom Metal: Compositional and Sonic Elements in The Gathering's "Strange Machines" (Mandylion, 1995)
323(16)
Lori Burns
20 Masking: Queer Aesthetics and Production Tricks in Orville Peck's "Hope to Die" (2019)
339(19)
Stan Hawkins
Zack Bresler
21 "What Are You Gonna Tell Her?" (2020): Mickey Guyton's Advocacy and Protest for Equality in Country Music
358(12)
Jada Watson
22 Form, Genre, and Vocal Performance in Nicki Minaj's "Stupid Hoe" (2011)
370(16)
Olivia R. Lucas
23 Tracks and Transformations in the Wailers' "Concrete Jungle" (1973)
386(17)
Mike Alleyne
Index 403
William Moylan is Distinguished University Professor (20192022) at the University of Massachusetts Lowell, where he is a Professor of Music and Sound Recording Technology and served as Chairperson of the Department of Music. As a recording engineer and a producer, he has worked with emerging and leading artists across a broad spectrum of popular and classical genres. William Moylan is the author of Understanding and Crafting the Mix, 3rd Edition (Focal Press, Routledge, 2015) and Recording Analysis: How the Record Shapes the Song (Focal Press, Routledge, 2020).

Lori Burns is Professor of Music at the University of Ottawa. Burns interdisciplinary research merges musical analysis and cultural theory to explore representations of gender in the lyrical, musical, and visual texts of popular music. Her monograph, Disruptive Divas: Feminism, Identity, and Popular Music (2002), won the Pauline Alderman Award from the International Alliance for Women in Music (2005). She is co-editor of two previous essay collections: The Pop Palimpsest (2018) and The Bloomsbury Handbook of Popular Music Video Analysis (2019). She is co-editor of the Ashgate Popular and Folk Music Series and Associate Editor of Music Theory Spectrum.

Mike Alleyne is Professor Emeritus with the Department of Recording Industry, Middle Tennessee State University (MTSU) and a Visiting Professor at the Pop Akademie in Germany. His work has been published in Popular Music & Society, Rock Music Studies, and Billboard magazine. His books include The Essential Hendrix (2020) and The Encyclopedia of Reggae (2012), and a co-edited collection entitlted Prince and Popular Music (2020). He also writes and edits for the SAGE Business Case Series in Music Marketing and contributed liner notes to the groundbreaking 9-CD box set, The Smithsonian Anthology of Hip-Hop and Rap (2021).