Major Labels
A History of Popular Music in Seven Genres
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- £8.99
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- £8.99
Publisher Description
From his allegiance to punk rock in his adolescence to becoming an essential voice on music and culture, Kelefa Sanneh makes a deep study of how popular music unites and divides us. Distilling a career’s worth of knowledge, he explores the tribes music forms, and how its genres, shape-shifting across the years, give us a way to track larger forces and concerns.
This is a book to shock and awe the deepest music nerd, and at the same time to work as a heady gateway drug for the uninitiated.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
In this thrilling debut, New Yorker writer Sanneh surveys the past 50 years of popular music through the dominant genres that shaped it: rock, R&B, country, punk, hip-hop, dance music, and pop. Though many musicians "hate being labeled," Sanneh argues, the "persistence of genres" has determined the trajectory of popular music: "You can't really rebel against a genre unless you feel part of it, too," he writes. From Carole King and Iggy Pop to Public Enemy and Donna Summer, Sanneh analyzes how each artist's music changed and endured in tandem with the genres that defined them—Summer, for instance, "helped bring electronic sounds into the musical mainstream." Tracing the development of country music from a regional to a national genre, he observes how "there have been people lamenting that the older, truer country music is being left behind," and how, ironically, Garth Brooks, "one of the genre's biggest attractions," was influential in a larger cultural "push... toward mainstream pop." Equally fascinating are Sanneh's insights into the way race has shaped music, particularly in the overlapping worlds of R&B and rock 'n' roll. This remarkable achievement will be a joy to music lovers, no matter what they prefer to listen to.