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Countercultures and Popular Music. Edited by Sheila Whiteley, Jedediah Sklower
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Table of Contents

Introduction; Countercultures and Popular Music; Reappraising ‘Counterculture'; I: Theorising Countercultures; 1: Break on Through: The Counterculture and the Climax of American Modernism; 2: The Banality of Degradation: Andy Warhol, the Velvet Underground and the Trash Aesthetic; 3: Were British Subcultures the Beginning of Multitude?; II: Utopias, Dystopias and the Apocalyptic; 4: The Rock Counterculture from Modernist Utopianism to the Development of an Alternative Music Scene; 5: ‘Helter Skelter' and Sixties Revisionism; 6: Apocalyptic Music: Reflections on Countercultural Christian Influence; 7: Nobody's Army: Contradictory Cultural Rhetoric in Woodstock and Gimme Shelter; III: Sonic Anarchy and Freaks; 8: The Long Freak Out: Unfinished Music and Countercultural Madness in Avant-Garde Rock of the 1960s and 1970s; 9: The Grateful Dead and Friedrich Nietzsche: Transformation in Music and Consciousness; 10: Scream from the Heart: Yoko Ono's Rock and Roll Revolution; 11: From Countercultures to Suburban Cultures: Frank Zappa after 1968; IV: Countercultural Scenes – Music and Place; 12: Countercultural Space Does Not Persist: Christiania and the Role of Music; 13: A Border-Crossing Soundscape of Pop: The Auditory Traces of Subcultural Practices in 1960s Berlin; 14: Music and Countercultures in Italy: The Neapolitan Scene

About the Author

Sheila Whiteley was Professor Emeritus, the University of Salford, Visiting Professor, Southampton Solent University, UK and Research Fellow, the Bader International Study Centre, Queen's University (Canada). Among her many publications: The Space Between the Notes: Rock and the Counter Culture (1992); Women and Popular Music (2000); and Too Much Too Young (2005). A PhD candidate in cultural history and communication sciences (university of Paris 3), Jedediah Sklower teaches communication studies at Sciences Po Paris and popular music history and aesthetics at the Catholic University of Lille. He has been a member of the editorial team of the French journal of popular music studies Volume! since 2008. He published Free jazz, la catastrophe feconde. Une histoire du monde eclate du jazz en France (1960-1982) (L'Harmattan, 2006), edited a special issue of Volume! dedicated to 'listening' (Editions Melanie Seteun, 2013). He also co-organised the 'Changing the Tune: Popular Music and Politics in the XXIst century' international conference in June 2013, with Alenka Barber-Kersovan (ASPM) and Elsa Grassy (IASPM-bfe).

Reviews

"…a brilliant, and highly accessible, collection of essays."- Dr Christina Ballico, Griffith University, Australia

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