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Just Around Midnight Rock And Roll And The Racial Imagination Jack Hamilton

  • SKU: BELL-36333146
Just Around Midnight Rock And Roll And The Racial Imagination Jack Hamilton
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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Just Around Midnight Rock And Roll And The Racial Imagination Jack Hamilton instant download after payment.

Publisher: Harvard University Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 2.81 MB
Pages: 352
Author: Jack Hamilton
ISBN: 9780674416598, 0674416597
Language: English
Year: 2016

Product desciption

Just Around Midnight Rock And Roll And The Racial Imagination Jack Hamilton by Jack Hamilton 9780674416598, 0674416597 instant download after payment.

By the time Jimi Hendrix died in 1970, the idea of a black man playing lead guitar in a rock band seemed exotic. Yet a mere ten years earlier, Chuck Berry and Bo Diddley had stood among the most influential rock and roll performers. Why did rock and roll become “white”? Just around Midnight reveals the interplay of popular music and racial thought that was responsible for this shift within the music industry and in the minds of fans.
Rooted in rhythm-and-blues pioneered by black musicians, 1950s rock and roll was racially inclusive and attracted listeners and performers across the color line. In the 1960s, however, rock and roll gave way to rock: a new musical ideal regarded as more serious, more artistic―and the province of white musicians. Decoding the racial discourses that have distorted standard histories of rock music, Jack Hamilton underscores how ideas of “authenticity” have blinded us to rock’s inextricably interracial artistic enterprise.
According to the standard storyline, the authentic white musician was guided by an individual creative vision, whereas black musicians were deemed authentic only when they stayed true to black tradition. Serious rock became white because only white musicians could be original without being accused of betraying their race. Juxtaposing Sam Cooke and Bob Dylan, Aretha Franklin and Janis Joplin, Jimi Hendrix and the Rolling Stones, and many others, Hamilton challenges the racial categories that oversimplified the sixties revolution and provides a deeper appreciation of the twists and turns that kept the music alive.

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