Tyranny and music

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Where to find it

Music Library

Call Number
ML3916 .T97 2018
Status
Available

Authors, etc.

Names:

Summary

Tyranny and Music is an edited collection of essays that explore how musical artists respond to cruel or oppressive governments and ruling regimes. Its primary strength and unique quality lies in its diversity, presenting a postmodern collage of scholarship that reaches across the divides of classical, popular and traditional musics just as it connects musical resistance of the past with the present and the near (Western) with the far (non-Western). Contemporary topics include Chosan's analysis of blood diamonds in the Sierra Leonean Civil War, and collective memory in the Persian Gulf War songs. Historical topics include the image of John Wilkes Booth in the popular imagination, censorship in the Soviet Union, Victor Ullman's song setting at Terez n, artistic restrictions in Maoist China, anti-inquisition propaganda in the outbreak of the Dutch revolt, Revolutionary Era Anthems in the United States and much more. These essays, while remarkable in their scholarly erudition, also provide intimate glimpses of the resiliency of the individual artist. From Cherine Amr's Heavy Metal resistance to the Muslim Brotherhood to Hanns Eisler's battle with the United States House on Un-American Activities Committee, stories of human struggle and perseverance arise from each of these narratives.

Contents

Introduction / Joseph E. Morgan -- Resisting tyranny with song: Hanns Eisler's "Nightmare" / James E. Parsons -- Memory as resistance: Viktor Ullmann's Terezìn settings of Friedrich Hölderlin / Brent Wetters -- "The desert ain't Vietnam": Voices from the 1991 Persian Gulf War / Jessica Loranger -- Anti-inquisition propaganda in music at the outbreak of the Dutch revolt: Noé Faignient's Chansons, madrigales et motetz / Sienna M. Wood -- For God and country: Scriptural exegesis and politics in the first New England school anthems / Molly Williams -- Vilification or problematization?: John Wilkes Booth in popular songs and musicals / Thomas J. Kernan -- "I am the wife of Mao Tse-Tung": An analysis of the representation of tyranny in John Adam's Nixon in China (Act II, Scene 2) / Max Noubel -- Battling the typhoon: The Zheng's revolutionary voice in Maoist China / Mei Han -- Memories don't burn: Soviet censorship and the Azerbaijani Ashiq bard / Anna Oldfield -- Minhibbuk (ya Bata): Musical rhetoric and Bashar al-Asad on Syrian radio during the civil war / Beau Bothwell -- Massive Scar Era, heavy metal, and two tyrannies / Daniel Guberman -- "You can take our diamonds, but you can never take our spirit": Chosan's analysis of blood diamonds and the Sierra Leonean civil war / Abimbola Cole Kai-Lewis -- Popular music and the impending tyranny of Donald Trump / Joseph E. Morgan.

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