Country music : a cultural and stylistic history

cover image

Where to find it

Music Library — Reserve

Call Number
ML3524 .N42 2013
Status
Available
Call Number
ML3524 .N42 2013 c. 2
Status
Available

North Carolina Collection (Wilson Library)

Call Number
C378 UMn341.2
Status
In-Library Use Only

Authors, etc.

Names:

Summary

A vibrant introduction to a quintessential American art form, Country Music: A Cultural and Stylistic History is the first undergraduate textbook that focuses solely on country music. Written by an experienced teacher and renowned scholar of the genre, it offers a coherent narrative that explains country music, its origins, its development, and its meaning from the first commercial recordings of the 1920s up to the present. It highlights significant performers, songs, and institutions in country music. It also considers key social, political, and musical issues that span many decades of evolution within the genre.Each part of Country Music opens with an introduction that provides a broad sense of the trends, context, and significant elements of country music during a specific period. Each chapter offers three essential features within the narrative:* Artist Profiles provide a close look at important figures in the history of country music, from country stars to songwriters to industry personnel* Listening Guides connect specific recordings to the ideas presented in each chapter; end-of-chapter playlists offer suggestions for further listening* Boxed essays offer in-depth explorations of topics in seven categories: history, musical style, the music business, culture, technology, songwriting, and issues of identityCountry Music concludes with three helpful appendices on song form, country music instruments, and finding the recordings. A companion website at www.oup.com/us/neal offers chapter summaries, questions for review, and web links.Offering a thorough overview of a core part of American culture, this compelling and accessible book is ideal as the main text for Country Music courses and as a supplement for courses in American Music and American Popular Music.

Contents

  • Each Part opens with an Overview
  • Preface
  • Introduction: Heading into the Country
  • Country as Genre
  • Definition of Country
  • Is it Real? Issues of Authenticity in Country Music
  • Goals and Themes
  • Situating a Performer
  • How to Listen
  • Getting Started
  • Part I The Early Years (1920s and 1930s)
  • 1 The Birth of Country Music
  • Musical Sources
  • New Technologies: Records and Radio
  • Essay (Culture): Radio Barn Dances
  • Artist Profile Fiddlin' John Carson
  • Audiences
  • The Business of Music
  • Essay (Musical Style): Hillbilly Entertainers
  • The Performers
  • Listening Guide: "The Little Old Log Cabin in the Lane"
  • Artist Profile De Ford Bailey
  • Listening Guide: "Don't Let Your Deal Go Down Blues"
  • Listening Guide: "Hallelujah Side"
  • Essay (Identity): Women in Early Country Music
  • 2 The Big Bang of Country Music
  • Role of the Producer
  • Essay (Music Business): Copyright
  • Essay (Technology): Making Records in the 1920s
  • Listening Guide: "Keep on the Sunny Side"
  • Artist Profile: The Carter Family and Its Legacy
  • Listening Guide: "Blue Yodel"
  • Artist Profile Jimmie Rodgers
  • Listening Guide: "Can the Circle Be Unbroken (Bye and Bye)"
  • Contributions of Jimmie Rodgers and the Carter Family to Country Music
  • Listening Guide: "Blue Yodel No. 9"
  • Essay (Culture): Cover Songs
  • Essay (Identity): Race in Early Country Music
  • 3 Innovation and Change
  • Barn Dance Radio Shows, Stars, and the Brother Acts
  • Essay (Musical Style): Brother Acts
  • Essay (Music Business): Sponsorship
  • Listening Guide: "The Great Speckled Bird"
  • Artist Profile Roy Acuff
  • Western Swing
  • Essay (Musical Style): Innovation in Western Swing
  • Artist Profile Bob Wills
  • Singing Cowboy
  • Listening Guide: "New San Antonio Rose"
  • Essay (Musical Style): Singing Cowboys
  • Listening Guide: "Back in the Saddle Again"
  • On the Brink of World War II
  • Part II World War II and After: Nationalism and Country Music (1940s and 1950s)
  • 4 Honky-Tonk Heyday
  • New Radio Stars
  • Essay (Music Business): Forces behind the Scenes
  • Country Music Culture in the Postwar Years
  • Essay (Technology): A New Era in Recording
  • Essay (Culture): Folk, Country, and the Novelty Song
  • Honky-Tonk Roots
  • Essay (Musical Style): Honky-Tonk
  • Essay (Musical Style): Country Boogie
  • Listening Guide: "Walking the Floor over You"
  • The Louisiana Hayride
  • Honky-Tonk Heyday
  • Artist Profile Hank Williams
  • Song Comparison: "In the Jailhouse Now"
  • Listening Guide: "Your Cheatin' Heart"
  • The Honky-Tonk Image
  • Honky-Tonk Angels
  • Answer Songs
  • Artist Profile Rose Maddox
  • Listening Guide: "(Pay Me) Alimony"
  • Essay (Songwriting): Songwriting in Nashville
  • The Impact of Honky-Tonk
  • 5 The Birth of Bluegrass
  • The Origins of Bluegrass
  • Artist Profile Bill Monroe
  • Essay (Musical Style): Bluegrass
  • Listening Guide: "Blue Moon of Kentucky"
  • First-Generation Bands
  • Artist Profile Earl Scruggs
  • Listening Guide: "Foggy Mountain Breakdown"
  • Essay (Identity): Women in Bluegrass
  • Bluegrass Meets Folk
  • From Bluegrass to Folk to Commercial Country
  • Essay (Culture): Bluegrass Festivals
  • Bluegrass as Symbol and Soundtrack
  • Listening Guide: "Rocky Top"
  • The Relationship between Bluegrass and Country
  • 6 Rockabilly and Teen Romance
  • Setting the Stage: The Emergence of Rock 'n' Roll
  • Memphis Rockabilly and Elvis Presley
  • Essay (Culture): Teenagers and Music
  • Essay (Culture): Cajun Country
  • Essay (Musical Style): Rockabilly
  • Song Comparison: "Blue Moon of Kentucky"
  • Rockabilly as Part of Country Music
  • Artist Profile Johnny Cash
  • Listening Guide: "Folsom Prison Blues"Rockabilly Women
  • Rock 'n' Roll and Country Connections beyond Sun
  • Artist Profile Wanda Jackson
  • Listening Guide: "I Gotta Know"Country Teen Crooners
  • Listening Guide: "Young Love"Coming to an End
  • Part III The Big Business of Country Music (1960s and 1970s)
  • 7 The Nashville Sound and Musical Innovation
  • Artist Profile Chet Atkins
  • The Stars
  • Essay (Musical Style): The Nashville Sound
  • Artist Profile Patsy Cline
  • Listening Guide: "Faded Love"
  • Listening Guide: "He'll Have to Go"
  • The Songs
  • Song Comparison: "Take Me In Your Arms and Hold Me"
  • Essay (Songwriting): A Professional Writer's Town
  • Listening Guide: "El Paso"
  • Essay (Music Business): The Country Music Association
  • Instrumentals
  • The Second Wave of Nashville Sound Artists
  • Making Sense of the Nashville Sound
  • 8 California Country and Country Rock
  • Out in Bakersfield
  • Essay (Musical Style): Bakersfield Sound
  • Artist Profile Merle Haggard
  • Listening Guide: "Mama Tried"
  • Artist Profile Buck Owens
  • Listening Guide: "Excuse Me (I Think I've Got a Heartache)"
  • Essay (History): "Okie from Muskogee" and Country Music Politics
  • Bluegrass Meets Folk-Rock
  • Country Rock
  • Essay (Culture): The Byrds on the Opry
  • Country Rock Branches Out
  • California Country
  • Listening Guide: "Will the Circle Be Unbroken"
  • 9 Traditionalists and Classic Country
  • Essay (Musical Style): Classic Country
  • Classic Country's Female Stars
  • Artist Profile Dolly Parton
  • Listening Guide: "Coal Miner's Daughter"
  • Song Comparison: "Muleskinner Blues"
  • Classic Country's Male Stars
  • Essay (Identity): Gender in Classic Country
  • Artist Profile George Jones
  • Listening Guide: "He Stopped Loving Her Today"
  • Listening Guide: "You've Never Been This Far Before"
  • Breaking Barriers
  • Essay (Culture): The Opry Moves
  • Essay (Songwriting): Story Songs
  • Essay (Songwriting): Truckin' Songs and the Open Road
  • The Duets and Ensembles
  • TV and Country Music
  • Looking Back on Classic Country
  • Part IV Expansion: From Country to Rock and Pop and Back Again (1970s and 1980s)
  • 10 Outlaw Country and Southern Rock Rebellion
  • The Emergence of Outlaw Country
  • Essay (Music Business): Behaving Like Outlaws
  • Artist Profile Willie Nelson
  • Essay (Musical Style): Outlaw Country
  • Album Exploration: Red Headed Stranger
  • Outlaw Country Runs Its Course
  • Listening Guide: "Luckenbach, Texas (Back to the Basics of Love)"
  • Essay (Culture): Long-Haired Rednecks, Hippies, and Cosmic Cowboys
  • Southern Rock and the Country Audience
  • Essay (Musical Style): Southern Rock
  • Listening Guide: "Sweet Home Alabama"
  • Artist Profile Charlie Daniels
  • Listening Guide: "The South's Gonna Do It"
  • 11 Urban Cowboys, Countrypolitan, and the Regan Era
  • History and Rise of Crossover Country
  • Essay (Musical Style): Countrypolitan
  • Pop Culture, the Cowboy, and the Country Boy
  • Essay (Culture): Country Music on the Silver Screen
  • Politics, Economics, and the Appeal of the Urban Cowboy
  • New Media and Breaking Down Genre Borders
  • The Stars and Songs of Urban Cowboy
  • Artist Profile Barbara Mandrell
  • Essay (Music Business): International Country
  • Listening Guide: "I Was Country (When Country Wasn't Cool)"
  • Listening Guide: "Love in the First Degree"
  • The End of Urban Cowboy
  • Artist Profile Emmylou Harris
  • Listening Guide: "Islands in the Stream"
  • 12 Neotraditionalists and Remaking the Past
  • Countrypolitan Fades
  • Neotraditionalist Philosophy
  • Essay (Musical Style): Neotraditionalist Recordings
  • Early Practitioners
  • Essay (Songwriting): Cover Songs Revisited
  • Artist Profile George Strait
  • Listening Guide: "Grandpa (Tell Me 'Bout the Good Old Days)"
  • Artist Profile Reba McEntire
  • Listening Guide: "How Blue"
  • Neotraditionalism Takes Root
  • Listening Guide: "All My Ex's Live in Texas"
  • Co-opted, Conservative, and Commercial
  • Essay (Culture): Branson, Missouri, and Country Music Tourism
  • Part V Country Music In Popular Culture (1990s and 2000s)
  • 13 The Commercial Country Explosion
  • The Class of 1989 and "New Country"
  • Artist Profile Garth Brooks
  • Essay (History): Southernization and Soccer Moms
  • Essay (Musical Style): New Country and Country Pop
  • Themes in New Country
  • Listening Guide: "Friends in Low Places"
  • Listening Guide: "Gone Country"
  • Stylistic Pendulums and Country Pop
  • Essay (Culture): Line Dancing
  • Artist Profile Shania Twain
  • Listening Guide: "Any Man of Mine"
  • Essay (Songwriting): Songwriting and Sophistication
  • The End of the 1990s
  • 14 Alternative Country and Roots Revival
  • Defining Alternative Country
  • Alternative Country Origins
  • Alternative Country Coalesces
  • A Broader Definition: Alternative Country as Musical Space
  • Artist Profile Ryan Adams
  • Essay (Technology): The Internet Age
  • Listening Guide: "No Depression"
  • Essay (Musical Style): What Alt-Country Doesn't Sound Like
  • Listening Guide: "Suppose Tonight Would Be Our Last"
  • Essay (Culture): Gay Line Dancing
  • Americana
  • Another Alternative: Bluegrass
  • The Impact on Mainstream Country
  • Artist Profile Rhonda Vincent
  • Changes in Commercial Country
  • Murder on Music Row: The Turning Tide
  • Listening Guide: "Man of Constant Sorrow"
  • Essay (Culture): The O Brother Phenomenon
  • 15 Into the Present
  • Country Music in the Spotlight
  • Essay (Culture): Dixie Chicks and Politics
  • Listening Guide: "Long Time Gone"
  • Listening Guide: "Whiskey Lullaby"
  • Return of Roots and Rednecks
  • Artist Profile Brad Paisley
  • Listening Guide: "Redneck Woman"
  • Americana and Alternative?
  • Pop Culture Lays Claim to Country Music
  • Artist Profile Carrie Underwood
  • Essay (Identity): Race in Contemporary Country
  • Essay (Technology): MP3s Please
  • Reflecting and Projecting Meaning
  • The Main Themes in Country Music's History
  • Looking Forward
  • Appendix A Song Form
  • Appendix B Country Instruments
  • Appendix C Finding the Recordings
  • Appendix D Glossary
  • Appendix E Timeline
  • Selected Bibliography

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