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E-raamat: Electronica, Dance and Club Music

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"Discos, clubs and raves have been focal points for the development of new and distinctive musical and cultural practices over the past four decades. This volume presents the rich array of scholarship that has sprung up in response. Cutting-edge perspectives from a broad range of academic disciplines reveal the complex questions provoked by this musical tradition. Issues considered include aesthetics; agency; 'the body' in dance, movement, and space; composition; identity (including gender, sexuality, race, and other constructs); musical design; place; pleasure; policing and moral panics; production techniques such as sampling; spirituality and religion; sub-cultural affiliations and distinctions; and technology. The essays are contributed by an international group of scholars and cover a geographically and culturally diverse array of musical scenes" -- Publisher's website.

Arvustused

...a substantial book...a handy point of reference for those that teach in the area of electronic dance music and culture, and it can also work well as a primer for an early literature review in research dissertation work. Danecult

Acknowledgements vii
Series Preface ix
Introduction xi
PART I PRODUCTION, PERFORMANCE AND AESTHETICS
1 `When Sound Meets Movement: Performance in Electronic Dance Music', Leonardo Music Journal, 18, pp. 17-20
3(4)
Pedro Peixoto Ferreira
2 `From Refrain to Rave: The Decline of Figure and the Rise of Ground', Popular Music, 13, pp. 209-22
7(14)
Philip Tagg
3 `Conceptualizing Rhythm and Meter in Electronic Dance Music', in Unlocking the Groove: Rhythm, Meter, and Musical Design in Electronic Dance Music, Bloomington: Indiana University Press, pp. 76-116
21(44)
Mark J. Butler
4 `Producing Kwaito: Nkosi Sikelel' iAfrika after Apartheid', World of Music, 50, pp. 103-20
65(18)
Gavin Steingo
5 `The Disc Jockey as Composer, or How I Became a Composing DJ', Current Musicology, 67, pp. 93-98
83(6)
Kai Fikentscher
6 `On the Process and Aesthetics of Sampling in Electronic Music Production', Organized Sound, 8, pp. 313-20
89(8)
Tara Rodgers
7 `The Aesthetics of Failure: "Post-Digital" Tendencies in Contemporary Computer Music', Computer Music Journal, 24, pp. 12-18
97(8)
Kim Cascone
8 `"A Pixel is a Pixel. A Club is a Club": Toward a Hermeneutics of Berlin Style DJ & VJ Culture', To the Quick, 5, pp. 28-41
105(16)
Sebastian Klotz
PART II THE BODY, THE SPIRIT AND (THE REGULATION OF) PLEASURE
9 `In Defence of Disco', Gay Left (Summer), pp. 20-23
121(8)
Richard Dyer
10 `In the Empire of the Beat: Discipline and Disco', Microphone Fiends: Youth Music & Youth Culture, New York: Routledge, pp. 147-57
129(12)
Walter Hughes
Andrew Ross
Tricia Rose
11 `"I Want to See All My Friends at Once": Arthur Russell and the Queering of Gay Disco', Journal of Popular Music Studies, 18, pp. 144-66
141(24)
Tim Lawrence
12 `I Feel Love: Disco and its Discontents', Criticism, 50, pp. 101-12
165(12)
Tavia Nyong'o
13 `Sampling Sexuality: Gender, Technology and the Body in Dance Music', Popular Music, 12, pp. 155-76
177(22)
Barbara Bradby
14 `Sampling (Hetero)sexuality: Diva-ness and Discipline in Electronic Dance Music', Popular Music, 20, pp. 349-57
199(10)
Susana Loza
15 `Dancing with Desire: Cultural Embodiment in Tijuana's Nor-tec Music and Dance', Popular Music, 25, pp. 383-99
209(18)
Alejandro L. Madrid
16 `The Spiritual Economy of Nightclubs and Raves: Osho Sannyasins as Party Promoters in Ibiza and Pune/Goa', Culture and Religion, 7, pp. 61-75
227(16)
Anthony D'Andrea
17 `Electronic Dance Music Culture and Religion: An Overview', Culture and Religion, 7, pp. 1-26
243(26)
Graham St John
18 `Soundtrack to an Uncivil Society: Rave Culture, the Criminal Justice Act and the Politics of Modernity', New Formations, 31, pp. 5-22
269(20)
Jeremy Gilbert
PART III IDENTITIES, BELONGINGS AND DISTINCTIONS
19 `Genres, Subgenres, Sub-Subgenres and More: Musical and Social Differentiation within Electronic/Dance Music Communities', Journal of Popular Music Studies, 13, pp. 59-75
289(18)
Kembrew McLeod
20 `Exploring the Meaning of the Mainstream (or why Sharon and Tracy Dance around their Handbags)', in Club Cultures: Music, Media, and Subcultural Capital, Cambridge: Polity Press, pp. 87-115
307(32)
Sarah Thornton
21 `Women and the Early British Rave Scene', Back to Reality: Social Experience and Cultural Studies, Manchester: Manchester University Press, pp. 152-69
339(18)
Maria Pini
Angela McRobbie
22 `Roomful of Asha: Gendered Productions of Ethnicity in Britain's "Asian Underground"', Transnational South Asians: The Making of a Neo-Diaspora, New York: Oxford University Press, pp. 215-43
357(30)
Falu Bakrania
Susan Koshy
R. Radhakrishnan
23 `"I Want Muscles": House Music, Homosexuality and Masculine Signification', Popular Music, 20, pp. 359-78
387(20)
Stephen Amico
24 `Mr. Mesa's Ticket: Memory and Dance at the Body Positive T-Dance', in Impossible Dance: Club Culture and Queer World-Making, Middletown, CT: Wesleyan University Press, pp. 159-83
407(26)
Fiona Buckland
25 `The Death of the Dance Party', Australian Humanities Review, 30, http://www.australianhumanitiesreview.org/archive/Issue-October-2003/race.html
433(12)
Kane Race
26 `Post-Soul Futurama: African American Cultural Politics and Early Detroit Techno', European Journal of American Culture, 24, pp. 131-52
445(22)
Sean Albiez
27 `Music Tourism and Factions of Bodies in Goa', Tourist Studies, 2, pp. 43-62
467(20)
Arun Saldanha
28 `The Dancer from the Dance: The Musical and Dancing Crowds of Clubbing', in Clubbing: Dancing, Ecstasy, and Vitality, London: Routledge, pp. 70-104
487(40)
Ben Malbon
Name Index 527
Mark J. Butler, Professor, Northwestern University, USA