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E-raamat: Heavy Metal Music in Britain [Taylor & Francis e-raamat]

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Heavy metal has developed from a British fringe genre of rock music in the late 1960s to a global mass market consumer good in the early twenty-first century. Early proponents of the musical style, such as Black Sabbath, Deep Purple, Judas Priest, Saxon, Uriah Heep and Iron Maiden, were mostly seeking to reach a young male audience. Songs were often filled with violent, sexist and nationalistic themes but were also speaking to the growing sense of deterioration in social and professional life. At the same time, however, heavy metal was seriously indebted to the legacies of blues and classical music as well as to larger literary and cultural themes. The genre also produced mythological concept albums and rewritings of classical poems. In other words, heavy metal tried from the beginning to locate itself in a liminal space between pedestrian mass culture and a rather elitist adherence to complexity and musical craftsmanship, speaking from a subaltern position against the hegemonic discourse. This collection of essays provides a comprehensive and multi-disciplinary look at British heavy metal from its beginning through The New Wave of British Heavy Metal up to the increasing internationalization and widespread acceptance in the late 1980s. The individual chapter authors approach British heavy metal from a textual perspective, providing critical analyses of the politics and ideology behind the lyrics, images and performances. Rather than focus on individual bands or songs, the essays collected here argue with the larger system of heavy metal music in mind, providing comprehensive analyses that relate directly to the larger context of British life and culture. The wide range of approaches should provide readers from various disciplines with new and original ideas about the study of this phenomenon of popular culture.
General Editor's Preface vii
Acknowledgements ix
Contributors xi
Introduction: Doing Cultural Studies with Earplugs 1(16)
Gerd Bayer
Part I Metal Commodities
The Empowering Masculinity of British Heavy Metal
17(16)
Deena Weinstein
Metal Goes `Pop': The Explosion of Heavy Metal into the Mainstream
33(20)
Benjamin Earl
The Brutal Truth: Grindcore as the Extreme Realism of Heavy Metal
53(20)
Liam Dee
Part II The Literary and Mythological Heritage
Demons, Devils and Witches: The Occult in Heavy Metal Music
73(16)
Helen Farley
Images of Human-Wrought Despair and Destruction: Social Critique in British Apocalyptic and Dystopian Metal
89(22)
Laura Wiebe Taylor
From Achilles to Alexander: The Classical World and the World of Metal
111(14)
Iain Campbell
Elements of the Gothic in Heavy Metal: A Match Made in Hell
125(18)
Bryan A. Bardine
Part III Heavy Metal Societies
The Unmaking of the English Working Class: Deindustrialization, Reification and the Origins of Heavy Metal
143(18)
Ryan M. Moore
No Class? Class and Class Politics in British Heavy Metal
161(20)
Magnus Nilsson
Rocking the Nation: One Global Audience, One Flag?
181(14)
Gerd Bayer
Index 195
Dr Gerd Bayer teaches in the Department of English at the University of Erlangen, Germany