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E-raamat: Roll With It: Brass Bands in the Streets of New Orleans

  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Sari: Refiguring American Music
  • Ilmumisaeg: 30-Oct-2013
  • Kirjastus: Duke University Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780822377207
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  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Sari: Refiguring American Music
  • Ilmumisaeg: 30-Oct-2013
  • Kirjastus: Duke University Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780822377207
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Roll With It is a firsthand account of the contradictory lives of New Orleans brass-band musicians. They are celebrated as cultural icons within the music scene; outside it, they are treated as faceless black males—subject to poverty, racial marginalization, and urban violence.


Roll With It is a firsthand account of the precarious lives of musicians in the Rebirth, Soul Rebels, and Hot 8 brass bands of New Orleans. These young men are celebrated as cultural icons for upholding the proud traditions of the jazz funeral and the second line parade, yet they remain subject to the perils of poverty, racial marginalization, and urban violence that characterize life for many black Americans. Some achieve a degree of social mobility while many more encounter aggressive policing, exploitative economies, and a political infrastructure that creates insecurities in healthcare, housing, education, and criminal justice. The gripping narrative moves with the band members from back street to backstage, before and after Hurricane Katrina, always in step with the tap of the snare drum, the thud of the bass drum, and the boom of the tuba.

Arvustused

Roll With It, which includes striking black-and-white illustrations by New Orleans artist Willie Birch, is at once celebratory and saddening: a book of personal stories and a highly researched academic work. - Geraldine Wyckoff (Offbeat) "Sakakeenys approach to the tensions between continuity in change in Roll With It: Brass Bands in the Streets of New Orleans, searches past academic theories, tapping many interviews and his own experiences with musicians. . . . Roll With It deserves a wide readership in the post-Katrina boom."     - Jason Berry (New Orleans Magazine) In addition to chronicling groups including the Rebirth Brass Brand, Sakakeeny provides a revealing look at the daily lives of musicians. . . . Detailed profiles of individual musicians make for a captivating narrative, and the book is beautifully illustrated with artwork by New Orleans native Willie Birch. - Scott Barretta (Clarion-Ledger) Fascinating. . . . The musicians' personal stories are interwoven with historical information, academic reflection, and personal experience, combining to form a highly original work that creates a vivid portrait both of this musical format and the noble but beleaguered city of New Orleans. - Florence Wetzel (All About Jazz) As Sakakeeny makes clear, the story of the citys brass bands is far more complex than music alone. Beyond its entertainment value, music serves as the site where competing social, political, and economic vectors intersect. In many ways, these vectors serve as a microcosm for the problems within the city at large. (Kirkus Reviews) Fascinating. . . . The musicians' personal stories are interwoven with historical information, academic reflection, and personal experience, combining to form a highly original work that creates a vivid portrait both of this musical format and the noble but beleaguered city of New Orleans.  - Florence Wetzel (All About Jazz) A notable work in that its the first critical project to chronicle New Orleans bombastic contemporary brass-band scene, the generation of musicians that grew up with century-old hymns in one ear and hip-hop in the other; also, and importantly, its a keen, social-justice-minded examination of the turbulent mix of race, economics, culture and tradition in which brass band culture is located. - Alison Fensterstock (Times-Picayune) Roll With It adds a contemporary perspective to studies of New Orleans culture and music. What emerges from Sakakeenys book is a portrait of a city that, with all its challenges, still manages to support a vibrant musical culture.  - John Paul Meyers (Jazz Perspectives) Sakakeeny offers detailed accounts of parades and the inner workings of the bands. The book offers a full picture of their lives and how the citys cultural economy works on the factory end. Sakakeeny observes the way the city celebrates its culture and especially its musicians, but the book also exposes the way many of them survive on the same earnings as low-rung service industry workers. Its an engaging look street-level look at the bands that so often are used to represent and symbolize the city. - Will Coviello (Gambit) Roll with It is an edifying, enjoyable, enlightening read and refreshing musical study. It conveys and embodies a vivaciousness, both the authors and that of the musical people portrayed throughout the book, a movement through time and place that refuses to slow down or be diverted or silenced." - Ron Emoff (American Anthropologist) "Roll With It is informative on many levels, detailing song structures, jazz history, neighborhood developments, and weaving information together through anecdote and research. It also poses a bigger question: If our city has economically benefitted from selling culture as a post-Katrina resource, are musicians getting what they deserve? Roll With It explores the answer. - Samuel Nelson (Where Y'at?) This is a volume in which rich ethnographic detail fails to obscure the broader framework of academic theory and personal concern for both the musicians and the music. Roll With It belongs on the reading lists of all those teaching ethnomusicology or ethnography in the modern world, those whose teaching engages with popular music, race, performance, tourism and economy, and those who are concerned about the relationship between their research (or the academic world in general) and the sociopolitical (and economic and racial) realities of the worlds in which we all live. - Gregory Booth (Journal of Popular Music Studies) "[ T]hose interested in a holistic consideration of musical products and cultural processes will find Sakakeenys study to be highly engaging and viscerally affecting as it exposes the oppositional forces inherent in a highly venerated-but highly volatile-performance tradition." - David Kammerer (Ethnomusicology)

Muu info

Roll With It is a firsthand account of the contradictory lives of New Orleans brass-band musicians. They are celebrated as cultural icons within the music scene; outside it, they are treated as faceless black males-subject to poverty, racial marginalization, and urban violence.
List Of Artwork
vii
Prologue Crossing The Threshold 1(1)
Introduction Forward Motion 1(12)
Chapter 1 Onward And Upward
13(56)
1.1 A Funeral Fit for a Duke
1.2 An Eventful History
1.3 Second Lining with Rebirth
1.4 Developments in the Treme
1.5 The Bass Brothers
1.6 Lives in Motion
1.7 When This Life Is Over
1.8 Voices and Instruments
1.9 Life at the Top
Chapter 2 Constraints
69(40)
2.1 Down on the Corner
2.2 Where Culture Means Business
2.3 Bennie's Dilemma
2.4 The Business of Culture
Chapter 3 Progressions
109(34)
3.1 You Don't Want to Go to War
3.2 A Renaissance
3.3 Tradition on Parade
3.4 Music by Any Means Necessary
3.5 Productive Friction
Chapter 4 Voices
143(36)
4.1 Structural Violence, Interpersonal Violence, and Musical Articulation
4.2 Joseph "Shotgun" Williams
4.3 Why Dey Had to Kill Him?
4.4 Dinerral Jevone Shavers
4.5 Voices and Instruments at Dinerral's Funeral
4.6 Voices Amplified, Muffled, and Distorted
4.7 Voices Lost and Found
Conclusion Engagements 179(8)
Afterword 187(8)
Image And Music In The Art Of Willie Birch
Willie Birch
Matt Sakakeeny
Acknowledgments 195(4)
Appendix 199(2)
List Of Interviews And Public Events
Notes 201(12)
Bibliography 213(14)
Index 227
Matt Sakakeeny is an ethnomusicologist and journalist, New Orleans resident and musician. An Assistant Professor of Music at Tulane University, he initially moved to New Orleans to work as a co-producer of the public radio program American Routes. Sakakeeny has written for publications including The Oxford American, Mojo, and Wax Poetics. He plays guitar in the band Los Po-Boy-Citos.

Willie Birch is an international artist who lives in New Orleans, where he was born in 1942. Birch received his BA from Southern University New Orleans in 1969 and his MFA from the Maryland Institute College of Art (MICA) in 1973. He is the recipient of many awards and honors, including the State of Louisiana Governor's award and fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts and the Guggenheim Foundation. His works are part of the permanent collections of the New Orleans Museum of Art, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Museum of Modern Art, and the Whitney Museum of American Art.