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Beggars Banquet and the Rolling Stones' Rock and Roll Revolution ‘They Call My Name Disturbance' Ashgate Popular and Folk Music Series

Langue : Anglais
Couverture de l’ouvrage Beggars Banquet and the Rolling Stones' Rock and Roll Revolution

The Rolling Stones? Beggars Banquet is one of the seminal albums in rock history. Arguably it not only marks the advent of the ?mature? sound of the Rolling Stones but lays out a new blueprint for an approach to blues-based rock music that would endure for several decades. From its title to the dark themes that pervade some of its songs, Beggars Banquet reflected and helped define a moment marked by violence, decay, and upheaval. It marked a move away from the artistic sonic flourishes of psychedelic rock towards an embrace of foundational streams of American music ? blues, country ? that had always underpinned the music of the Stones but assumed new primacy in their music after 1968. This move coincided with, and anticipated, the ?roots? moves that many leading popular music artists made as the 1960s turned toward a new decade; but unlike many of their peers whose music grew more ?soft? and subdued as they embraced traditional styles, the music and attitude of the Stones only grew harder and more menacing, and their status as representatives of the dark underside of the 60s rock counterculture assumed new solidity. For the Rolling Stones, the 1960s ended and the 1970s began with the release of this album in 1968.

Russell Reising: Introducton: "Just trying to do this jigsaw puzzle"

Part I: What can poor boys do, except to sing (and play and produce) in a rock ‘n' roll band?

John Covach: Jimmy Miller, the Rolling Stones, and Beggars Banquet

Steven Baur: 'And the drummer, he’s so shattered': the percussive core of Beggars Banquet

Akitsugu Kawamoto: 'And the bass player, he looks nervous': progressive elements in the bass lines of Beggars Banquet

Jim LeBlanc: 'Too much is never enough': Beggars Banquet and the decline of Brian Jones

Stephen D. Christman: "Five strings, three notes, two fingers, one asshole": Keith Richards’s use of open G tuning

James McGrath: Doctor, I’m damaged: medical and cultural mythologies of Nicky Hopkins and the Rolling Stones

Part II: "What’s puzzling you is the nature of my game": some ideas

Ruth Tallman: Condemned to be free: the frightening uncertainty of a world without morality

Norma Coates: How can a smart chick like me listen to the Stones and not throw up? A speculative exploration of Beggars Banquet and misogyny

Brian Goodman, Woo Woooo: Beggars Banquet’s new aesthetic

Part III: Some songs

Kimberly Mack: Please allow me to introduce myself’: autobiographical blues self-fashioning in ‘Sympathy for the Devil’

Peter Mills: "Ghost at the banquet : the enigma of 'Child Of The Moon'"

Jacopo Conti: The 'old' and 'new' Rolling Stones in aural staging and chord changes of 'Street Fighting Man'

Part IV: The Rolling Stones, live if you want it

Steve Waksman: On the Road to Altamont: the Rolling Stones on Tour, 1969

Kimi Karki: 'I've been around for a long, long year’: the spectacular evil in the Rolling Stones’ live performance career

Russell Reising is Professor of American Culture and Asian Studies, University of Toledo, Ohio

Date de parution :

15.6x23.4 cm

Disponible chez l'éditeur (délai d'approvisionnement : 14 jours).

50,12 €

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Date de parution :

15.6x23.4 cm

Disponible chez l'éditeur (délai d'approvisionnement : 14 jours).

166,30 €

Ajouter au panier