Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-r5fsc Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-21T23:13:58.613Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Another boring day in paradise: rock and roll and the empowerment of everyday life*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 November 2008

Extract

About five years ago, I began to teach courses on the cultural history of rock and roll. My approach was simple: I would try to describe the texts, interpreting the significance produced by the unique synthesis of musical texture and lyrical content. Then I would suggest correspondences to the situation of its audiences which were mediated through the institutional practices of production and consumption. The music obliquely represented and responded to the structure of experience of at least certain portions of its youth audience. As I sought more adequate readings, the correspondences became increasingly refracted; the music had to be located in an overdetermined context: class, race, subcultures, gender, as well as age, exerted unequal pressures on and were represented in rock and roll. Nevertheless, my students – as well as the rock and roll fan in me – were noticeably dissatisfied. While they often assented to my readings, it was clear that my readings failed to capture something important, something which was intimately connected to rock and roll's power as well as to its cultural politics.

Type
Part 4. Reading Rock and Roll
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1984

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Berger, J. 1980. ‘In opposition to history, in defiance of time’, Village Voice, 8–14 10, pp. 8990Google Scholar
Carson, T. 1980. ‘Martha and the Muffins get disengaged’, Village Voice, 13–19 08, p. 59Google Scholar
Carson, T. 1981. ‘The David Johansen story’, Village Voice, 8–15 07, p. 49Google Scholar
Considine, J. D. 1981. ‘REO + MOR = heavy metal pop’, Village Voice, 8–15 07, p. 57Google Scholar
Farren, M. 1982. ‘Surface noise’, Trouser Press, 08, p. 52Google Scholar
Frith, S. 1981. Sound Effects: Youth, Leisure and the Politics of Rock 'n' Roll (New York)Google Scholar
Grossberg, L. 1982. ‘Experience, signification and reality: the boundaries of cultural semiotics’, Semiotica, 41, pp. 73106CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Grossberg, L. 1983 a. ‘The politics of youth culture: some observations on rock and roll in American culture’, Social Text, 8, Winter 1983/1984, pp. 104–26CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Grossberg, L. 1983 b. ‘If rock and roll communicates, why is it is noisy? Pleasure and the popular’, paper delivered to the international conference of IASPM,Reggio Emilia, Italy,SeptemberGoogle Scholar
Grossberg, L. Forthcoming, ‘Teaching the popular’, in Criticism, Theory and Interpretation in the Classroom, ed. Nelson, C. (Urbana)Google Scholar
Hebdige, D. 1979. Subculture: the Meaning of Style (London)Google Scholar
Hebdige, D. 1982. ‘Posing … threats, striking … poses: youth, surveillance and display’, SubStance, 37/38, pp. 6888Google Scholar
Hunter, J. 1981. ‘Think to the beat’, Village Voice, 21–7 10Google Scholar
Marcus, G. 1969. ‘Who put the bomp in the bomp-de-bomp de-bomp?’, in Rock and Roll Will Stand, ed. Marcus, G. (Boston), pp. 627Google Scholar
Marcus, G. 1980 a. ‘Anarchy in the UK’, in The Rolling Stone Illustrated History of Rock and Roll, ed. Miller, J., 2nd edn. (New York), pp. 451–63Google Scholar
Marcus, G. 1980 b. ‘Wake-up’, Rolling Stone, 24 06, pp. 4044Google Scholar
Marcus, G. 1981 a. ‘The shock of the old’, New West, 03, p. 113Google Scholar
Marcus, G. 1981 b. ‘Etched in tone’, New West, 09, p. 124Google Scholar
Nelson, C. 1978. ‘The psychology of criticism, or what can be said?’, in Psychoanalysis and the Question of the Text, ed. Hartmen, G. H. (Baltimore), pp. 4561Google Scholar
Nelson, C. and Grossberg, L. (eds). Forthcoming. Marxism and the Interpretation of Culture (Urbana)Google Scholar
Piccarella, J. 1980. ‘Fashion's future fusion conventions’, Village Voice, 14 01, p. 70Google Scholar
Piccarella, J. 1982. ‘Flipper's triumph of the therapeutic’, Village Voice, 15 06, p. 83Google Scholar
Robbins, I. 1982. ‘Lip service’, Trouser Press, 08, p. 46Google Scholar
Schjeldjahl, P. 1981. ‘Appraising passions’, Village Voice, 7–13 01, p. 67Google Scholar
Williams, R. 1981. Culture (London)Google ScholarPubMed
Zion, S. 1981. ‘Outlasting rock’, New York Times Magazine, 21 06, p. 16Google Scholar