[a] groundbreaking study ... Highly recommended.
R. D. Cohen, Choice
captivating read. This book will undoubtedly appeal to students and scholars of music, history, and culture alike.
Roger Davis Gatchet, Oral History Review
The Republic of Rock uncovers the lost story of rock music and citizenship in the sixties counterculture. Tracing the way people in two key places--San Francisco and Vietnam--used rock to make sense of their lives and the world around them, the book helps us to understand more vividly how rock became a medium for participants in the counterculture to think about what it meant to be an American citizen, a world citizen, a citizen-consumer, or a citizen-soldier. The music became a resource for grappling with the nature of democracy in larger systems of American power both domestically and globally.
From the Acid Tests of Ken Kesey and the Merry Pranksters to hippie disc jockeys on strike, from the airwaves of Vietnam to the forgotten tale of a South Vietnamese rock band, The Republic of Rock shows how the musical connections between the City of the Summer of Love to the country in which the United States waged war were crucial to the making of the sixties counterculture-and why the legacy of rock music in the sixties continues to matter to the meaning of citizenship in a global society today.
Les mer
The Republic of Rock uncovers the lost story of rock music and citizenship in the sixties counterculture by tracing the way people in two key places - San Francisco and Vietnam - used rock to make sense of their lives and the world around them.
Les mer
Acknowledgements ; Introduction ; Part I: San Francisco ; Ch 1. Uncle Sam Wants You to Pass the Acid Tests ; Ch 2. We Are KMPX FM Rock, Complete with All the Contradictions ; Ch 3. The Wild West Festival Is You and Me in a Cooperative Association ; Part II: Vietnam ; Ch 4. A Soundtrack for the Entire Process ; Ch 5. Welcome to Entertainment Vietnam! ; Ch 6. We Got A Little Peace Message, Like Straight from Saigon ; Epilogue ; Notes ; Index
Les mer
"Kramer's study of rock provides a model for future work on music's significance
for U.S. soldiers in Vietnam that might explore other musical genres and their
connections to questions of racial identity and pride...Throughout, Kramer's book is a model of thorough research, with conclusions informed by an extensive body of archival sources and original interviews with musicians, as well as serious engagement with the major scholarship on rock and the counterculture...A groundbreaking study highly recommended to any reader interested in 1960s rock or the role of music in the Vietnam conflict."--Journal of the Society of American Music
"...[A] provocative, always smart, and well-grounded account of the role rock music played in the lived experience of the sixties-era counterculture....Kramer has accomplished what few other historians of the counterculture have done: he has found stories of men and women actively involved in the cultural rebellion of the sixties era who struggled to turn their dreams into actions. Kramer enters this producerist counterculture through the agency of rock
music."--David Farber, author of The Age of Great Dreams: America in the 1960s
"The Republic of Rock offers valuable insights into the culture of rock music in San Francisco and Saigon during the 1960s. Kramer's book provides an informed and informative retrospective on a decade when sonic expectations for humanity soared, only to be brought back to earth by other musical depictions of ghetto lives, police harassment, mindless capitalism, drug abuse, and military madness."--B. Lee Cooper, Rock Music Studies
"Kramer probes deeply into the countercultural archives of art posters, underground newspapers, music, press releases, and interviews to establish how the rock music scene in San Francisco presented both a challenge to traditional values, while simultaneously embracing a hip capitalism which commercialized the counterculture. Kramer argues that the acid rock scene in San Francisco became a community in which music was a primary avenue through which to address
issues of citizenship in what eventually was known as Woodstock nation."--Ron Briley, History News Network
"Groundbreaking....Draws on a wide range of sources in exploring the role of music, drugs, and the counterculture in San Francisco and South Vietnam from the late 1960s into the early 1970s."--CHOICE
"Given my particular interests in history and music, I cracked open The Republic of Rock: Music and Citizenship in the Sixties Counterculture thinking that I would be more reminded than enlightened. I was pleasantly surprised to have been incorrect in my expectations."--Blake Maddux, Dig Boston
"From happenings to alternative rock radio stations to music festivals Michael Kramer traces the close relationship of what he calls 'hip capitalism' and the emergence of niche marketing to utopian ideas of an open-ended public sphere with unblocked, unmediated sharing between all citizens. His book shows just how inseparable economic, political, and metaphysical ideas grew during the 1960s. He cinches his argument by turning to Vietnam. His chapter on the
embrace of rock and soul music by the U.S. military is extraordinarily elegant. By looking into the rock groups that young Vietnamese formed, the book explores why aspects of U.S. culture has had such
powerful international influence, even when U.S. political, economic, or military power was failing. The story told in this book shows the power of artists and audiences coming together."--Richard Candida Smith, University of California, Berkeley
"In Republic of Rock, Michael Kramer skillfully examines rock music as an energizing 'circuit' connecting disparate communities of San Francisco hippies, Vietnam grunts, and South Vietnamese urbanites in a transnational 'sonic space' that fostered civic participation on young people's terms. Deeply researched and with a strong theoretical foundation, Republic of Rock helps readers to think expansively about music's power to define social relationships,
in the United State and South Vietnam, in the Vietnam War and on the home front. Kramer's smart, witty prose and interdisciplinary approach to sixties counterculture, American military history, and global
citizenship make this book suitable for classroom use but also a great read for rock fans of any generation."--Meredith H. Lair, author of Armed with Abundance: Consumerism and Soldiering in the Vietnam War
"Throughout, Kramer's book is a model of thorough research, with conclusions
informed by an extensive body of archival sources and original interviews with
musicians, as well as serious engagement with the major scholarship on rock and the counterculture. In short, The Republic of Rock is a groundbreaking study highly recommended to any reader interested in 1960s rock or the role of music in the Vietnam conflict."--Journal of the Society for American Music
Les mer
Selling point: Focuses on the deep context of musical reception using a wide range of multimedia sources and connects it to democratic citizenship.
Selling point: Draws on new archival evidence and interviews, telling new stories that have been silenced by the typical, clichéd tale of rock in the sixties.
Selling point: Transnational study that connects US popular culture to military in Vietnam and then to Vietnamese.
Selling point: Author was music editor for New York Times.com, and has written about music, culture, and history for Salon, Sonicnet, Newsday, VH1.com, Jazziz, First of the Month, The Point, and other outlets.
Les mer
Michael J. Kramer teaches History and American Studies at Northwestern University, and writes about arts and culture at www.culturerover.com.
Selling point: Focuses on the deep context of musical reception using a wide range of multimedia sources and connects it to democratic citizenship.
Selling point: Draws on new archival evidence and interviews, telling new stories that have been silenced by the typical, clichéd tale of rock in the sixties.
Selling point: Transnational study that connects US popular culture to military in Vietnam and then to Vietnamese.
Selling point: Author was music editor for New York Times.com, and has written about music, culture, and history for Salon, Sonicnet, Newsday, VH1.com, Jazziz, First of the Month, The Point, and other outlets.
Les mer
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780195384864
Publisert
2013
Utgiver
Oxford University Press Inc
Vekt
522 gr
Høyde
236 mm
Bredde
155 mm
Dybde
31 mm
Aldersnivå
U, P, 05, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
304
Forfatter