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What the Music Said: Black Popular Music and Black Public Culture
Mark Anthony Neal
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First Published in 1999. In What the Music Said, Mark Anthony Neal provides a timely study of from be-bop to Hip Hop. This book looks at the last fifty years of black popular music and provides an intriguing portrait of the existential and social forces that drove black communities to make music in protest, reaction and to fulfil their material and spiritual needs.
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Front Cover
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Title Page
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Coypright Page
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Table of Contents
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Preface
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Acknowledgments
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Introduction: Toward A Black Public: Movements, Markets, and Moderns
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Chapter One: Legislating Freedom, Commodifying Struggle: Civil Rights, Black Power, and the Struggle for Black Musical Hegemony
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Chapter Two: From Protest to Climax: Black Power, State Repression, and Black Communities of Resistance
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Chapter Three: Soul for Sale: The Marketing of Black Musical Expression
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Chapter Four: Soul for Real: Authentic Black Voices in an Age of Deterioration
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Chapter Five: Postindustrial Soul: Black Popular Music at the Crossroads
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Chapter Six: Postindustrial Postscript: The Digitized Aural Urban Landscape
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Endnotes
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References
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Index
Citable Link
Published: 1999
Publisher: Routledge
- 9780203700617 (ebook)