Book: Hole In Our Soul: The Loss Of Beauty And Meaning In American Popular Music From ragtime to rap, Motown to Madonna, Hole in Our Soul: The loss of Beauty and Meaning in American Popular Music is cultural history with attitude. Defending the vigor of jazz, blues, country, gospel, and early rock'n'roll, Bayles argues that recent styles like grunge, punk, and gangsta rap have succumbed to a mindless cult of shock and sonic abuse.
From Queen Latifa to Count Basie, Madonna to Monk, "Hole in Our Soul: The Loss of Beauty and Meaning in American Popular Music" traces popular music back to its roots in jazz, blues, country, and gospel through the rise in rock 'n' roll and the emergence of heavy metal, punk, and rap. Yet despite the vigor and balance of these musical origins, Martha Bayles argues, something has gone seriously wrong, both with the sound of popular music and the sensibility it expresses.
Bayles defends the though, affirmative spirit of Afro-American music against the strain of artistic modernism she calls 'perverse.' She describes how perverse modernism was grafted onto popular music in the late 1960s, and argues that the result has been a cult of brutality and obscenity that is profoundly anti-musical.
Unlike other recent critics of popular music, Bayles does not blame the problem on commerce. She argues that culture shapes the market and not the other way around. Finding censorship of popular music "both a practical and a constitutional impossibility," Bayles insists that "an informed shift in public tastes may be our only hope of reversing the current malignant mood."
Details of Book: Hole In Our Soul: The Loss Of Beauty And Meaning In American Popular Music Book: Hole In Our Soul: The Loss Of Beauty And Meaning In American Popular Music
Author: Martha Bayles
ISBN: 0226039595
ISBN-13: 9780226039596
, 978-0226039596
Binding: Paperback
Publishing Date: May 1996
Publisher: University Of Chicago Press
Number of Pages: 461
Language: English