Cart
Free Shipping in the UK
Proud to be B-Corp

Deindustrialisation and Popular Music Giacomo Botta, Adjunct Professor, University of Helsinki, Finland

Deindustrialisation and Popular Music By Giacomo Botta, Adjunct Professor, University of Helsinki, Finland

Summary

The book offers a new and unique point of view on industrial cities and their popular music cultures based on interdisciplinary research and methods

Deindustrialisation and Popular Music Summary

Deindustrialisation and Popular Music: Punk and Post-Punk in Manchester, Dusseldorf, Torino and Tampere by Giacomo Botta, Adjunct Professor, University of Helsinki, Finland

The book is a comparative study of popular music cultures in 1980s Torino, Tampere, Manchester and Dusseldorf and their relation to the industrial city as imaginary, as heritage and as everyday reality.

Popular music genres, such as hardcore punk, house, industrial, post-punk and heavy metal, share a common origin in 1980s decaying industrial cities. All these genres have been canonized and understood as scores for grey, gloomy, decaying urban industrial environments or for their evocation, but is there an organic relationship between de-industrialization and this kind of music production?

Deindustrialisation and Popular Music Reviews

With Deindustrialisation and Popular Music, Botta make an important contribution to the study of popular music and sound, in particular post-punk cultures, in the context of urban deindustrialization. His engaging and accessible book offers insightful theoretical reflections on, and historical contextualizations of, the intricate ways in which popular music production, aesthetics and consumption are interconnected.

* Popular Music History *
A must-read for everyone who seeks to understand the relationship between place and sound beyond a mere cause and effect-analogy. A multi-layered interdisciplinary study which unravels the articulation of industrial musicscapes and deindustrialization in a comparative perspective looking at four European cities: Manchester, Dusseldorf, Torino and Tampere. Well-researched and well-written: a superb ethnography and historiography of urban culture and popular music. -- Rolf Lindner, Professor Emeritus of European Ethnology, Humboldt University of Berlin
Sharpened by the authors expertise in economic theory, urban history and musical communities, Deindustrialisation and Popular Music offers fresh thinking about the ways in which music is political. Venturing beyond the usual cities covered in popular music research, Botta takes us into the unique histories and fascinating musical worlds of Tampere, Dusseldorf, Torinto and Manchester. Highly recommended. -- William Straw, James McGill Professor of Urban Media Studies, McGill University
This groundbreaking study makes the sound of industrial work and creative destruction come alive in compelling ways. By considering a broad array of industrial cities, local sensibilities, and DIY styles across Europe, Botta advances our understanding of deindustrialization music beyond the tidy social/aesthetic homologies that underlie familiar accounts of post-punk Manchester and electronic Dusseldorf. Deindustrialisation and Popular Music is a vital contribution to the cultural analysis of contemporary European urbanism. -- Leonard Nevarez, Professor of Sociology, Vassar College

Moving us beyond the exhausted creative cities trope, Botta critically examines how material and symbolic infrastructures are mediated through musicmaking, courtesy a lively, occasionally personal, look at scenes in Manchester, Dusseldorf, Torino and Tampere. Positioning the post-industrial city as a semiotic resource over which competing interests continue to wage battle, he offers us a compelling re-think of the post-industrial city.

-- Geoff Stahl, Senior Lecturer in Media Studies, Victoria University of Wellington
Deindustrialisation and Popular Music is not the same old story about punk and post-punk. It looks for music and subcultures context and impact in new places and in new ways. Indeed in some ways this is not a book about punk/post-punk at all. This is a book about how we can take popular culture seriously as a product, as a way of seeing ourselves, and as a way of working through the past. The cultural forms and sectors have filled in the post-industrial gaps, where the creative zones are part and parcel of gentrification, all transmitted through new technological products and media forms. These carry a memory of the past with them. From Delta Blues to punk in Finland Deindustrialisation and Popular Music maps out music in its global place and how popular culture helps us deal with our past in a changing world. -- Lucy Robinson, Professor, University of Sussex
This is not just another book on punk and post-punk. It isnt just another book on cities and music either. This is a book on musics importance in the reconfiguring of todays cities namely those heirs to industrialisation. Theoretically and methodologically remarkable, this book explores punk and post-punk heritage frequently enclosed in stereotyped or immensely subjectivized narratives. However, its touchstone is starting from, and going beyond, Manchester. Its analysing Dusseldorf, Torino, and Tampere showing how this heritage is at the core of contemporary European identity. -- Paula Guerra, Associate Professor of Sociology, University of Porto

About Giacomo Botta, Adjunct Professor, University of Helsinki, Finland

Giacomo Botta, Adjunct Professor, University of Helsinki, Finland.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments / Introduction: Metal on Metal / 1: The Industrial City / 2: A Genealogy of Industrial City Music/ 3: Manchester / 4: Dusseldorf / 5: Torino / 6: Tampere / 7: Industrial Heritages / 8: From Vanishing Mediator to Cultural Catalyst: Music, Space and Place / Conclusions / Bibliography

Additional information

NGR9781538148273
9781538148273
1538148277
Deindustrialisation and Popular Music: Punk and Post-Punk in Manchester, Dusseldorf, Torino and Tampere by Giacomo Botta, Adjunct Professor, University of Helsinki, Finland
New
Paperback
Rowman & Littlefield
2022-05-11
160
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a new book - be the first to read this copy. With untouched pages and a perfect binding, your brand new copy is ready to be opened for the first time

Customer Reviews - Deindustrialisation and Popular Music