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Rock 'N' Film: Cinema's Dance With Popular Music
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Barnes and Noble
Rock 'N' Film: Cinema's Dance With Popular Music
Current price: $79.00
Barnes and Noble
Rock 'N' Film: Cinema's Dance With Popular Music
Current price: $79.00
Loading Inventory...
Size: Hardcover
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For two decades after the mid-1950s, biracial popular music played a fundamental role in progressive social movements on both sides of the Atlantic. Balancing rock's capacity for utopian popular cultural empowerment with its usefulness for the capitalist media industries,
explores how the music's contradictory potentials were reproduced in various kinds of cinema, including major studio productions, minor studios' exploitation projects, independent documentaries, and the avant-garde.
These include
and other 1950s jukebox musicals; the films Elvis made before being drafted, especially
, as well as the formulaic comedies in which Hollywood abused his genius in the 1960s; early documentaries such as
that presented James Brown and the Rolling Stones as the core of a black-white, US-UK cultural commonality;
that marked the British Invasion;
and other Direct Cinema documentaries about the music of the counterculture; and avant-garde films about the Rolling Stones by Jean-Luc Godard, Kenneth Anger, and Robert Frank.
After the turn of the decade, notably
in which the Stones appeared to be complicit in the Hells Angels' murder of a young black man, 1960s' music-and films about it-reverted to separate black and white traditions based respectively on soul and country. These produced blaxploitation and
on the one hand, and bigoted representations of Southern culture in
on the other. Ending with the deaths of their stars, both films implied that rock 'n' roll had died or even, as David Bowie proclaimed, that it had committed suicide. But in his documentary about Bowie,
, D.A. Pennebaker triumphantly re-affirmed the community of musicians and fans in glam rock.
In analyzing this history, David E. James adapts the methodology of histories of the classic film musical to show how the rock 'n' roll film both displaced and recreated it.