Researching Live Music
Gigs, Tours, Concerts and Festivals
Herausgeber: Anderton, Chris; Pisfil, Sergio
Researching Live Music
Gigs, Tours, Concerts and Festivals
Herausgeber: Anderton, Chris; Pisfil, Sergio
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Researching Live Music offers an important contribution to the emergent field of live music studies, a field which has, over the past ten years, seen a steady growth in publications that examine the history of live music venues and promoters, the economics of the live music industry, and the operations of the sector.
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Researching Live Music offers an important contribution to the emergent field of live music studies, a field which has, over the past ten years, seen a steady growth in publications that examine the history of live music venues and promoters, the economics of the live music industry, and the operations of the sector.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd
- Seitenzahl: 272
- Erscheinungstermin: 18. November 2021
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 15mm
- Gewicht: 390g
- ISBN-13: 9780367405007
- ISBN-10: 0367405008
- Artikelnr.: 62274660
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Books on Demand GmbH
- In de Tarpen 42
- 22848 Norderstedt
- info@bod.de
- 040 53433511
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd
- Seitenzahl: 272
- Erscheinungstermin: 18. November 2021
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 15mm
- Gewicht: 390g
- ISBN-13: 9780367405007
- ISBN-10: 0367405008
- Artikelnr.: 62274660
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Books on Demand GmbH
- In de Tarpen 42
- 22848 Norderstedt
- info@bod.de
- 040 53433511
Chris Anderton is Associate Professor in Cultural Economy at Solent University, Southampton. He is the author of Music Festivals in the UK: Beyond the Carnivalesque (2019) and co-author of both Understanding the Music Industries (2013) and Music Management, Marketing and PR: Creating Connections and Conversations (forthcoming). He is also co-editor of Media Narratives in Popular Music (forthcoming) and has guest edited issues of the journals Rock Music Studies and Arts and the Market. Sergio Pisfil is a Lecturer and researcher at Universidad Peruana de Ciencias Aplicadas. His PhD, gained at the University of Edinburgh under the supervision of Simon Frith, focused on the history of live sound and its connections to rock music between 1967 and 1973. His research interests include live music, and the history and esthetics of popular music. His work has been published in various edited collections, including The Bloomsbury Handbook of Rock Music Research, Gender in Music Production, and the forthcoming Oxford Handbook of Progressive Rock; and in journals such as Popular Music and Society and Communiquer (forthcoming). He is currently guest editing a special issue on live music for the journal Arts and the Market.
List of illustrations
List of contributors
Acknowledgments
Live Music Studies in Perspective
Chris Anderton and Sergio Pisfil
PART I: Promotion
1. Festivals, Free and Unfree: Alex Cooley and the American Rock
Festival
Steve Waksman
2. As Long As They Go Home Safe: The Voice of the Independent Music
Festival Promoter
Danny Hagan
3. Under the Cover of Darkness: Situating "Covers Gigs" within Live
Music Ecologies
Pat O'Grady
4. Showcase Festivals as a Gateway to Foreign Markets
Patryk Galuszka
5. Disruption and Continuity: Covid-19, Live Music, and Cyclic Sociality
Chris Anderton
PART II: Production
6. Live Sound Matters
Christopher James Dahlie, Jos Mulder, Sergio Pisfil, and Nick Reeder
7. Mobile Spectacle: Es Devlin's Pandemonium Tour Design
Glyn Davis
8. Fulfilling the Hospitality Rider: Working Practices and Issues in a
Tour's Supply Chain
Gabrielle Kielich
9. Vocaloid Liveness? Hatsune Miku and the Live Production of the
Japanese Virtual Idol Concerts
Kimi Kärki
Part III: Consumption
10. Making Music Public: What Would a Sociology of Live Music Promotion
Look Like?
Loïc Riom
11. Dead Stars Live: Exploring Holograms, Liveness, and Authenticity
Kenny Forbes
12. Live ... as You've Always Heard It Before: Classic Rock, Technology,
and the Re-positioning of Authenticity in Live Music Performance
Andy Bennett
13. Approaching the Live from a Distance: The Unofficial Led Zeppelin
Archive
Stephen Loy
Part IV: Policy
14. Music Cities, or Cities of Music?
Christina Ballico and Dave Carter
15. State of Play: Tensions and Interventions in Live Music Policy
Adam Behr
16. "Por Más Músicas Mujeres en Vivo!": The Live Music Female Quota Law
and Its Implications for Argentine Music Festivals
Sarah Lahasky
17. Beyond Live Shows: Regulation and Innovation in the French Live Music
Video Economy
Gérôme Guibert, Michaël Spanu, and Catherine Rudent
Index
List of contributors
Acknowledgments
Live Music Studies in Perspective
Chris Anderton and Sergio Pisfil
PART I: Promotion
1. Festivals, Free and Unfree: Alex Cooley and the American Rock
Festival
Steve Waksman
2. As Long As They Go Home Safe: The Voice of the Independent Music
Festival Promoter
Danny Hagan
3. Under the Cover of Darkness: Situating "Covers Gigs" within Live
Music Ecologies
Pat O'Grady
4. Showcase Festivals as a Gateway to Foreign Markets
Patryk Galuszka
5. Disruption and Continuity: Covid-19, Live Music, and Cyclic Sociality
Chris Anderton
PART II: Production
6. Live Sound Matters
Christopher James Dahlie, Jos Mulder, Sergio Pisfil, and Nick Reeder
7. Mobile Spectacle: Es Devlin's Pandemonium Tour Design
Glyn Davis
8. Fulfilling the Hospitality Rider: Working Practices and Issues in a
Tour's Supply Chain
Gabrielle Kielich
9. Vocaloid Liveness? Hatsune Miku and the Live Production of the
Japanese Virtual Idol Concerts
Kimi Kärki
Part III: Consumption
10. Making Music Public: What Would a Sociology of Live Music Promotion
Look Like?
Loïc Riom
11. Dead Stars Live: Exploring Holograms, Liveness, and Authenticity
Kenny Forbes
12. Live ... as You've Always Heard It Before: Classic Rock, Technology,
and the Re-positioning of Authenticity in Live Music Performance
Andy Bennett
13. Approaching the Live from a Distance: The Unofficial Led Zeppelin
Archive
Stephen Loy
Part IV: Policy
14. Music Cities, or Cities of Music?
Christina Ballico and Dave Carter
15. State of Play: Tensions and Interventions in Live Music Policy
Adam Behr
16. "Por Más Músicas Mujeres en Vivo!": The Live Music Female Quota Law
and Its Implications for Argentine Music Festivals
Sarah Lahasky
17. Beyond Live Shows: Regulation and Innovation in the French Live Music
Video Economy
Gérôme Guibert, Michaël Spanu, and Catherine Rudent
Index
List of illustrations
List of contributors
Acknowledgments
Live Music Studies in Perspective
Chris Anderton and Sergio Pisfil
PART I: Promotion
1. Festivals, Free and Unfree: Alex Cooley and the American Rock
Festival
Steve Waksman
2. As Long As They Go Home Safe: The Voice of the Independent Music
Festival Promoter
Danny Hagan
3. Under the Cover of Darkness: Situating "Covers Gigs" within Live
Music Ecologies
Pat O'Grady
4. Showcase Festivals as a Gateway to Foreign Markets
Patryk Galuszka
5. Disruption and Continuity: Covid-19, Live Music, and Cyclic Sociality
Chris Anderton
PART II: Production
6. Live Sound Matters
Christopher James Dahlie, Jos Mulder, Sergio Pisfil, and Nick Reeder
7. Mobile Spectacle: Es Devlin's Pandemonium Tour Design
Glyn Davis
8. Fulfilling the Hospitality Rider: Working Practices and Issues in a
Tour's Supply Chain
Gabrielle Kielich
9. Vocaloid Liveness? Hatsune Miku and the Live Production of the
Japanese Virtual Idol Concerts
Kimi Kärki
Part III: Consumption
10. Making Music Public: What Would a Sociology of Live Music Promotion
Look Like?
Loïc Riom
11. Dead Stars Live: Exploring Holograms, Liveness, and Authenticity
Kenny Forbes
12. Live ... as You've Always Heard It Before: Classic Rock, Technology,
and the Re-positioning of Authenticity in Live Music Performance
Andy Bennett
13. Approaching the Live from a Distance: The Unofficial Led Zeppelin
Archive
Stephen Loy
Part IV: Policy
14. Music Cities, or Cities of Music?
Christina Ballico and Dave Carter
15. State of Play: Tensions and Interventions in Live Music Policy
Adam Behr
16. "Por Más Músicas Mujeres en Vivo!": The Live Music Female Quota Law
and Its Implications for Argentine Music Festivals
Sarah Lahasky
17. Beyond Live Shows: Regulation and Innovation in the French Live Music
Video Economy
Gérôme Guibert, Michaël Spanu, and Catherine Rudent
Index
List of contributors
Acknowledgments
Live Music Studies in Perspective
Chris Anderton and Sergio Pisfil
PART I: Promotion
1. Festivals, Free and Unfree: Alex Cooley and the American Rock
Festival
Steve Waksman
2. As Long As They Go Home Safe: The Voice of the Independent Music
Festival Promoter
Danny Hagan
3. Under the Cover of Darkness: Situating "Covers Gigs" within Live
Music Ecologies
Pat O'Grady
4. Showcase Festivals as a Gateway to Foreign Markets
Patryk Galuszka
5. Disruption and Continuity: Covid-19, Live Music, and Cyclic Sociality
Chris Anderton
PART II: Production
6. Live Sound Matters
Christopher James Dahlie, Jos Mulder, Sergio Pisfil, and Nick Reeder
7. Mobile Spectacle: Es Devlin's Pandemonium Tour Design
Glyn Davis
8. Fulfilling the Hospitality Rider: Working Practices and Issues in a
Tour's Supply Chain
Gabrielle Kielich
9. Vocaloid Liveness? Hatsune Miku and the Live Production of the
Japanese Virtual Idol Concerts
Kimi Kärki
Part III: Consumption
10. Making Music Public: What Would a Sociology of Live Music Promotion
Look Like?
Loïc Riom
11. Dead Stars Live: Exploring Holograms, Liveness, and Authenticity
Kenny Forbes
12. Live ... as You've Always Heard It Before: Classic Rock, Technology,
and the Re-positioning of Authenticity in Live Music Performance
Andy Bennett
13. Approaching the Live from a Distance: The Unofficial Led Zeppelin
Archive
Stephen Loy
Part IV: Policy
14. Music Cities, or Cities of Music?
Christina Ballico and Dave Carter
15. State of Play: Tensions and Interventions in Live Music Policy
Adam Behr
16. "Por Más Músicas Mujeres en Vivo!": The Live Music Female Quota Law
and Its Implications for Argentine Music Festivals
Sarah Lahasky
17. Beyond Live Shows: Regulation and Innovation in the French Live Music
Video Economy
Gérôme Guibert, Michaël Spanu, and Catherine Rudent
Index