Lexington Books
Pages: 280
Trim: 6½ x 9
978-1-4985-5632-3 • Hardback • October 2019 • $117.00 • (£90.00)
978-1-4985-5635-4 • eBook • October 2019 • $111.00 • (£85.00)
Alessandro Bratusis senior lecturer in the Department of Musicology and Cultural Heritage at the University of Pavia.
Introduction: Theoretically Live: Performance and Mediation between Experience, Intermediality, and Authenticity
Chapter 1: Live Once, and Witness Forever: The Analytical Framework
Chapter 2: The Many Lives of Jimi: Recordings and Utopian Spaces in Hendrix’s Posthumous Albums
Chapter 3: So Empty without Me? Heritage, Realness and Memory in Tupac Shakur’s Posthumous Records
Chapter 4: Identity as Timbre: Johnny Cash’s Expansive Identity in the American Recordings and Beyond
Chapter 5: A Conversation with No Speakers: Live without Audience
Chapter 6: Live EDM: Audiovisual Performativity for Bodies and Machines
Coda: (Living?) In the Material World: The In-Betweenness of Michael Jackson’s This Is It
Bratus' book provides a worthwhile contribution to the growing body of research on mediatized uses of music in the popular domain. This book is theoretically strong and well-argued throughout, extending our understanding of several uniquely contemporary phenomena with reference to current theory on musicology, sound studies, media studies, and cultural studies. Bratus is well informed about the issues he discusses, bearing on questions of performance, technology, gender and the body, temporality, authenticity, and other key areas of concern. Anyone interested in delving deeper into current thinking on mediatized performances of popular music in the present historical moment would be advised to read this book.
— John Richardson, University of Turku