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Glam Rock : Music in Sound and Vision

Posted By: readerXXI
Glam Rock : Music in Sound and Vision

Glam Rock : Music in Sound and Vision
by Simon Philo
English | 2018 | ISBN: 1442271477 | 236 Pages | PDF | 1.29 MB

Until recently, glam rock has been a mere footnote in popular music history: a style-over-substance lark in an otherwise serious industry. Glam Rock: Music in Sound and Vision reveals the true story of how glam carved out a place as a diverse musical style and how it related to the artistic, political, economic, emotional, sexual, and commercial scenes of the late twentieth century. Committed to spectacle but also to musical ingenuity, glam delivered an exhilarating burst of color that offered a joyful reboot for pop culture—“a total blam blam!”

Glam swept through Britain to North America in the early 1970s with the foundational stardom of T Rex and David Bowie, offering an alternative to the established rock and pop styles that had started to bore a segment of young listeners. As Alice Cooper and KISS filled concert arenas, British acts as diverse as the Rolling Stones, Elton John, and Queen consciously adopted glam's flair for drama. Refreshing and reinvigorating, glam influenced later musical movements and moments from glitterfunk to punk, from new wave to new romanticism, and from hair metal to the synth-pop of self-conscious changelings like Marilyn Manson and Lady Gaga.

In Simon Philo's engaging history, glam finally gets the spotlight it deserves. As an essential force in the history of popular music, glam offers a prism through which to explore '70s pop culture in all its glitter and charm.

"Simon Philo’s comprehensive knowledge of glam rock is unrivaled. As a fellow fan-scholar, I read Glam Rock with admiration, appreciation, and excitement—Philo authoritatively details how Bowie and Roxy’s Bryan Ferry became the most influential musicians in the history of British rock and roll." - Neil Nehring, Professor, University of Texas at Austin, and author of Flowers in the Dustbin: Culture, Anarchy, and Postwar England