This
is a general survey course exploring and analyzing the history and meaning of
popular recorded music within mass culture and society. It focuses on the
historical, aesthetic, social, political-economic and technological
developments that have shaped the very definition of the popular, while at the same time encompassing a variety of aspects
of recorded music from the history of the record industry to the concept of the
recorded, from rock and other
nationally specific styles to MTV and MP3.
Various
historically determined techniques and styles of production, performance,
dissemination and re-production are also investigated. Other topics covered are
the use of recorded music as a tool of ideological production and as a site of
resistance, the idea of commodification and reification of musical experience
in the recorded object, the cross-cultural determinations of specific musical
forms, the implications for creativity and politics of a global and highly
concentrated industry, cultural negotiations, issues of copyright and questions
relating to gender, ethnicity and race.