We're sorry, but eCampus.com doesn't work properly without JavaScript.
Either your device does not support JavaScript or you do not have JavaScript enabled.
How to enable JavaScript in your browser.
Need help? Call 1-855-252-4222
Is there such a thing today as music that's meaningfully new? Critics cry that "there's nothing new under the sun" while musicians, PR machines, and media outlets claim every product is new. Despite this, the topic of the new remains surprisingly unaddressed in contemporary criticism and scholarship about American popular music.
Nothing Has Been Done Before instigates a fresh debate about that music-rock 'n' roll, pop, folk, R&B, country, hip-hop-since the turn of the millennium: an era of repurposing, hyperconsumerism, and post-Web 2.0 technology. In prose accessible to educated general readers, the book follows the stories of a diverse cast of musicians as they seek the new, from the dusty roads of Bob Dylan's Love and Theft to the glamorous pop spectacle of the American Wow; from Kanye West's gilded techno-futurism to a Guided By Voices tribute concert in a local dive bar.
Nothing Has Been Done Before is a counter-orthodoxy to current music criticism and the perception of music as merely a product. Arguably what we consider "new" has been degraded or dismissed as a fantasy; either the new is merely code for what's trending, or, in certain postmodern circles, it's considered an unnecessary and impossible ideal. Nothing Has Been Done Before argues for a revitalized understanding of the new in popular music. Neither a jeremiad against nor a slick apologia for all things contemporary, the book claims that, indeed, nothing has been done before, but music must remind us-and we must remember.
PROLOGUE1. 1949, or Nothing Has Been Done Before2. Three Versions of "Atlantic City"
PART ONE: Millennial Stitching and the Anxiety of Knowing Too Much3. Wheel Inside a Wheel: Gillian Welch's Time (the Revelator) 4. "Love and Theft": Bob Dylan's Great Transgression 5. The Anxiety of Influence & Meta Rock: Archers of Loaf, the Wrens, and DBT6. New Theories of Everything Prompted by Guided by Voices Appreciation Night
PART TWO: The American Wow7. Spectaglam! Katy Perry, New Adults, and the American Wow8. Meaning and Meat: Consumerism and Technology in Pop Music9. The Unrepeatable New10. Kanye West: Iconoclast11. Power Up: Janelle Monae and Afrofuturism 12. You'll Never See My Face in Kansas City
PART THREE: Shouting at the Hard of Hearing13. On the Good Side: Protest Music in the Bush Years14. Renaissance of Love: Child Ballads, Apoliticism, and Suffering 15. The Dream of the United States and What It May Become: REM's "Driver 8"16. Revival of Conscience: The New Hip-Hop 17. Bruce Springsteen Shouts at the Hard of Hearing 18. Female Bodies in the River: Tradition and "The Body Electric"
EPILOGUE19. Nothing Has Been Done Before, Again
The New copy of this book will include any supplemental materials advertised. Please check the title of the book to determine if it should include any access cards, study guides, lab manuals, CDs, etc.
The Used, Rental and eBook copies of this book are not guaranteed to include any supplemental materials. Typically, only the book itself is included. This is true even if the title states it includes any access cards, study guides, lab manuals, CDs, etc.