Available Formats
Popular Music Autobiography: The Revolution in Life-Writing by 1960s' Musicians and Their Descendants
By (Author) Oliver Lovesey
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic USA
30th December 2021
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Autobiography: arts and entertainment
Popular music
Diaries, letters and journals
809.9335
Hardback
264
Width 152mm, Height 229mm
526g
The 1960s saw the nexus of the revolution in popular music by a post-war generation amid demographic upheavals and seismic shifts in technology. Over the past two decades, musicians associated with this period have produced a large amount of important autobiographical writing. This book situates these works -- in the forms of formal autobiographies and memoirs, auto-fiction, songs, and self-fashioned museum exhibitions -- within the context of the recent expansion of interest in autobiography, disability, and celebrity studies. It argues that these writings express anxiety over musical originality and authenticity, and seeks to dispel their writers celebrity status and particularly the association with a lack of seriousness. These works often constitute a meditation on the nature of postmodern fame within a celebrity-obsessed culture, and paradoxically they aim to regain the private self in a public forum.
Tracking the emergence, in the wake of the Sixties, of a wide-ranging genre of audio-biography, Loveseys witty, ambitious study explores how the autobiographical performances of edgy, experimental musician-life writers shape a generational autobiography. Ranging from Beatles manager Brian Epstein to Bob Dylan and Patti Smith, post-punk rock to Moby, his knowledgeable overview of popular-music memoirs probes narratives of aspiration and confession, homoerotica and violence, addiction and mortality as hybrids of celebrity culture that fuel popular musics global reach. * Julia Watson, Professor Emerita of Comparative Studies, The Ohio State University, USA *
With Popular Musical Autobiography Oliver Lovesey delivers a sweeping and groundbreaking study of this neglected and underappreciated subgenre. In his energetic introduction, with discussion of life-writers ranging from Saint Augustine and Lord Byron to Jeff Tweedy, Lovesey sets the stage for an insightful and enjoyable examination of various music autobiographers and their strategies. Among others, he explores Claptons and Marianne Faithfulls recovery narratives, Brian Epsteins Victorian-styled concealment, Cozey Fanni Tuttis self-objectivization, Patti Smiths performative self with her homage to European literary greats, and Bob Dylans lifelong preoccupation with self-construction. Its a brilliant and very necessary work. * Thomas Kitts, Professor of English, St. Johns University, New York, USA *
Oliver Lovesey is Professor of English at the University of British Columbia, Canada and the author of Postcolonial George Eliot (2017) and The Postcolonial Intellectual (2016) and editor of Popular Music and the Postcolonial (2018).