Popular Music and Narrativity: A Theory and History of Pop Storyworlds
By (Author) Dr Alex Jeffery
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic USA
23rd February 2023
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Social and cultural history
History of music
Other graphic or visual art forms
781.64
Hardback
288
Width 152mm, Height 229mm
Popular music is rich in imaginative storytelling, from the songs of music hall, and street narratives of hip-hop to the 1970s heyday of the concept album. As an even broader audiovisual practice, including music video, sleeve art and star-texts of performers themselves, the possibilities for unique ways of telling stories multiply - capturing the public imagination more recently are examples like Beyoncs recent visual album Lemonade and experiments in popular music transmedia like Gorillaz. While musics role as soundtrack for other narrative media has been extensively theorised, relatively little attention has been paid to how narrativity works within popular music itself. By building on writing around narrativity from popular music scholars, applying concepts from the storyworlds literature to music and vice versa, this book connects these two disciplines. It provides fresh takes on well-known case studies from David Bowie and The Beatles to Jeff Waynes Musical Version of War of the Worlds, while introducing the reader to lesser known examples from global popular music culture. Providing a long overdue overview of narrativity in popular music culture, this book connects the dots between innovative and exciting examples across its history.
Alex Jeffery is an academic researcher and lecturer at City, University of London, UK. His primary research interest is in popular music and narrativity through theorisation and practice.