Danger Mouse's The Grey Album 33 1/3

Author: Charles Fairchild

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General Fields

  • : $5.00 AUD
  • : 9781623566609
  • : Continuum Publishing Corporation
  • :
  • :
  • : 0.157
  • : November 2014
  • : 165mm X 120mm X 13mm
  • : United States
  • : 19.99
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  • :
  • :
  • : books

Special Fields

  • :
  • :
  • : Charles Fairchild
  • : 33 1/3
  • : Paperback
  • :
  • : 160
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Barcode 9781623566609
9781623566609

Description

This book marks the tenth anniversary of The Grey Album. The online release and circulation of what Danger Mouse called his 'art project' was an unexpected watershed in the turn-of-the-century brawls over digital creative practice. The album's suppression inspired widespread digital civil disobedience and brought a series of contests and conflicts over creative autonomy in the online world to mainstream awareness. The Grey Album highlighted, by its very form, the profound changes wrought by the new technology and represented the struggle over the tectonic shifts in the production, distribution and consumption of music. But this is not why it matters. The Grey Album matters because it is more than just a clever, if legally ambiguous, amalgam. It is an important and compelling case study about the status of the album as a cultural form in an era when the album appears to be losing its coherence and power. Perhaps most importantly, The Grey Album matters because it changes how we think about the traditions of musical practice of which it is a part. Danger Mouse created a broad, inventive commentary on forms of musical creativity that have defined all kinds of music for centuries: borrowing, appropriation, homage, derivation, allusion and quotation. The struggle over this album wasn't just about who gets to use new technology and how. The battle over The Grey Album struck at the heart of the very legitimacy of a long recognised and valued form of musical expression: the interpretation of the work of one artist by another.

Promotion info

An academic analysis of The Grey Album as digital download movement catalyst and its effect on the music industry, copyright, and notions of artistic originality.

Author description

Charles Fairchild is Associate Professor of Popular Music at the University of Sydney, Australia. He is the author of Music, Radio and the Public Sphere (2012) and Pop Idols and Pirates (2008). He has published in such journals as Popular Music, Television and New Media, Media, Culture and Society and Popular Music and Society.

Table of contents

Introduction: The Grey Album in a Post-Album World. Chapter 1: Music, Incorporated. New World, Old Industry. Selling the Album, Destroying the Single. Crowds, Clouds and Idols. Chapter 2: Danger Mouse v. Capitol, Capitol v. Music. The Aesthetic Practices of the Powerful. From Fair Use to Safe Harbors. Ownership Rights, Authorship Rights and Natural Rights to Music. Chapter 3: The Aesthetics of The Grey Album. The Aesthetic Legitimacy of The Grey Album. The Musical Traditions That Shaped The Grey Album. Musical Fidelity and Sample-Based Music. Chapter 4:The Music of The Grey Album. The Legacies of The Beatles and The Black Album. The Making of The Grey Album. The Flow of The Grey Album. Conclusion Bibliography