Black Sinatras, White Panthers: Race, Genre and Performance in Detroit Black Pop and Rock, 1960-1970

This paper explores several narratives of race and racialized music production in postwar American popular musics, to study the ways in which race has played an intrinsic role in structuring not only contemporary expectations of popular music-making, but also the frameworks by which we continue to s...

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Main Author: MacAulay, Mark
Language:en
Published: 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10222/13168
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spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-NSHD.ca#10222-131682013-10-04T04:12:51ZBlack Sinatras, White Panthers: Race, Genre and Performance in Detroit Black Pop and Rock, 1960-1970MacAulay, MarkmusichistoryraceperformancemusicologyDetroitMotownThis paper explores several narratives of race and racialized music production in postwar American popular musics, to study the ways in which race has played an intrinsic role in structuring not only contemporary expectations of popular music-making, but also the frameworks by which we continue to study American popular musics today. The essay discusses two case studies from Detroit's music cultures of the 1960s – black pop star Marvin Gaye and the white hard rock group the MC5 – to illustrate how entrenched expectations of racialized performance served to inform contemporary and still-current critiques of these groups; these case studies also reveal the inadequacy of some standard musico-racial narratives in interpreting the racialized dimensions of these artists' performances.2010-12-20T19:15:35Z2010-12-20T19:15:35Z2010-12-202010-11-19http://hdl.handle.net/10222/13168en
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic music
history
race
performance
musicology
Detroit
Motown
spellingShingle music
history
race
performance
musicology
Detroit
Motown
MacAulay, Mark
Black Sinatras, White Panthers: Race, Genre and Performance in Detroit Black Pop and Rock, 1960-1970
description This paper explores several narratives of race and racialized music production in postwar American popular musics, to study the ways in which race has played an intrinsic role in structuring not only contemporary expectations of popular music-making, but also the frameworks by which we continue to study American popular musics today. The essay discusses two case studies from Detroit's music cultures of the 1960s – black pop star Marvin Gaye and the white hard rock group the MC5 – to illustrate how entrenched expectations of racialized performance served to inform contemporary and still-current critiques of these groups; these case studies also reveal the inadequacy of some standard musico-racial narratives in interpreting the racialized dimensions of these artists' performances.
author MacAulay, Mark
author_facet MacAulay, Mark
author_sort MacAulay, Mark
title Black Sinatras, White Panthers: Race, Genre and Performance in Detroit Black Pop and Rock, 1960-1970
title_short Black Sinatras, White Panthers: Race, Genre and Performance in Detroit Black Pop and Rock, 1960-1970
title_full Black Sinatras, White Panthers: Race, Genre and Performance in Detroit Black Pop and Rock, 1960-1970
title_fullStr Black Sinatras, White Panthers: Race, Genre and Performance in Detroit Black Pop and Rock, 1960-1970
title_full_unstemmed Black Sinatras, White Panthers: Race, Genre and Performance in Detroit Black Pop and Rock, 1960-1970
title_sort black sinatras, white panthers: race, genre and performance in detroit black pop and rock, 1960-1970
publishDate 2010
url http://hdl.handle.net/10222/13168
work_keys_str_mv AT macaulaymark blacksinatraswhitepanthersracegenreandperformanceindetroitblackpopandrock19601970
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