This Ain't the Summer of Love
Conflict and Crossover in Heavy Metal and Punk
Format:Paperback
Publisher:University of California Press
Published:27th Feb '09
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
This lively and entertaining revisionist history of rock music after 1970 reconsiders the roles of two genres, heavy metal and punk. Instead of considering metal and punk as aesthetically opposed to each other, Steve Waksman breaks new ground by showing that a profound connection exists between them. Metal and punk enjoyed a charged, intimate relationship that informed both genres in terms of sound, image, and discourse. "This Ain't the Summer of Love" traces this connection back to the early 1970s, when metal first asserted its identity and punk arose independently as an ideal about what rock should be and could become, and upends established interpretations of metal and punk and their place in rock history.
"One of the more potent and persuasive pieces of recent cultural critiques... Waksman, often quite brilliantly, fuses the fan and the critic into a rich voice for music criticism... Considerably raises the bar for engaged exploration of music subcultures." Baltimore City Paper "A wonderful mixture of fact, observation, interpretation, and humor." -- Scott G - The G-Man Music Industry Newswire "The author is to be commended for shedding welcome light on a seldom illuminated dialogue and recognising the ongoing variegation of rock 'n' roll as a process contingent on the external pressures brought to bear on it." The Wire "Waksman's superb book provides a model for other scholars to follow." Journal Of Popular Music Stds "Waksman's work is engaging, thought-provoking, and an important contribution particularly for metal studies." -- Glenn Pillsbury American Studies "This work is an exemplar nuance, one that does justice to the complexities of the culture it addresses." -- Robert Walser Journal Of The Society For American Music (Jsam) "A comprehensively and enthusiastically researched book." -- Alan Ashton-Smith Popmatters
ISBN: 9780520257177
Dimensions: 229mm x 152mm x 25mm
Weight: 544g
398 pages