If asked to explain the Grammy Awards, any of us could be forgiven for saying they recognize achievements in popular music. Most of a Grammy ceremony could roll by without dissuading that notion, until long-down-the-list categories like “Best Boxed or Special Limited Edition Package” remind viewers that the Grammys, presented by the Recording Academy, have more to do with musical recordings than with music per se. Today, the synonymy between popular music and the recording industry is so entrenched as to seem unremarkable; what musician wouldn’t record their songs in the process of pushing them toward a popular audience? Kyle Barnett’s Record Cultures: The Transformation of the U.S. Recording Industry returns us to a historical moment when industrial actors, including musicians, were still working hard to establish that link. From the mid-1910s through the Great Depression, Barnett guides us through bursts of expansion and experimentation in commercial record production, through...
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March 2024
Book Review|
March 01 2024
Review: Record Cultures: The Transformation of the U.S. Recording Industry, by Kyle Barnett
Kyle Barnett.
Record Cultures: The Transformation of the U.S. Recording Industry
. Ann Arbor, MI
: University of Michigan Press
, 2020
. 320 pp.
Andy Kelleher Stuhl
McGill University
Andy Kelleher Stuhl is a PhD candidate in Communication Studies at McGill University. His dissertation is a history of automation and artistic response in American broadcast radio between 1950 and 2010. His research aims to surface historical continuities behind phenomena in auditory media, such as automated distribution, that often appear as 21st-century novelties – and to recover earlier work by radio artists as critical precedents for new media experimenters.
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Email: [email protected]
Journal of Popular Music Studies (2024) 36 (1): 164–166.
Citation
Andy Kelleher Stuhl; Review: Record Cultures: The Transformation of the U.S. Recording Industry, by Kyle Barnett. Journal of Popular Music Studies 1 March 2024; 36 (1): 164–166. doi: https://doi.org/10.1525/jpms.2024.36.1.164
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