Birds of Fire
brings overdue critical attention to fusion, a musical idiom that
emerged as young musicians blended elements of jazz, rock, and funk in
the late 1960s and 1970s. At the time, fusion was disparaged by jazz
writers and ignored by rock critics. In the years since, it has come to
be seen as a commercially driven jazz substyle. Fusion never did
coalesce into a genre. In Birds of Fire,
Kevin Fellezs contends that hybridity was its reason for being. By
mixing different musical and cultural traditions, fusion artists sought
to disrupt generic boundaries, cultural hierarchies, and critical
assumptions. Interpreting the work of four distinctive fusion
artists—Tony Williams, John McLaughlin, Joni Mitchell, and Herbie
Hancock—Fellezs highlights the ways that they challenged convention in
the 1960s and 1970s. He also considers the extent to which a musician
can be taken seriously as an artist across divergent musical traditions.
Birds of Fire concludes
with a look at the current activities of McLaughlin, Mitchell, and
Hancock; Williams’s final recordings; and the legacy of the fusion music
made by these four pioneering artists.
MORE Books ...
This file is intended only for preview!
I ask you to delete the file from your hard drive after reading it.
thank for the original uploader
Tip: Use JDownloader
Thank you very much.
ReplyDelete;)
Delete