File Under Popular

File Under Popular

First edition cover, November Books, 1984
Author Chris Cutler
Illustrator Graham Keatley
Mary Thomas
Country United Kingdom
Language English
Subject Musicology
Publisher November Books (United Kingdom)
Autonomedia (United States)
Publication date
1984 (United Kingdom)
1992 (United States)
Media type Print (Paperback)
Pages 224 pp (United Kingdom)
184 pp (United States)
ISBN 0-946423-01-6
OCLC 12441929

File Under Popular: Theoretical and Critical Writings on Music is a collection of seven essays on the political theory of popular music written by English percussionist, lyricist and music theorist, Chris Cutler. The essays were written between 1978 and 1983, four of them in response to requests and the rest unprompted. Two of the essays were first published in two German publications, and two were originally presented by Cutler at two international symposia on popular music. The book was first published in 1984 in London by November Books, the publishing wing of Cutler's independent record label, Recommended Records. It was also published in Polish, German and Japanese.

Rock critic and sociologist Simon Frith described File Under Popular as "A stirringly aggressive antidote to contemporary pop cynicism."[1]

Essays

  1. "What is Popular Music?"
  2. "The Realm of Lightning / Black Music in a White World / Sun Ra, a Life Work"
  3. "Living in the Electric: The Residents"
  4. "Phil Ochs and Elvis Presley"
  5. "Necessity and Choice in Musical Forms: Concerning Musical and Technical Means and Political Needs"
  6. "Progressive Rock in the UK: What Was Unique to the Development of Rock and Electric Music in the UK?"
  7. "Progressive Music, Progressive Politics?"

Essay notes

Synopsis

The essays in File Under Popular tackle the subject of "popular music", what it is, its origins and the political and marketing forces behind it. Chris Cutler charts the history of music and how it was changed by written notation and then recording technology. Three of the essays dwell specifically on individual musicians and groups, namely Sun Ra, The Residents, Phil Ochs and Elvis Presley, but their stories are told within the context of the evolution of music. "Necessity and Choice in Musical Forms" is the first sketch of an analytical theory that shows how memory systems underpin the forms that music can take; part III of this essay is a personnel memoir of Cutler's that explains how his former band, Henry Cow functioned outside the music industry and their involvement in the establishment of Rock in Opposition. The last two essays deal with the development of progressive rock in the United Kingdom, its significance and the politics behind it.

Cutler continued his analysis on "popular music" in 1986 in two articles, "Skill, Part 1: The Negative Case For Some New Music Technology" and "Skill, Part 2: Heavy Metal, Punk and the New Wave", published in the RēR Quarterly sound-magazine, Volume 1 Number 3 (1986) and Volume 2 Number 2 (1987), respectively. These articles were later reworked by Cutler into a single essay entitled "Skill", which was included in the 1996 expanded Japanese edition of File Under Popular.

Background

File Under Popular was originally intended for publication in 1984 in what was then Czechoslovakia at the instigation of Josef Vlcek of the Prague-based non-profit arts organisation, Jazzová Sekce-Artforum.[3] As the majority of these essays had not been published in English, Chris Cutler decided to publish an English edition in London. The Czech edition was supposed to be published first, but it was delayed and the English edition appeared in 1984. Further delays and problems eventually resulted in the Czech edition being abandoned. File Under Popular was later also published in Polish, German and Japanese.

Cutler placed the following dedicatory in the "Introduction" of File Under Popular: "Dedicated to Jazzová and Josef, the sine qua non of its publication."[4]

Editions

Edition notes

Footnotes

  1. "Autonomedia catalogue" (PDF). Autonomedia. Retrieved 10 August 2007.
  2. "International Association for the Study of Popular Music (IASPM)". Retrieved 13 August 2007.
  3. "Jazzová Sekce-Artforum". Radio Hortus. Archived from the original on 11 June 2007. Retrieved 13 August 2007.
  4. Cutler 1984, p. 8.
  5. "ファイル・アンダー・ポピュラー―ポピュラー音楽を巡る文化研究". Amazon.co.jp. Retrieved 9 November 2007.

References

External links

Subject of instruction

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Tuesday, September 23, 2014. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.