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Journal ArticleDOI

From Music to Noise: The Decline of Street Music

Bruce D. Johnson
- 06 Feb 2017 - 
- Vol. 15, Iss: 1, pp 67-78
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TLDR
The history of live street music is the history of an endangered species, either suppressed or trivialized as little more than "local colour" as discussed by the authors, which is the worst that might be said of the music was that the same songs were too often repeated.
Abstract
The history of live street music is the history of an endangered species, either suppressed or trivialized as little more than ‘local colour’. Five hundred years ago the streets of Elizabethan London were rich with the sounds of street vendors, ballad-makers and musicians, and in general the worst that might be said of the music was that the same songs were too often repeated – what we would now call ‘on high rotation’. By the beginning of the nineteenth century, the poet Wordsworth and advocate of the ‘common man’ was describing street music as ‘monstrous’, and throughout that century vigorous measures were being applied to suppress such sounds, which were now categorized as noise. By the twenty-first century, live street music has been virtually silenced but for the occasional licensed busker or sanctioned parade. Paradoxically, this process of decline is intersected by a technologically sustained ‘aural renaissance’ that can be dated from the late nineteenth century. This article explores the reasons for the gradual extinction of live street music and the transformation of the urban soundscape. It argues connections with issues of class, the rise of literacy, the sacralization of private property and the formation of the politics of modernity.

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Journal ArticleDOI

The Singing Bourgeois: Songs of the Victorian Drawing Room and Parlour

Kenneth DeLong, +1 more
- 01 Mar 1993 - 
TL;DR: The foundations of the drawing-room genre, the growth of the market for domestic music the rise of the woman ballad composer cultural assimilation sacred songs promoters, publishers and professional performers a best-selling formula? nationalism and imperialism hegemony continuity and change.
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Street music, governance, and cultural policy in San Cristóbal de Las Casas

TL;DR: In this article, an ethnographic perspective is taken to explore the changing ways in which the municipal government of San Cristobal de Las Casas, a city in southern Mexico whose economy is highly depend...
Journal ArticleDOI

The Voice Essential: Exploring Oral Traditions in the Study of Vocal Improvisation

TL;DR: In this paper , the authors provide a lens on the voice's utility in oral traditions, from the utility of oral traditions to the pedagogy of singing as performance, by providing entry points to understand vocal utility that synthesizes both practicalities with aesthetics.
References
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Book

Distinction: A Social Critique of the Judgement of Taste

TL;DR: In this article, a social critic of the judgement of taste is presented, and a "vulgar" critic of 'pure' criticiques is proposed to counter this critique.
Book

The Rise Of The Novel: Studies in Defoe, Richardson and Fielding

Ian Watt
TL;DR: In this article, Watt traces the genesis and development of the most popular literary form, the novel, and investigates the reasons why the three main eighteenth-century novelist wrote in the way they did, a way resulting ultimately in the modern novel of the present day.
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The London Hanged: Crime and Civil Society in the Eighteenth Century

TL;DR: Linebaugh as discussed by the authors examines how the meaning of 'property' changed substantially during a century of unparalleled growth in trade and commerce, analyses the increasing attempts of the propertied classes to criminalize 'customary rights' and suggests that property-owners, by their exploitation of the emergent working class, substantially determined the nature of crime, and that crime, in turn, shaped the development of the economic system.
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The Hanging Tree: Execution and the English People 1770-1868

TL;DR: This paper analyzed responses to the scaffold at all social levels: from the crowds who gathered to watch executions; to the literary commentators such as Boswell and Byron; to judges, politicians and monarchs who decided who should die and who should be reprieved.
Book

The social mission of English criticism, 1848-1932

Chris Baldick
TL;DR: The authors examines the transformation of English literary criticism which underlies the study of English literature today, focusing on the social objectives of the pioneer critics and educationalists who established modern English studies.