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The Fugs, the Lower East Side, and the Slum Aesthetic in 1960s Rock
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 December 2014
Abstract
During the mid-to-late 1960s, impoverished urban districts throughout the United States witnessed an influx of white middle-class youth who attempted to remake society and themselves against a backdrop of inner-city grit and decay. This article focuses on the Lower East Side of Manhattan to explore the significance of slumming in the creation and reception of 1960s rock. Lower East Side rock musicians drew little overt influence from their neighborhood's longstanding ethnic communities, which included eastern Europeans, Puerto Ricans, and African Americans. Rather, these musicians were fascinated with the concept of the “slum” itself as a more abstract signifier of authenticity, adventure, and nonconformity. I propose that a “slum aesthetic” emphasizing dirt, obscenity, and willful amateurism, exemplified by local band the Fugs, was crucial to the Lower East Side rock scene. Examining this “slum aesthetic” helps paint a more nuanced picture of both the political significance of rock and the connections between popular music and urban life. As the Lower East Side's musicians sought both radical social change and a large audience, they represented their neighborhood in ways that combined thoughtful engagement with broad caricature, a contradiction that inspired both musical creativity and social tension.
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- Research Article
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- Copyright © The Society for American Music 2014
References
References
Fugs Archives, Fales Library and Special Collections, New York University Libraries:
“The Fugs!” Undated press release. MSS 13, box 1, folder 13.
“FUGS Guerilla Lovefare Squack Squad,” [1968?]. MSS 13, box 1, folder 13.
“Transatlantic News.” Transatlantic Records press release, n.d. MSS 13, box 1, folder 17.
Inventory of Clipping Files (Subjects), Music Division, The New York Public Library:
“The Fugs.” Undated press release in “The Fugs” file.
Ed Sanders Papers, Archives and Special Collections at the Thomas J. Dodd Research Center, University of Connecticut Libraries:
“Ed Sanders Wins Obscenity Case.” Undated press release. 17:439.
“An Evening with the Fugs!” Players Theatre program, Showcard 4/15 (August, n.d.). 17:432.
“Flash! Flash! Flash!” Draft of invitation to opening of the Peace Eye Book Store, 24 February 1965. 14:386.
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Greenberg, Howard. Letter [to the Fugs], n.d. 11:296.
Krizer, Sheldon. Letter to Ed Sanders, 16 December 1968. 12:310.
LEMAR press release, 10 August 1965. 17:435.
[Poland], Jeff. Letter to Ed Sanders, [1964]. 12:339.
Sanders, Ed. “Ed Sanders Newsletter,” April 1966. 17:441.
John and Leni Sinclair Papers, Bentley Historical Library, University of Michigan: Marilyn Lowen Fletcher, letter to John Sinclair, 16 January 1969. Folder 33, box 2.
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