Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-dzt6s Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-25T15:10:51.721Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The ‘social history’ of popular music: a label without a cause?

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 November 2008

Extract

During the coffee break at a recent conference, I described myself to a new acquaintance as ‘a social historian of music’. He replied that he was glad to meet me as he now knew all four of us. The ‘club’, of course, has never been quite that exclusive, but the joke highlighted the essentially submerged and inchoate nature of work in this field. What follows is a decidedly personal article, designed not as a polished, final argument but as a review of some recent developments within the social history of popular music and as a stimulus to further work and argument. Aimed most particularly at those, whether they define themselves as musicologists or historians, taking relatively early steps into this field, it reflects the biases and preoccupations of a social historian with decidedly Anglo-centric interests and for whom history tends to ‘begin’ about 1750; I have a sense, however, that some of my comments may be relevant to the study both in and of other countries and of other historical periods. ‘Popular’ music is broadly defined here to accommodate both ‘aesthetic’ and ‘social’ usages of the term, but given my particular interests, and perhaps because of the methodological imperatives of social history, the latter application undoubtedly receives the closest attention.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1993

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Aston, E. 1988. ‘Male impersonation in the music hall; the case of Vesta Tilley’, New Theatre Quarterly, 4, pp. 247–57CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bailey, P. 1986. ‘Champagne Charlie: performance and ideology in the music-hall swell song’, in Music Hall. The Business of Pleasure, ed. Bratton, J. (Milton Keynes), pp. 4969Google Scholar
Boyes, G. 1992. The English Folksong Revival (Manchester)Google Scholar
Cannadine, D. 1986. ‘The state of British history’, Times Literary Supplement, 10 10 1986Google Scholar
Chancellor, V. 1970. History for their Masters. Opinion in the English History Textbook, 1880–1914 (New York)Google Scholar
Davis, T. 1991. ‘The moral sense of the majorities: indecency and vigilance in Late-Victorian music-halls’, Popular Music, 10:1, pp. 3952CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ehrlich, C. 1976. The Piano. A History (Oxford)Google Scholar
Ehrlich, C. 1985. The Music Profession in Britain Since the Eighteenth Century. A Social History (Oxford)Google Scholar
Ehrlich, C. 1989. Harmonious Alliance. A History of the Performing Rights Society (Oxford)Google Scholar
Elbourne, R. 1980. Music and Tradition in Early Industrial Lancashire, 1780–1840 (Woodbridge, Suffolk)Google Scholar
Finnegan, R. 1989. The Hidden Musicians. Music-Making in an English Town (Cambridge)Google Scholar
Gammon, V. 1980. ‘Folk-song collecting in Sussex and Surrey, 1843–1914’, History Workshop Journal, 10, pp. 6189CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gammon, V. 1981. ‘“Babylonian Performances”: the rise and suppression of popular church music, 1660–1870’, in Popular Culture and Class Conflict, 1590–1914, ed. S., and Yeo, E. (Brighton), pp. 6288Google Scholar
Gammon, V. 1984. ‘“Not appreciated in Worthing?” Class expression and song-texts in mid-nineteenth century Britain’, Popular Music, 4, pp. 524CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gammon, V. and Gammon, S. 1991. ‘From “repeat and twiddle” to “snap and precision”. The musical revolution of the nineteenth century’, in Bands. The Brass Band Movement in the 19th and 20th Centuries, ed. Herbert, T. (Milton Keynes), pp. 120–44Google Scholar
Harker, D. 1985. Fakesong. The Manufacture of British ‘Folksong’ From 1700 to the Present Day (Milton Keynes)Google Scholar
Herbert, T. (ed.) 1991. Bands. The Brass Band Movement in the 19th and 20th Centuries (Milton Keynes)Google Scholar
Hoher, D. 1986. ‘The composition of music hall audiences, 1850–1900’, in Music Hall: The Business of Pleasure, ed. Bailey, P. (Milton Keynes), pp. 7392Google Scholar
Hutchison, R. and Feist, A. 1991. Amateur Arts in the UK (London)Google Scholar
Inglis, F. 1992. ‘Intellectual history and popular culture: the case of sport’, British Society of Sports History Bulletin, 12, pp. 1122Google Scholar
Kerman, J. 1985. Musicology (London)Google Scholar
Kirk, N. 1985. ‘In defence of class’, International Review of Social History, xxxii, pp. 147Google Scholar
Jackson, B. 1968. Working Class Community (London)Google Scholar
Joyce, P. 1991. Visions of the People. Industrial England and the Question of Class, 1840–1914 (Cambridge)CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lloyd, A. L. 1967. Folksong in England (London)Google Scholar
MacKenzie, J. 1984. Propaganda and Empire (Manchester)Google Scholar
Mackerness, E. 1964. A Social History of English Music (London)Google Scholar
Middleton, R. 1990. Studying Popular Music (Milton Keynes)Google Scholar
Nettel, R. 1944. Music in the Five Towns (Oxford)Google Scholar
Pickering, M. 1982. Village Song and Culture (London)Google Scholar
Pickering, M. 1990. ‘Recent folk music scholarship in England: a critique’, Folk Music Journal, 6:1, pp. 3764Google Scholar
Obelkevich, J. 1989. ‘In search of the listener’, Journal of the Royal Musical Association, 114:1, pp. 102–8CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Oliver, P. (ed.) 1990. Black Music in Britain. Essays on the Afro-Asian Contribution to Popular Music (Milton Keynes)Google Scholar
Russell, D. 1987. Popular Music in England, 1840–1914. A Social History (Manchester)CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Russell, D. 1992. ‘“We carved our way to glory”: the British soldier in music hall song and sketch, c. 1880–1914’, in Popular Imperialism and the Military, 1850–1950, ed. Mackenzie, J. (Manchester), pp. 5079Google Scholar
Russell, I. 1990. Review article, Folk Music Journal, 6:1, pp. 8790Google Scholar
Russell, J. F. and Elliot, J. H. 1936. The Brass Band Movement (London)Google Scholar
Samuel, R. 1992. ‘Reading the signs’, History Workshop Journal, 32, pp. 89109 and 33, pp. 220–46.Google Scholar
Scott, D. 1989. The Singing Bourgeois. Songs of the Victorian Drawing Room and Parlour (Milton Keynes)Google Scholar
Smail, J. 1987. ‘New languages for labour and capital: the transformation of discourse in the early years of the Industrial Revolution’, Social History, 12:1, pp. 4971CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stedman Jones, G. 1974. ‘Working-class culture and working-class politics in London, 1870–1900: notes on the re-making of a working class’, Journal of Social History, 7:4, pp. 460508CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stedman Jones, G. 1983. ‘Rethinking Chartism’, in Languages of Class. Studies in English Working Class History (Cambridge), pp. 90178Google Scholar
Stedman Jones, G. 1989. ‘The “cockney” and the nation, 1780–1988’, in Metropolis London. Histories and Representations Since 1800, ed. Feldman, D. and Jones, G. Stedman (London), pp. 272324Google Scholar
Stedman Jones, G. 1991. Review article, Economic History Review, xliv:4, pp. 729–34Google Scholar
Stuart, C. D. and Park, A. J. 1895. The Variety Stage (London)Google Scholar
Summerfield, P. 1981. ‘The Effingham Arms and the Empire: deliberate selection in the evolution of music-hall in London’, in Popular Culture and Class Conflict, 1590–1914, ed. Yeo, E. and Yeo, S. (Brighton), pp. 209–40Google Scholar
Summerfield, P. 1986. ‘Patriotism and empire: music-hall entertainment, 1870–1914’, in Imperialism and Popular Culture, ed. Mackenzie, J. (Manchester), pp. 1748Google Scholar
Temperley, N. 1986. ‘The Lost Chord’, Victorian Studies, 30:1, pp. 723Google Scholar
Thompson, E. 1963. The Making of the English Working Class (London)Google Scholar
Van der Merwe, P. 1989. Origins of the Popular Style (Oxford)Google Scholar
Waters, C. 1986. ‘Manchester Morality and London Capital: the battle over the Palace of Varieties’, in Music Hall: the Business of Pleasure, ed. Bailey, P. (Milton Keynes), pp. 141–61Google Scholar
Waters, C. 1990. British Socialists and the Politics of Popular Culture, 1884–1914 (Manchester)Google Scholar
Weber, W. 1975. Music and the Middle Class (London)Google Scholar
Wickham, C. 1991. ‘Systatic structures: social theory for historians’, Past and Present, 132, pp. 188203CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wolff, J. 1987. ‘The ideology of autonomous art’, in Music and Society. The Politics of Composition, Performance and Reception, ed. Leppert, R. and McClary, S. (Cambridge), pp. 112Google Scholar