Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-dk4vv Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-26T17:49:52.276Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Music for Socialism, London 1977

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 March 2019

Abstract

Members of the rock band Henry Cow co-founded Music for Socialism in early 1977 with the assistance of several associates in London's cultural left. Their first large event, a socialist festival of music at the Battersea Arts Centre, gathered folk musicians, feminists, punks, improvisers, and electronic musicians in a confabulation of workshops, performances, and debates. The organization would continue to produce events and publications examining the relationship between left politics and music for the next eighteen months. Drawing on published sources, archival documents, and interviews, this article documents and analyzes the activities of Music for Socialism, filling out the picture of a fascinating, fractious organization that has too often served as a thin caricature of abstruse failure compared with the better resourced, more successful, and well-documented Rock Against Racism. As important as the latter was to anti-racist activism during the rise of the National Front, it was not concerned with the issues that Music for Socialism considered most important – namely, how musical forms embody their own politics and how musicians might control their means of production. Affiliated with the Socialist Workers Party (UK), Rock Against Racism produced massive benefit concerts and rallies against the fascist right, drawing together musicians and audiences from punk and reggae. The much smaller events of Music for Socialism enrolled musicians from a range of popular music genres and often placed as much emphasis on discussion and debate as they did on having a good time. The organization's struggles, I will suggest, had less to do with ideological rigidity than it did with the itineracy and penury of musicians and intellectuals lacking support from the music industry, governmental arts funding, labor organizations, or academia.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2019 

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.)

Footnotes

I wish to thank all my interview subjects, and especially Ian Hoare and Neil Sandford, for their assistance in researching this article.

References

Ansell, Kenneth. ‘Dissecting the Cow: An Almost Complete History of Henry Cow’, Impetus 2 (June 1976), n.p.Google Scholar
Ansell, Kenneth. ‘Rock in Opposition’, Impetus 7 (1978), 282–3.Google Scholar
‘Art Attacks’, Wedge 2 (April 1978), 30.Google Scholar
Ballantine, Christopher. ‘Towards an Aesthetic of Experimental Music’, The Musical Quarterly 63/2 (1977), 224–46.Google Scholar
Benjamin, Walter. ‘The Author as Producer’, in Understanding Brecht, trans. Bostock, Anna. London: Verso, [1934]1998. 85103.Google Scholar
Beresford, Steve. Untitled report. Musics 13 (August 1977), 18.Google Scholar
Cardew, Cornelius. Untitled report. Musics 13 (August 1977), 1213.Google Scholar
Catchpole, Charles. ‘Rock Prophets Scorn Success’, Evening Standard, 23 March 1977.Google Scholar
Cooper, Lindsay. ‘Women, Music, Feminism – Notes’, Musics 14 (October 1977), 1619.Google Scholar
Cooper, Lindsay. ‘Rock Around the Cock’, Leveller, October 1978, 12.Google Scholar
Cutler, Chris. Untitled report. Musics 13 (August 1977), 1618.Google Scholar
Cutler, Chris. ‘“Progressive” Music, “Progressive” Politics?’, in File Under Popular: Theoretical and Critical Writings on Music. London: November Books, 1985. 142–61.Google Scholar
Dallas, Karl. ‘Fighting the System Europe-wide’, Melody Maker, 15 April 1978.Google Scholar
Devenport, Pete. Untitled report. Musics 13 (August 1977), 1112.Google Scholar
Drott, Eric. Music and the Elusive Revolution: Cultural Politics and Political Culture in France, 1968–1981. Berkeley: University of California Press, 2011.Google Scholar
Dunn, Kevin. Global Punk: Resistance and Rebellion in Everyday Life. New York: Bloomsbury, 2016.Google Scholar
Evans, Mike. ‘Rank ’n’ File Rockanroll’. Cream 18 (November 1972), 1820.Google Scholar
Farren, Mick. ‘Rocking on Within the System’. Cream 23 (April 1973), 89.Google Scholar
Feher, Ferenc. ‘Negative Philosophy of Music – Positive Results’. New German Critique 4 (1975), 99112.Google Scholar
Freni, Nicolle. Untitled report. Musics 13 (August 1977), 16.Google Scholar
Frith, Simon. ‘Punk – Hippies with Short Hair’, The Leveller, November 1977, 20–1.Google Scholar
Frith, Simon. ‘Formalism, Realism, and Leisure: The Case of Punk’ (1980), in The Subcultures Reader, ed. Thornton, Sarah and Gelder, Ken. London: Routledge, 1997. 163–74.Google Scholar
Frith, Simon and Street, John. ‘Rock Against Racism and Red Wedge: From Music to Politics, from Politics to Music’, in Rockin’ the Boat, ed. Garofalo, Reebee. Boston: South End Press, 1992. 6780.Google Scholar
Goodyer, Ian. Crisis Music: The Cultural Politics of Rock Against Racism. Manchester: University of Manchester Press, 2009.Google Scholar
Green, Kim. Untitled report. Musics 13 (August 1977), 12.Google Scholar
Herman, Gary and Hoare, Ian. ‘The Struggle for Song: A Reply to Leon Rosselson’, in Media, Politics and Culture: A Socialist View, ed. Gardner, Carl. London: Macmillan, 1979. 5160.Google Scholar
Heyhoe, Malcolm. ‘Music for Socialism’ review, New Musical Express, 18 June 1977.Google Scholar
Hoare, Ian. ‘Music for Socialism’. Wedge 1 (Summer 1977), 25–6.Google Scholar
Hoare, Ian. ‘Music for Socialism’. Musics 13 (August 1977), 9.Google Scholar
Hoare, Ian. ‘Record and Tape Distribution: The First Steps’, Music for Socialism Newsletter, November 1977, 7.Google Scholar
Hoare, Ian. ‘The Politics of Rock Performance’, Music for Socialism Newsletter, November 1977, 10.Google Scholar
Hoare, Ian, Anderson, Clive, Cummings, Tony, and Frith, Simon, The Soul Book. New York: Dell, 1976.Google Scholar
Hobbs, Nick. Untitled report. Musics 13 (August 1977), 1415.Google Scholar
Hobbs, Nick. ‘Rock in Opposition’, Music for Socialism Newsletter, February 1978, 45.Google Scholar
Hodgkinson, Tim. ‘Thoughts on the Conference’, Music for Socialism Newsletter, November 1977, 56.Google Scholar
Hoyland, John. ‘Who Owns the Music?Cream 22 (March 1973), 89.Google Scholar
Hoyland, John. ‘Up Against the Business’, Let It Rock, May 1973, 27.Google Scholar
Hoyland, John. ‘Still Up Against the Business’, Let It Rock, July 1973, 31–2.Google Scholar
Hoyland, John. ‘How Do Music and Socialism Connect?’, Comment, 11 June 1977, 200.Google Scholar
Jameson, Fredric. Marxism and Form. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1971.Google Scholar
Jay, Martin. The Dialectical Imagination: A History of the Frankfurt School and the Institute of Social Research, 1923–1950. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1973.Google Scholar
Laing, Dave. One-Chord Wonders: Power and Meaning in Punk Rock. Milton Keynes: Open University Press, 1985.Google Scholar
Laing, Dave. ‘“The World's Best Rock Read”: Let It Rock 1972–75’. Popular Music and Society 33/4 (October 2010), 449–63.Google Scholar
Levidov, Les. Untitled report. Musics 13 (August 1977), 1314.Google Scholar
Levidov, Les. ‘Words and Music – An Overview’, Music for Socialism Newsletter, December 1977, 11, 13.Google Scholar
McNeill, Phil. ‘Revolution Planned for May 28’, New Musical Express, 28 May 1977.Google Scholar
Net’, ‘Music, Music for Socialism Newsletter, February 1978.Google Scholar
Union, Musicians. Untitled report. Musics 13 (August 1977), 11.Google Scholar
Patterson, Archie. ‘Rock Began in Opposition to Mainstream Culture. . ..’, in Eurock: Music & Second Culture Post Millennium. Portland: Eurock Publications, 2013. 713.Google Scholar
Patterson, Archie. ‘Giorgio Gomelsky Interview’, in Eurock: Music & Second Culture Post Millennium. Portland: Eurock Publications, 2013. 1431.Google Scholar
Pearce, Geoff. Untitled report. Musics 13 (August 1977), 1516.Google Scholar
Rachel, Daniel. Walls Come Tumbling Down: The Music and Politics of Rock Against Racism, 2 Tone and Red Wedge. London: Picador, 2016.Google Scholar
Rosselson, Leon. Untitled report. Musics 13 (August 1977), 12.Google Scholar
S. B., ‘Yes, It's All Very Clever but . . . Henry Cow at Leeds’, Leeds Music News, December 1977.Google Scholar
Sandford, Neil. ‘Jazz: A Tradition of Protest’. Music for Socialism Newsletter, November 1977, 11.Google Scholar
[Sandford, Neil]. ‘Words and Music’, Music for Socialism Newsletter, December 1977, 4.Google Scholar
Shelton, Robert. ‘Socialist Music Festival’, The Times, 30 May 1977.Google Scholar
‘Statement of Aims Approved at the Meeting of June 25th’, Music for Socialism Newsletter, August 1977, 1.Google Scholar
Subotnik, Rose Rosengard. ‘Adorno's Diagnosis of Beethoven's Late Style: Early Symptom of a Fatal Condition’. Journal of the American Musicological Society 29/2 (1976), 242–75.Google Scholar
Thyrén, David. ‘The Alternative Eurovision Song Contest in Sweden, 1975’, in A Cultural History of the Avant-garde in the Nordic Countries, 1950–1975, ed. Ørum, Tania and Olsson, Jesper. Leiden: Brill, 2016. 831–40.Google Scholar
Walker, Ian. ‘Whole Lotta Shakin’ Goin’ On’. Leveller 7 (July/August 1977), 1820.Google Scholar
Warshaw, Jack. Untitled report. Musics 13 (August 1977), 10.Google Scholar
Weitzman, Ronald. ‘An Introduction to Adorno's Musical and Social Criticism’. Music and Letters 52/3 (July 1971), 287–98.Google Scholar
Williams, Richard. ‘The Trip’, Melody Maker, 12 September 1970.Google Scholar
Williams, Richard. ‘The Revolt Against the Business Establishment’, Melody Maker, 19 September 1970.Google Scholar
Wilmer, Val. Mama Said There'd Be Days Like This: My Life in the Jazz World. Aylesbury: Women's Press, 1989.Google Scholar
Worley, Matthew. No Future: Punk, Politics, and British Youth Culture, 1976–1984. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2017.Google Scholar
Young, Rob. Rough Trade: Labels Unlimited. London: Black Dog Publishing, 2006.Google Scholar