Sgt. Pepper and the Beatles: It Was Forty Years Ago Today

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Dr Olivier Julien
Ashgate Publishing, Ltd., 2013 M01 28 - 208 pages

The first concept album in the history of popular music, the soundtrack of the Summer of Love or 'Hippy Symphony No. 1': Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band is first and foremost the album that gave rise to 'hopes of progress in pop music' (The Times, 29 May 1967). Sgt. Pepper and the Beatles commemorates the fortieth anniversary of this masterpiece of British psychedelia by addressing issues that will help put the record in perspective. These issues include: reception by rock critics and musicians, the cover, lyrics, songwriting, formal unity, the influence of non-European music and art music, connections with psychedelia and, more generally, the sociocultural context of the 1960s, production, sound engineering and musicological significance. The contributors are world renowned for their work on the Beatles: they examine Sgt. Pepper from the angle of disciplines such as musicology, ethnomusicology, history, sociology, literature, social psychology and cultural theory.

 

Contents

cultural agendas or optimistic
11
Sgt Peppers quest for extended form
33
The Beatles and Indian music
63
magic myth and music
91
Sgt Pepper and fables
121

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About the author (2013)

Olivier Julien teaches the history and musicology of popular music at the Universities of Paris-Sorbonne (Paris IV) and Paris-Sorbonne Nouvelle (Paris III), France.

Contributors: Olivier Julien, Sheila Whiteley, Terence O’Grady, Thomas MacFarlane, Michael Hannan, David Reck, Naphtali Wagner, Ian Inglis, Russell Reising, Jim LeBlanc, John Kimsey, Allan Moore.

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