Call for chapter proposals:
The Arena Concert: Music, Mediation and Mass Entertainment
The idea of live popular
music as mass entertainment is one that presents an arresting series of
challenges and remains mostly unexplored in contemporary academic writing. And
yet, it would seem, arena concerts are coming to constitute the commercial
future of popular music, and popular music is being shaped by this phenomena.
We ask: what, then, is this phenomena? And what then are the challenges that
have blocked a critical engagement with this phenomena?
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The post-digital landscape of
popular music consumption is one in which, paradoxically, “liveness”, the
experience, and authenticity have been returned to their prime positions -
perhaps for the first time since their folk (Newport) and rock (Woodstock) heydays.
The failures to secure “the product” across the 2000s (via anti-piracy software
and corporate malware, judicial attacks on Napster and Pirate Bay, the locking
of hardware, and reimagining questions of ownership) have rapidly led to albums
being reduced to little more than giveaway promotional fodder. And popular
music, post-MTV, is no longer an audio form: a nexus of image and news,
celebrity and fandom, seeking to saturate all digital platforms, comes to
constitute what is both popular and what is considered to be music. For bands
and artists, managers (and even medics) are replaced by tour organisers. For
young fans, the gig becomes the only complete way of buying into the music, and
the experience of attending the gig is authenticated (and propagated) via
social media, with the night itself commemorated via DVDs of the event (of a
new subgenre of the arena concert film). For not so young fans, a plethora of
artists of yesteryear are suddenly available, and live, and live, once again: a
post-MP3 reformation.
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This proposed volume will be
the first such exploration of the arena concert. It will test and define,
intervene and assess, offer pre-histories, present histories and consider
future directions, and will concern itself with designers, choreographers,
mixers, musicians and bands, promoters, security, broadcasters, caterers,
social media use and audiences. We invite proposals for academic chapters,
interventions, interviews and more, and have secured informal interest from a
major academic publisher. Proposals should be 400-500 words and emailed as a
Word file (not a PDF) with minimal formatting, and with a biographical note and
contact details included, to Benjamin Halligan (b.halligan@salford.ac.uk) by 23
July 2013. Informal inquiries prior very welcome.
The editorial team is:
Dr Robert Edgar, York St John University (The Music Documentary: Acid Rock to Electropop, Basics Film-Making volumes)
Dr Kirsty Fairclough-Isaacs, University of Salford (The Music Documentary)
Dr Benjamin Halligan, University of Salford (Michael Reeves, Mark E. Smith and The Fall, Reverberations, Resonances, The Music Documentary)
Dr Sunil Manghani, Winchester School of Art (Image Studies: Theory and Practice, Images: A Reader, Image Critique and the Fall of the Berlin Wall).
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