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OverviewFor the Beatles, 1967 marks a signal crossroads that would both transform the group’s career and place them on a trajectory towards their eventual disbandment. It was a year in which they exploded prevailing rock music demographics through the global onslaught and international success of Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band beginning in June 1967. Yet it was also a period that saw them in a precarious state of flux throughout the summer and fall months, as the band attempted to recapture their artistic direction in the wake of Sgt. Pepper and the untimely death of manager Brian Epstein. The Beatles, Sgt. Pepper, and the Summer of Love draws readers into that pivotal year in the life of the band. For the Fab Four, 1967 would see the band members part ways with psychedelia and the avant-garde through the trials and tribulations of the Magical Mystery Tour, a project that resulted in a series of classic recordings, while at the same time revealing the bandmates’ aesthetic vulnerabilities and failings as would-be filmmakers and auteurs. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Kenneth Womack , Kathryn B. Cox , Kenneth L. Campbell , Jacqueline EdmondsonPublisher: Lexington Books Imprint: Lexington Books Dimensions: Width: 16.20cm , Height: 2.50cm , Length: 23.50cm Weight: 0.549kg ISBN: 9781498534734ISBN 10: 1498534732 Pages: 254 Publication Date: 03 July 2017 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsIntroduction: It Was 50 Years Ago Today! - Kenneth Womack I. A Splendid Time Is Guaranteed for All 1.Sgt. Pepper—with a Little Outsider Help—Taught the Band to Play - Jerry Zolten 2.Turning Us On: Artifice as Authenticity in Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band - Mark Osteen 3.The Sitar, Eastern Music and Philosophy, and the Beatles’ Progress Towards Rishikesh - Kathryn B. Cox 4.The Act You’ve Known for All These Years: Discord and Harmony in the Third Space - Jacqueline Edmondson II. The Summer of Love (and Commerce) 5. “All You Need Is Love”: The Beatles in the Global Village - Kit O’Toole 6.Golden Blunders: The Fall of the Beatles’ Apple and Its Unlikely Seed - Joe Rapolla 7.The Wretched Life of a Lonely Heart: Sgt. Pepper’s Girls, Fandom, the Wilson Sisters, and Chrissie Hynde - Katie Kapurch 8. “You Say You Want a Revolution”: The Beatles and the Political Culture of the 1960s - Kenneth L. Campbell III. The Magical/Tragical History Tour 9.Dying To Take You Away: The Beatles as Cinematic Auteurs - Robert Rodriguez 10.The End of Fantasy: The Beatles, Magical Mystery Tour, and the Counterculture - Michael Frontani 11.Magical Mystery Tour: From EP to LP to CD - Bruce SpizerReviewsLargely because of the Beatles, 1967 was the most important year for song since 1840. This study of the Beatles' work of 1967 offers deep and stimulating new research and speculation on the surrounding politics, communications media, commerce and the counterculture; inspiration ranging from non-western to avant garde musics; tension in the Beatles' masquerade; the role of gender in reception; and the album's influence on followers. -- Walter Everett, University of Michigan In this fifty-year retrospective on Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band and the Magical Mystery Tour film/EP/LP, Womack, Cox, and their writers have done what a good recap of these pop artifacts should do: not merely to 'celebrate' them for having aged so well, but to wrench readers out of their by now routine responses to the Beatles so as to have them experience, as if for the first time, the group's supreme masterpiece, their subsequent misadventures in film-making, and all of the lasting music they created in 1967, the year of the Summer of Love. -- Steven Hamelman, Coastal Carolina University Largely because of the Beatles, 1967 was the most important year for song since 1840. This study of the Beatles' work of 1967 offers deep and stimulating new research and speculation on the surrounding politics, communications media, commerce and the counterculture; inspiration ranging from non-western to avant garde musics; tension in the Beatles' masquerade; the role of gender in reception; and the album's influence on followers. -- Walter Everett, University of Michigan In this fifty-year retrospective on Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band and the Magical Mystery Tour film/EP/LP, Womack, Cox, and their writers have done what a good recap of these pop artifacts should do: not merely to 'celebrate' them for having aged so well, but to wrench readers out of their by now routine responses to the Beatles so as to have them experience, as if for the first time, the group's supreme masterpiece, their subsequent misadventures in film-making, and all of the lasting music they created in 1967, the year of the Summer of Love. -- Steven Hamelman, Coastal Carolina University Author InformationKenneth Womack is professor of English and dean of the Wayne D. McMurray School of Humanities and Social Sciences at Monmouth University. Kathryn B. Cox is doctoral candidate in historical musicology at the University of Michigan. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |