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A01=Jon Marc Smith
A01=Katie Kapurch
A23=Cyrus Cassells
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and music
Author_Jon Marc Smith
Author_Katie Kapurch
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Beatles
Bettye LaVette
Billy Preston
Bird imagery in music
Black Music
Blackbird
Category1=Non-Fiction
Category=AVC
Category=AVGP
Category=AVH
Category=AVN
Category=HBLW
COP=United States
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Florence Mills
Flying Africans
Folklore
George Harrison
Henry Louis Gates
Huddie Ledbetter
John Lennon
Jr.
Language_English
Lead Belly
literature
Lord Kitchener (Aldwyn Roberts)
Lord Woodbine (Harold Adolphus Phillips)
Martha Wash
Music History
Nina Simone
PA=Available
Paul McCartney
Price_€20 to €50
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Ringo Starr
Signifying
softlaunch
Sylvester (Sylvester James
Transatlantic history

Product details

  • ISBN 9780271095622
  • Weight: 386g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 14 Nov 2023
  • Publisher: Pennsylvania State University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
  • Language: English
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From the beginning, the Beatles acknowledged in interviews their debt to Black music, apparent in their covers of and written original songs inspired by Chuck Berry, Little Richard, Fats Domino, the Shirelles, and other giants of R&B. Blackbird goes deeper, appreciating unacknowledged forerunners, as well as Black artists whose interpretations keep the Beatles in play.

Drawing on interviews with Black musicians and using the song “Blackbird” as a touchstone, Katie Kapurch and Jon Marc Smith tell a new history. They present unheard stories and resituate old ones, offering the phrase “transatlantic flight” to characterize a back-and-forth dialogue shaped by Black musicians in the United States and elsewhere, including Liverpool. Kapurch and Smith find a lineage that reaches back to the very origins of American popular music, one that involves the original twentieth-century blackbird, Florence Mills, and the King of the Twelve String, Lead Belly. Continuing the circular flight path with Nina Simone, Billy Preston, Jimi Hendrix, Aretha Franklin, Sylvester, and others, the authors take readers into the twenty-first century, when Black artists like Bettye LaVette harness the Beatles for today.

Detailed, thoughtful, and revelatory, Blackbird explores musical and storytelling legacies full of rich but contested symbolism. Appealing to those interested in developing a deep understanding of the evolution of popular music, this book promises that you’ll never hear “Blackbird”—and the Beatles—the same way again.

Katie Kapurch is Associate Professor of English at Texas State University. She is the author of Victorian Melodrama in the Twenty-First Century and the coeditor of New Critical Perspectives on the Beatles and The Beatles and Humour.

Jon Marc Smith is Senior Lecturer of English at Texas State University. His publications include scholarship on race and gender in popular music, literature, and film, and a novel, Make Them Cry, coauthored with Smith Henderson.

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