![]() In great detail and with an impressive sense for origins and outcome of local musical styles, this book is an eye-opener. Financial Times Books of the YearĪ cultural historian, Denning offers a brilliant book that serves as a time line of modern music and musical styles and, more important, a history of the evolution and influence of vinyl recordings of modern music. Denning links the explosion of vernacular recordings to an emergent age of decolonisation. Record companies hunted new sounds: Argentine tango singers, Cuban son musicians, Egyptian taarab vocalists. Noise Uprising’s year zero is 1925, when electrical recording techniques allowed vinyl to conquer the world. The scope of Denning’s book-dozens of genres across five continents-is impressive … Noise Uprising offers an ambitious map of the connections between them. Josh Kun, University of Southern Californiaĭeeply researched and densely fascinating … the book is a necessary chronicle. ![]() Every future attempt to analyze the sounds and politics of the international music industry will need to reckon with this powerful book. Andrew RossĪ monumental rewriting of the global history of recorded music. Which of the senses was decolonized first? In making a case for the ear, Denning has given us a brilliant, audacious guidebook to the sly but unruly insurgencies of sound that coursed through the port cities of the Black Atlantic, the Polynesian Pacific, and the Gypsy Mediterranean. Timothy Brennan, author of Secular Devotion: Afro-Latin Music and Imperial Jazz “I suspect it will be the most important book released on music this year.” Jonathon Kyle Sturgeon,Īn ambitious record of a revolution in sound in the late 1920s that erupted in port towns everywhere, from Cape Town to Shanghai-local guilds operating autonomously but in global unison like a cosmic fugue. ![]() It utterly revises the history and geography of modern music.
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