Echoes of '77: A Nation In Noise

Prijzen vanaf
15,19

Uitgelicht

VERGELIJK ALLE AANBIEDERS (3)

Beschrijving

Bol Echoes of '77: A Nation in Noise is a chronicle of Britain at the edge of transformation - a country caught between collapse and creation, where music became both mirror and weapon. The year 1977 was not simply loud; it was diagnostic. Through punk's abrasion, disco's pulse, reggae's steadiness, and the emerging hum of electronics, Britain revealed the frequencies of its own unrest. This book listens to those frequencies - not nostalgically, but analytically - tracing how sound became a form of social documentation.The narrative unfolds across the fractured terrain of the late seventies: factories closing, youth clubs vibrating, radios transmitting static and defiance. Punk appears not as rebellion for its own sake but as the audible consequence of economic decline and generational disillusionment. Disco, shimmering in the clubs of London and Manchester, offers a counterpoint - a temporary suspension of gravity, a choreography of escape. Reggae carries the weight of migration and resistance, its basslines functioning as both anchor and protest. And beneath it all, the synthesizer begins to hum - a new machine language emerging from the circuitry of Europe, signalling the future before anyone could name it.Echoes of '77: A Nation in Noise treats music as evidence. Each chapter reconstructs the conditions that produced the sound: the geography of recording studios, the architecture of venues, the sociology of audiences. It examines how rhythm became a form of speech when words failed, how distortion became a vocabulary for anger, and how repetition became a way of surviving monotony. The book's tone is forensic but lyrical - a documentary written in the cadence of memory.This is not a nostalgic account of a lost era but a study of how a nation heard itself changing. The noise of 1977 was not chaos; it was communication. It carried the signals of a generation that refused silence, and in doing so, it redefined what music could mean. Echoes of '77: A Nation in Noise listens to that moment with precision and empathy - tracing the hum beneath the headlines, the pulse beneath the politics, and the sound that still reverberates through the culture that followed.

Vergelijk aanbieders (3)

Shop
Prijs
Verzendkosten
Totale prijs
15,19
2,99
18,18
Naar shop
2,99 Shipping Costs
44,99
Gratis
44,99
Naar shop
Gratis Shipping Costs
44,99
Gratis
44,99
Naar shop
Gratis Shipping Costs
Beschrijving (2)
Bol

Echoes of '77: A Nation in Noise is a chronicle of Britain at the edge of transformation - a country caught between collapse and creation, where music became both mirror and weapon. The year 1977 was not simply loud; it was diagnostic. Through punk's abrasion, disco's pulse, reggae's steadiness, and the emerging hum of electronics, Britain revealed the frequencies of its own unrest. This book listens to those frequencies - not nostalgically, but analytically - tracing how sound became a form of social documentation.The narrative unfolds across the fractured terrain of the late seventies: factories closing, youth clubs vibrating, radios transmitting static and defiance. Punk appears not as rebellion for its own sake but as the audible consequence of economic decline and generational disillusionment. Disco, shimmering in the clubs of London and Manchester, offers a counterpoint - a temporary suspension of gravity, a choreography of escape. Reggae carries the weight of migration and resistance, its basslines functioning as both anchor and protest. And beneath it all, the synthesizer begins to hum - a new machine language emerging from the circuitry of Europe, signalling the future before anyone could name it.Echoes of '77: A Nation in Noise treats music as evidence. Each chapter reconstructs the conditions that produced the sound: the geography of recording studios, the architecture of venues, the sociology of audiences. It examines how rhythm became a form of speech when words failed, how distortion became a vocabulary for anger, and how repetition became a way of surviving monotony. The book's tone is forensic but lyrical - a documentary written in the cadence of memory.This is not a nostalgic account of a lost era but a study of how a nation heard itself changing. The noise of 1977 was not chaos; it was communication. It carried the signals of a generation that refused silence, and in doing so, it redefined what music could mean. Echoes of '77: A Nation in Noise listens to that moment with precision and empathy - tracing the hum beneath the headlines, the pulse beneath the politics, and the sound that still reverberates through the culture that followed.

Amazon

Pagina's: 122, Paperback, Paul Davies


Productspecificaties

Merk Paul Davies
EAN
  • 9798232597955
Maat


Prijshistorie

* Prijshistorie bevat geen data van Amazon, Amazon Marketplace.

Prijzen voor het laatst bijgewerkt op:

Uitgelichte Keuze
15,19
Naar shop