"Nealon is right that musical discourse must change. It must recognize the way that music is listened to now and how it is used."-Barry Shank, Cultural Critique “This project clears a path through the stalemate of the ‘authenticity’ (an enduring watchword of most popular musicological scholarship) debate and boldly goes where few others have dared to go. As the new musicology moves to make sense of its relation to sound studies, this kinky little book is likely to emerge as an important, if vexed, touchstone.”-John Mowitt, leadership chair in the critical humanities at the University of Leeds and author of Sounds: The Ambient Humanities