’This book pays fitting tribute to one of the founding figures of popular music studies. Simon Frith’s writing has remained relevant to several generations of scholars and general readers alike because of its sweeping scope, insightful observations and pathbreaking interdisciplinarity. A sociologist by background, Frith worked across existing paradigms for much of his career and his research output is informed as much by his background as a critic and engagement with musical life as by the more traditional academic concerns of critical theory, music industry studies and aesthetics. Popular Music Matters extends the Frithian legacy by focusing on the issues of the day in each of these areas while attending to how the musical is always entwined with the social. This impressive collection of essays by leading popular music scholars and established critics, many of whom worked with or studied under Frith, challenges the orthodoxies of popular music scholarship. Themes range from the sociological to the musicological, from reflections on the current musical landscape to snapshots of the scholar and man. This is an excellent place to start for anyone wishing to assess the impact and import of one of the luminaries of popular music studies.’ John Richardson, University of Turku, Finland ’... as a comprehensive guide to the universe of Frithology, Popular Music Matters passes as excellent with distinction!’ Popular Music ’Laing and Marshall have compiled a collection of essays celebrating Frith's long and multi-faceted career, and engaging with key ideas from the many corners of popular music studies for which Frith's work has been so vital. An essential mix tape.’ Sarah Hill, Cardiff University, UK ’Taking into account his remarkable contributions to a varied range of disciplines, there was no better way of paying homage to him than an edited multidisciplinary collection. The metaphor used by the editors themselves is certainly on the spot. Marshall an