Winner of the IASPM Canada Book Prize 2019Honorable Mention for PROSE Award for Excellence in Music and the Performing Arts 2018When Genres Collide is a provocative history that rethinks the relationship between jazz and rock through the lens of the two oldest surviving and most influential American popular music periodicals: Down Beat and Rolling Stone. Writing in 1955, Duke Ellington argued that the new music called rock ‘n’ roll “is the most raucous form of jazz, beyond a doubt.” So why did jazz and rock subsequently become treated as separate genres?The rift between jazz and rock (and jazz and rock scholarship) is based on a set of received assumptions about their fundamental differences, but there are other ways popular music history could have been written. By offering a fresh examination of key historical moments when the trajectories and meanings of jazz and rock intersected, overlapped, or collided, it reveals how music critics constructed an ideological divide between jazz and rock that would be replicated in American musical discourse for decades to follow.Recipient of and Honorable Mention in the PROSE Award, Music & the Performing Arts 2018.
Matt Brennan is Reader in Popular Music at the University of Glasgow, UK.
IntroductionChapter 1 Early American Jazz as the Precursor to Rock ‘n’ RollChapter 2 Down Beat and Mid-Century Popular Music CoverageChapter 3 The American Jazz Press Covers RockChapter 4 The Birth of Rolling StoneChapter 5 Newport 1969 and the Uneasy Coupling of Jazz and RockConclusionIndex
Matt Brennan looks to the music press of the 1950s and 60s, ... [in doing so] revealing a tangled relationship between jazz and what would become rock.
Matt Brennan, Joseph Michael Pignato, Daniel Akira Stadnicki, Matt (University of Glasgow) Brennan, Montreal) Stadnicki, Daniel Akira (McGill University
Matt Brennan, Joseph Michael Pignato, Daniel Akira Stadnicki, Matt (University of Glasgow) Brennan, Montreal) Stadnicki, Daniel Akira (McGill University