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Mark E. Smith and The Fall: Art, Music and Politics

Book

Mark E. Smith and The Fall: Art, Music and Politics

DOI link for Mark E. Smith and The Fall: Art, Music and Politics

Mark E. Smith and The Fall: Art, Music and Politics book

Mark E. Smith and The Fall: Art, Music and Politics

DOI link for Mark E. Smith and The Fall: Art, Music and Politics

Mark E. Smith and The Fall: Art, Music and Politics book

ByBenjamin Halligan, Michael Goddard
Edition 1st Edition
First Published 2010
eBook Published 16 May 2016
Pub. Location London
Imprint Routledge
DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315593951
Pages 226
eBook ISBN 9781315593951
Subjects Area Studies, Arts
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Halligan, B. (2010). Mark E. Smith and The Fall: Art, Music and Politics (M. Goddard, Ed.) (1st ed.). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315593951

ABSTRACT

This volume offers a comprehensive range of approaches to the work of Mark E. Smith and his band The Fall in relation to music, art and politics. Mark E. Smith remains one of the most divisive and idiosyncratic figures in popular music after a recording career with The Fall that spans thirty years. Although The Fall were originally associated with the contemporaneous punk explosion, from the beginning they pursued a highly original vision of what was possible in the sphere of popular music. While other punk bands burned out after a few years, only to then reform decades later as their own cover bands, The Fall continue to evolve while retaining a remarkable consistency, even with the frequent line-up changes that soon left Mark E. Smith as the only permanent member of the group. The key aspect of the group that this volume explores is the invariably creative, unfailingly critical and often antagonistic relations that characterize both the internal dynamics of the group and the group's position in the pop cultural surroundings. The Fall's ambiguous position in the unfolding histories of British popular music and therefore in the new heritage industries of popular culture in the UK, from post-punk to anti-Thatcher politics, to the 'Factory fiction of Manchester' and on into Mark E. Smith's current role as ageing enfant terrible of rock, illustrates the uneasy relationship between the band, their critical commentators and the historians of popular music. This volume engages directly with this critical ambiguity. With a diverse range of approaches to The Fall, this volume opens up new possibilities for writing about contemporary music beyond traditional approaches grounded in the sociology of music, Cultural Studies and music journalism - an aim which is reflected in the variety of provocative critical approaches and writing styles that make up the volume.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

chapter |16 pages

Introduction: ‘Messing up the Paintwork’

ByMichael Goddard, Benjamin Halligan

part |2 pages

Part I The Fall and ‘The North’

chapter 1|14 pages

Building up a Band: Music for a Second City

ByRichard Witts

chapter 2|8 pages

The Fall: A Manchester Band?

ByKatie Hannon

chapter 3|14 pages

Salford Drift: A Psychogeography of The Fall

ByMark Goodall

part |2 pages

Part II The Techniques and Tactics of The Fall

chapter 4|10 pages

‘Rebellious Jukebox’: The Fall and the War against Conformity

ByAndy Wood

chapter 5|10 pages

‘I curse your preoccupation with your record collection’: The Fall on Vinyl 1978–83

ByRichard Osborne

chapter 6|10 pages

‘Dictaphonics’: Acoustics and Primitive Recording in the Music of The Fall

ByRobert Walker

chapter 7|6 pages

‘Let me tell you about scientific management’: The Fall, the Factory and the Disciplined Worker

ByOwen Hatherley

part |2 pages

Part III The Aesthetics of The Fall

chapter 8|16 pages

‘Memorex for the Krakens’: The Fall’s Pulp Modernism

ByMark Fisher

chapter 9|12 pages

Language Scraps: Mark E. Smith’s Handwriting and the Typography of The Fall

ByPaul Wilson

chapter 10|10 pages

‘Humbled in Iceland’: On Improvisation during The Fall

ByRobin Purves

chapter 11|12 pages

The Fall, Mark E. Smith and ‘The Stranger’: Ambiguity, Objectivity and the Transformative Power of a Band from Elsewhere

ByMartin Myers

part |2 pages

Part IV The Fall, the Media and Cultural Politics

chapter 12|10 pages

‘The Sound of The Fall, the Truth of this Movement of Error’: A True Companion, an Ambivalent Friendship, an Ethic of Truths

ByBenjamin Halligan, Michael Goddard

chapter 13|12 pages

‘I think it’s over now’: The Fall, John Peel, Popular Music and Radio

ByRadio Paul Long

chapter 14|12 pages

In Search of Cultural Politics in a Fall Fanzine

ByChris Atton

chapter 15|10 pages

‘As if we didn’t know who he was’: Mark E. Smith’s Untimeliness

ByJanice Kearns, Dean Lockwood
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