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Freak Scenes - (Music and the Moving Image) by Jamie Sexton (Paperback)
About this item
Highlights
- Freak Scenes explores the increased licensing of indie music and representation of indie music cultures within American independent cinema since the 1980s.
- Author(s): Jamie Sexton
- 208 Pages
- Performing Arts, Film
- Series Name: Music and the Moving Image
Description
About the Book
The first academic book to explore indie music and indie music cultures on screen
Book Synopsis
Freak Scenes explores the increased licensing of indie music and representation of indie music cultures within American independent cinema since the 1980s. Indie music has, since the 2000s, become highlighted in some indie films as an attraction, but this book probes how the appeal of indie music stretches back to the late 1970s, when punk music made its impact on filmmaking.
Sexton looks at a range of issues where indie music and indie film intersect, including commercial concerns, the growth of niche marketing, the increased employment of popular music in cinema and questions of authenticity, as well as the fraught tensions between commercial and artistic concerns. Case studies include: sonic authorship and indie music, representations of punk and indie scenes on screen, and an exploration of how racial and gender issues inform the representation and reception of indie cultures on film.
Review Quotes
An excellent, original, nuanced and much-needed book-length analysis of the close links and parallels between aspects of indie film and indie music. Highly recommended for anyone interested in American indie film, indie music, or combinations of the two.
--Geoff King, Brunel UniversityJamie Sexton's wonderful new book brings together American indie cinema and indie music, demonstrating in great detail and in a compelling manner the highly complex and creative ways the two have intersected. Also providing some fascinating case studies, Freak Scenes will no doubt prove to be a major work in the field of American independent cinema studies!
--Yannis Tzioumakis, University of LiverpoolWith an extensive review and a careful analysis of the indie culture as both a social and anartistic phenomenon, Freak Scenes can certainly function as a comprehensive source for both indie fans and scholars in the field. Sexton skillfully combines the use of theories in cultural studies with effective and lucid arguments, creating a detailed yet accessible survey of indie film and music. Offering a careful selection of case studies, the author draws interesting parallels and analyzes intersections between film and music, shedding light on the surprisingly fundamental and multidimensional role of music in film, not only within the genre in question.
--Alicja Relidzyńska "Journal of Popular Culture"