Portraying Performer Image in Record Album Cover Art

Author:   Ken Bielen
Publisher:   Lexington Books
ISBN:  

9781793640727


Pages:   222
Publication Date:   15 November 2021
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

Our Price $190.00 Quantity:  
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Portraying Performer Image in Record Album Cover Art


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Full Product Details

Author:   Ken Bielen
Publisher:   Lexington Books
Imprint:   Lexington Books
Dimensions:   Width: 16.10cm , Height: 2.20cm , Length: 22.80cm
Weight:   0.590kg
ISBN:  

9781793640727


ISBN 10:   1793640726
Pages:   222
Publication Date:   15 November 2021
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

Table of Contents

Preface 1. From the Early Idols of Popular Music to the British Invasion 2. 1960s Folk Music and the Move to Folk Rock 3. From Sweet Sixties and Seventies Soul Music to Disco on the Cover 4. Psychedelia and Beyond 5. Images of Americana 6. Singer-Songwriters and Song Interpreters

Reviews

An insightful survey of varied performers, times, and musical genres as exhibited and understood through the visuals of popular music record album covers that is a much-needed and long overdue contribution to several fields of inquiry. Fans and scholars alike will find much to enjoy and consider in this close descriptive analysis. Bielen exhibits his extensive knowledge and understanding of popular music and its intersection with society in Portraying Performer Image in Record Album Cover Art. I love how he dissects album cover and insert art and explains their relationship to the music and the images that artists and record companies try to project. His analyses are spot on. There was nothing like walking into a record store during the LP era and catching sight of an album cover that presented a vision of the artist, the music and a reflection of the times. We listened with our eyes before we tasted with our ears. Are they one of us? The images on an album cover are images of an artist as well as images of ourselves. Or at least the image they want to project is. Ken Bielen looks at album covers and uncovers a history of musical art in his book, Portraying Performer Image in Record Album Cover Art. He invites us to listen to what we've seen and see again what we've heard. Or dare I say that an album cover is worth a thousand songs?


An insightful survey of varied performers, times, and musical genres as exhibited and understood through the visuals of popular music record album covers that is a much-needed and long overdue contribution to several fields of inquiry. Fans and scholars alike will find much to enjoy and consider in this close descriptive analysis.--Ben Urish, University of Kansas Bielen exhibits his extensive knowledge and understanding of popular music and its intersection with society in Portraying Performer Image in Record Album Cover Art. I love how he dissects album cover and insert art and explains their relationship to the music and the images that artists and record companies try to project. His analyses are spot on.--James E. Perone, University of Mount Union There was nothing like walking into a record store during the LP era and catching sight of an album cover that presented a vision of the artist, the music and a reflection of the times. We listened with our eyes before we tasted with our ears. Are they one of us? The images on an album cover are images of an artist as well as images of ourselves. Or at least the image they want to project is. Ken Bielen looks at album covers and uncovers a history of musical art in his book, Portraying Performer Image in Record Album Cover Art. He invites us to listen to what we've seen and see again what we've heard. Or dare I say that an album cover is worth a thousand songs?--Don Cusic, Belmont University


Ken Bielen exhibits his extensive knowledge and understanding of popular music and its intersection with society in Portraying Performer Image in Record Album Cover Art. I love how he dissects album cover and insert art and explains its relationship to the music and the images that artists and record companies try to project. His analyses are spot on.--James E. Perone, University of Mount Union There was nothing like walking into a record store during the LP era and catching sight of an album cover that presented a vision of the artist, the music and a reflection of the times. We listened with our eyes before we tasted with our ears. Are they one of us? The images on an album cover are images of an artist as well as images of ourselves. Or at least the image they want to project. Ken Bielen looks at album covers and uncovers a history of musical art in his book, Portraying Performer Image in Record Album Cover Art. His book invites us to listen to what we've seen and see again what we've heard. Or dare I say that an album cover is worth a thousand songs?--Don Cusic, Belmont University


An insightful survey of varied performers, times, and musical genres as exhibited and understood through the visuals of popular music record album covers that is a much needed and long overdue contribution to several fields of inquiry. Fans and scholars alike will find much to enjoy and consider in this close descriptive analysis.--Ben Urish, University of Kansas Ken Bielen exhibits his extensive knowledge and understanding of popular music and its intersection with society in Portraying Performer Image in Record Album Cover Art. I love how he dissects album cover and insert art and explains its relationship to the music and the images that artists and record companies try to project. His analyses are spot on.--James E. Perone, University of Mount Union There was nothing like walking into a record store during the LP era and catching sight of an album cover that presented a vision of the artist, the music and a reflection of the times. We listened with our eyes before we tasted with our ears. Are they one of us? The images on an album cover are images of an artist as well as images of ourselves. Or at least the image they want to project. Ken Bielen looks at album covers and uncovers a history of musical art in his book, Portraying Performer Image in Record Album Cover Art. His book invites us to listen to what we've seen and see again what we've heard. Or dare I say that an album cover is worth a thousand songs?--Don Cusic, Belmont University


Author Information

Ken Bielen holds a doctorate in American culture studies from Bowling Green State University and is the retired director of the grants office at Indiana Wesleyan University.

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