San Francisco and the Long 60s

San Francisco and the Long 60s

Author
Sarah Hill
Publisher
Bloomsbury Academic
Language
English
Year
2015
ISBN
9781628924206,9781628924213,9781501304866,9781628924220
File Type
pdf
File Size
5.5 MiB

About the Author

Sarah Hill is Associate Professor of Popular Music and Tutorial Fellow at St Peter's College, University of Oxford, UK. She has published work on Welsh-language popular music and cultural identity, progressive rock, and female vocality. A native of Oakland, California, and a fluent Welsh speaker, Sarah is also Co-ordinating Editor of Popular Music and Chair of the UK/Ireland branch of the International Association for the Study of Popular Music (IASPM).

Product Description

San Francisco and the Long 60s tells the fascinating story of the legacy of popular music in San Francisco between the years 1965-69. It is also a chronicle of the impact this brief cultural flowering has continued to have in the city – and more widely in American culture – right up to the present day. The aim of San Francisco and the Long 60s is to question the standard historical narrative of the time, situating the local popular music of the 1960s in the city's contemporary artistic and literary cultures: at once visionary and hallucinatory, experimental and traditional, singular and universal. These qualities defined the aesthetic experience of the local culture in the 1960s, and continue to inform the cultural and social life of the Bay Area even fifty years later.

The brief period 1965-69 marks the emergence of the psychedelic counterculture in the Haight-Ashbury neighbourhood, the development of a local musical 'sound' into a mainstream international 'style', the mythologizing of the Haight-Ashbury as the destination for 'seekers' in the Summer of Love, and the ultimate dispersal of the original hippie community to outlying counties in the greater Bay Area and beyond. San Francisco and the Long 60s charts this period with the references to received historical accounts of the time, the musical, visual and literary communications from the counterculture, and retrospective glances from members of the 1960s Haight community via extensive first-hand interviews.

For more information, read Sarah Hill's blog posts here:

http://blogs.cardiff.ac.uk/musicresearch/2014/05/15/san-francisco-and-the-long-60s
http://blogs.cardiff.ac.uk/musicresearch/2014/08/22/city-scale/
http://blogs.cardiff.ac.uk/musicresearch/2015/07/21/fare-thee-well/

Review

“Sarah Hill is to be congratulated for her detailed exploration of the complex--and often turbulent--cultural history of San Francisco during the 1960s. She assesses and analyses the emergent counterculture's re-workings of music, art, theatre, sexuality and politics...the book is replete with information and insights that illuminate the events of the decade itself, and their continuing significance.” ―Ian Inglis, Visiting Fellow, Northumbria University, UK

“Sarah Hill's new book offers a delightful panorama of countercultural San Francisco in the 1960s, studded with evocative quotes from historical and contemporary interviews with many of the principal players on the scene, and giving a special place to the musical achievements of many of the classic San Francisco bands. Her articulation of the 'long 60s,' reaching up to the present day, will resonate with countless fans, young and old, of that vibrant and precious time.” ―Graeme M. Boone, Professor of Music, The Ohio State University, USA

“In this book Sarah Hill delivers a masterful study of a place often written about, and frequently iconized, as a heartland of the 1960s counter-culture but never portrayed with the level of micro-social detail offered here. In her accounts of the ordinary people whose lives both shaped and were shaped by the counter-culture, Hill enriches our understanding of how cultural memory is becoming increasingly central in the way that generations collectively appropriate and inscribe meaning in the objects, images and texts of contemporary popular culture.” ―Andy Bennett, Professor of Cultural Sociology and Director of the Griffith Centre for Cultural Research, Griffith University, Australia

“It is a delight to see the

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