The urge to connect with that which transcends our experience, be it a higher power, another person or some artistic ideal or aspect of nature, is one of the things that makes us human. People view the object of this quest, as well as what it means to achieve it, differently. Yet regardless of how it is understood, the urge to participate in or belong to something greater and more lasting than ourselves—a feeling born of an awareness of our mortality—is what defines us as spiritual beings. Though often dismissed as ephemeral or, worse, demonic, popular music has given voice to this quest for transcendence since its beginnings. Pop singers are rarely as outwardly spiritual as, say, their gospel counterparts; they're forever pointing beyond themselves, though, be it to some better future, some higher ideal, or to some vision of deliverance. Fontella Bass's "Rescue Me," the Four Tops's "Reach Out (I'll Be There)," Jimmy Cliff's "Many Rivers to Cross," Afrika Bambaataa's "Looking for the Perfect Beat," and U2's "I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For" are but a handful of popular recordings from the past few decades that express a longing for something more. What, other than transcendence, is Jimi Hendrix talking about in "Purple Haze" when he shouts, "'scuse me, while I kiss the sky"? Or Van Morrison, in "Caravan," when he implores us to crank our radios and sail away with him into the mystic? Heard in the right light, secular and even carnal records have the power to speak to transcendental concerns, galvanizing their historical and cultural moments. Regardless of their spiritual leanings, all of the subjects discussed in this book (including Public Enemy, Madonna, Sleater-Kinney, Tricky, Johnny Cash, Nine Inch Nails, Moby, Marvin Gaye, Eminem, Polly Harvey, Bruce Springsteen and Sly & the Family Stone) make music that expresses a basic striving for transcendence. Artists' stories and personalities inform these discussions, but only in as much as they illuminate the struggles and concerns that run through their music. I'll Take You There is a beautifully written, wide-ranging and illuminating examination of some of the most potent popular music ever recorded.
... Luisa 74,123, 124 Thom, Paul 2 Thomas, Amboise 29 Thompson, Gordon 95 Thurman, Leon 66, 68, 88 Timberlake, Craig 9, 23, 37 Tinctoris, 165 Titze, ...
... by a full cycle per second, from 6.5 Hz (e.g., Enrico Caruso [Dejonckere et al., 1995]) to 5.5 Hz (e.g., Luciano Pavarotti [Keidar, Titze, & Timberlake ...
Timberlake, C. (1986). The 'pop' singer and the voice teacher (From the American Academy of Teachers of Singing). The NATSJournal, September/October, 21, ...
... Joseph C.95 Stendhal (Beyle, Henri) 31 Steptoe, Andrew 3, 175 Stevens, ... Gordon 95 Thurman, Leon 66, 68,88 Timberlake, Craig 9, 23, 37 Tinctoris, ...
... Camp Aesthetic: Advancing New Perspectives, edited by Bruce E. Drushel ... “Our Icons: Ourselves; Britney Spears, Justin Timberlake, Kevin Federline, ...
A Christmas Carol in Bethlehem is an adaptation of Dickens' classic 19th century English tale that places Scrooge in Bethlehem at the birth of Christ.
(Piano/Vocal/Guitar Artist Songbook). 16 tracks from Timberlake's 2018 album which debuted at the top of the Billboard 200 charts, including: Breeze off the Pond * Filthy * Flannel * The Hard Stuff * Hers * Higher Higher * Livin' off the ...
(Piano/Vocal/Guitar Artist Songbook).
(Piano/Vocal/Guitar Songbook). Matching folio to the infectious soundtrack of the 2016 DreamWorks film featuring songs by Justin Timberlake; Anna Kendrick; Zooey Deschanel; Gwen Stefani; Ariana Grande; Earth, Wind & Fire; and more!
2, footnote cites uvedale Price, An Essay on the Picturesque, as compared with the sublime and the beautiful, and, on the use of studying pictures for the purpose of improving real landscape (London: printed for J. Robson, 1794), p.