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Mixing pop and politics: rock music in Czechoslovakia before and after the Velvet Revolution

Mixing pop and politics: rock music in Czechoslovakia before and after the Velvet Revolution <jats:p>Rock and pop music in the USSR and eastern Europe has become an area of increasing interest to both the western mass media and cultural studies since <jats:italic>glasnost, perestroika</jats:italic>, the collapse of the Eastern bloc Communist regimes and the constitution of new western-styled democratic governments. This is largely because rock music has represented probably the most widespread vehicle of youth rebellion, resistance and independence behind the Iron Curtain, both in terms of providing an enhanced political context for the often banned sounds of British and American rock, and in the development of home-grown musics built on western foundations but resonating within their own highly charged political contexts. As the East German critic Peter Wicke has claimed,</jats:p><jats:p>Because of the intrinsic characteristics of the circumstances within which rock music is produced and consumed, this cultural medium became, in the GDR, the most suitable vehicle for forms of cultural and political resistance that could not be controlled by the state. (Wicke 1991, p. 1)</jats:p> http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Popular Music CrossRef

Mixing pop and politics: rock music in Czechoslovakia before and after the Velvet Revolution

Popular Music , Volume 11 (2): 187-203 – May 1, 1992

Mixing pop and politics: rock music in Czechoslovakia before and after the Velvet Revolution


Abstract

<jats:p>Rock and pop music in the USSR and eastern Europe has become an area of increasing interest to both the western mass media and cultural studies since <jats:italic>glasnost, perestroika</jats:italic>, the collapse of the Eastern bloc Communist regimes and the constitution of new western-styled democratic governments. This is largely because rock music has represented probably the most widespread vehicle of youth rebellion, resistance and independence behind the Iron Curtain, both in terms of providing an enhanced political context for the often banned sounds of British and American rock, and in the development of home-grown musics built on western foundations but resonating within their own highly charged political contexts. As the East German critic Peter Wicke has claimed,</jats:p><jats:p>Because of the intrinsic characteristics of the circumstances within which rock music is produced and consumed, this cultural medium became, in the GDR, the most suitable vehicle for forms of cultural and political resistance that could not be controlled by the state. (Wicke 1991, p. 1)</jats:p>

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Publisher
CrossRef
ISSN
0261-1430
DOI
10.1017/s0261143000004992
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

<jats:p>Rock and pop music in the USSR and eastern Europe has become an area of increasing interest to both the western mass media and cultural studies since <jats:italic>glasnost, perestroika</jats:italic>, the collapse of the Eastern bloc Communist regimes and the constitution of new western-styled democratic governments. This is largely because rock music has represented probably the most widespread vehicle of youth rebellion, resistance and independence behind the Iron Curtain, both in terms of providing an enhanced political context for the often banned sounds of British and American rock, and in the development of home-grown musics built on western foundations but resonating within their own highly charged political contexts. As the East German critic Peter Wicke has claimed,</jats:p><jats:p>Because of the intrinsic characteristics of the circumstances within which rock music is produced and consumed, this cultural medium became, in the GDR, the most suitable vehicle for forms of cultural and political resistance that could not be controlled by the state. (Wicke 1991, p. 1)</jats:p>

Journal

Popular MusicCrossRef

Published: May 1, 1992

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