The Barbershop Singer: Inside the Social World of a Musical Hobby

Első borító
University of Toronto Press, 1996. jan. 1. - 134 oldal

Barbership singing is often dismissed by its critics as merely an enjoyable hobby. Though long popular with both its public and participants, it has been relatively neglected in the field of music studies. Robert A. Stebbins demonstrates that barbershop singing is an elaborate and complicated form of serious leisure that provides its participants with distinctive lifestyles. The Barbershop Singer is a unique case study of this significant musical genre, describing the social world of the barbershop singer and exploring its appeal for both male and female singers. Robert Stebbins traces the history of barbershop singing and compares and contrasts the worlds of jazz, classical music, and barbershop as serious leisure pursuits. Stebbins also reveals its costs and rewards, its complex organizational structures, the social marginality felt by its more dedicated participants, and the main problems facing the art today.

Although barbershop singing is clearly a circumscribed social world, understanding how it works expands current knowledge of the variant forms of social participation available to citizens of the modern world. The Barbershop Singer will be of interest to sociologists as well as those involved in the world of barbershop.

 

Tartalomjegyzék

The Social Worlds of American Music
3
The Old Songs
20
Organized Barbershop
34
Becoming a Barbershop Singer
44
Why Sing?
61
Work in Leisure
75
Dissonance in Close Harmony
87
Musical Lifestyles
100
Interview Guide for the Study of Barbershop
111
Bibliography
125
Index
131
Copyright

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Gyakori szavak és kifejezések

A szerzőről (1996)

Robert A. Stebbins is a professor of Sociology at the University of Calgary. He is author of The Franco-Calgarians: French Language, Leisure, and Linguistic Lifestyle in an Anglophone City and Amateurs, Professionals, and Serious Leisure.

Bibliográfiai információk