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Jazz Sells: Music, Marketing, and Meaning

Contributor(s): Laver, Mark (Author)

ISBN: 9781138018761

Publisher: Routledge

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Pub Date: February 24, 2015

Dewey: 306.48425097

LCCN: 2015001116

Lexile Code: 0000

Features: Bibliography, Illustrated, Index

Target Age Group: NA to NA

Physical Info: 0.60" H x 8.90" L x 5.90" W ( 0.70 lbs) 262 pages

Series: Transnational Studies in Jazz

Descriptions, Reviews, etc.

Description:

Jazz Sells: Music, Marketing, and Meaning examines the issues of jazz, consumption, and capitalism through advertising. On television, on the Internet, in radio, and in print, advertising is a critically important medium for the mass dissemination of music and musical meaning.

Review Quotes:

"Jazz Sells usefully furthers our understanding of how music has been used to sell goods, and entice people to buy them. This is a welcome addition to the small but fast-growing literature on music and consumer culture." - Timothy D. Taylor, author of The Sounds of Capitalism: Advertising, Music, and the Conquest of Culture

"At once a study of the political economy of music in marketing and of jazz historiography, Jazz Sells encourages--indeed, requires--us to think in new and provocative ways about the many meanings jazz has had and continues to have. Engaging and witty, few studies match Laver's in interdisciplinary relevance and significance to the discipline of jazz studies at once." - Gabriel Solis, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA

"Mark Laver's work offers jazz as a lens to scrutinize consumer capitalism, its mechanisms, and its cultural meanings. His clearly written, rich analysis points out the tensions between jazz's images as 'countercultural' and 'sophisticated, ' 'ageless' and 'vital, ' improvisational and fixed. With its ethnographic grounding, this book adds materially to a small but growing focus on jazz in media studies, and on marketing in jazz studies. " - Steven F. Pond, author of Head Hunters: The Making of Jazz's First Platinum Album

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