In Mediatization in Popular Music Recorded Artifacts: Performance on Record and on Screen, the relationship between performance, technological mediation, and the sense of live presence is investigated through a series of case studies related to popular music products. Alessandro Bratus explores technological mediation as a process of authentication that involves a chain of interconnected instances that have their roots in the cultural context in which the media products are designed to be marketed, and that also shape its recording technique and post-production. The book analyzes posthumous records, a peculiar case of the organization of recorded tracks made in absentia of their original performers that puts forward the possibility of an "otherworldly" collaboration between the living and the dead. Bratus also argues that the crucial significance of live performance for the construction of a personal, intimate relationship between performers and audiences reverberates in the audiovisual construction of the filmed concert, in which the spectator is put in the position of a witness rather than an active participant.
Autorentext
Alessandro Bratus is senior lecturer in the Department of Musicology and Cultural Heritage at the University of Pavia.
Zusammenfassung
In Mediatization in Popular Music Recorded Artifacts: Performance on Record and on Screen , the relationship between performance, technological mediation, and the sense of live presence is investigated through a series of case studies related to popular music products. Alessandro Bratus explores technological mediation as a process of authentication that involves a chain of interconnected instances that have their roots in the cultural context in which the media products are designed to be marketed, and that also shape its recording technique and post-production. The book analyzes posthumous records, a peculiar case of the organization of recorded tracks made in absentia of their original performers that puts forward the possibility of an otherworldly collaboration between the living and the dead. Bratus also argues that the crucial significance of live performance for the construction of a personal, intimate relationship between performers and audiences reverberates in the audiovisual construction of the filmed concert, in which the spectator is put in the position of a witness rather than an active participant.
Inhalt
Introduction: Theoretically Live: Performance and Mediation between Experience, Intermediality, and Authenticity
Chapter 1: Live Once, and Witness Forever: The Analytical Framework
Chapter 2: The Many Lives of Jimi: Recordings and Utopian Spaces in Hendrix's Posthumous Albums
Chapter 3: So Empty without Me? Heritage, Realness and Memory in Tupac Shakur's Posthumous Records
Chapter 4: Identity as Timbre: Johnny Cash's Expansive Identity in the American Recordings and Beyond
Chapter 5: A Conversation with No Speakers: Live without Audience
Chapter 6: Live EDM: Audiovisual Performativity for Bodies and Machines
Coda: (Living?) In the Material World: The In-Betweenness of Michael Jackson's This Is It