Nicholas Gebhardt is professor of jazz and popular music studies at Birmingham City University, UK. He is the author of The Cultural Politics of Jazz Collectives and Going For Jazz: Musical Practices and American Ideology, the latter also published by the University of Chicago Press.
"Essential reading not only for its exploration of practice, but
also for its focus on how this business was shaped and changed by
the circuits, the stress on respectable family entertainment, its
star system, and the continuous show that was vaudeville. .
.[Vaudeville Melodies], although an indisputably academic work,
will have appeal beyond the specialist historian."-- "International
Association for the Study of Popular Music Journal"
"Gebhardt's Vaudeville Melodies explores how late-nineteenth
century American political economy--a combination of progressive
ideology and corporate-administrative capitalism--forged a space
for the invention of show business and the idea of the modern
entertainer. Moving between the stage and the corporate office,
Gebhardt's theoretically sophisticated study is a powerful argument
for a dynamic, relational understanding of popular culture. Neither
a top-down nor a bottom-up phenomenon, vaudeville emerged from the
interplay of performers, managers, and audiences. Deftly weaving
together diverse sources--performer biographies, popular press
accounts, film, and music--Gebhardt provides a new and more
holistic account of the creation and development of this
prototypically modern American entertainment. VaudevilleMelodies
will be an essential resource for scholars of vaudeville, popular
music, and popular culture generally. More than just a renewal of
the scholarship on vaudeville, Vaudeville Melodies offers a
brilliant analysis of the very idea of entertainment in modern
American mass culture, an analysis as applicable to the
early-twenty-first century as it is to the early-twentieth
century."--Andrew Berish "author of Lonesome Roads and Streets of
Dreams: Place, Mobility & Race in Jazz of the 1930s and '40s"
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