The West Texas Musicscape and Buddy Holly’s Musical Idiolect, 1950–1955
Dublin Core | PKP Metadata Items | Metadata for this Document | |
1. | Title | Title of document | The West Texas Musicscape and Buddy Holly’s Musical Idiolect, 1950–1955 - Buddy Holly |
2. | Creator | Author's name, affiliation, country | Dave Laing; University of Liverpool and University of East Anglia; United Kingdom |
3. | Subject | Discipline(s) | music |
4. | Subject | Keyword(s) | Buddy Holly; rock & roll; west Tesas musicscape |
5. | Subject | Subject classification | music history & criticism; ML159-3785; popular music; ML3469-3541 |
6. | Description | Abstract | The author introduces his approach to the volume whereby he will study “Buddy Holly” as 'the precipitate of a network of practices involving numerous other individuals (e.g. musicians, disc jockeys, promoters, producers), technologies (e.g. radio, jukebox, phonography, electric guitar), and artefacts, most notably sound recordings. He proceeds then to describe the 'musicscape' of Lubbock, West Texas. After a brief section on the city of Lubbock, the remainder of this chapter describes five sites or musicscapes in which Buddy Holly and his informal network of friends and collaborators were immersed in the mid-1950s. The term “musicscape” is derived from the concept of soundscape elaborated by Canadian musicologist Murray Schafer, who defined (Schafer 1977). |
7. | Publisher | Organizing agency, location | Equinox Publishing Ltd |
8. | Contributor | Sponsor(s) | |
9. | Date | (YYYY-MM-DD) | 01-Apr-2010 |
10. | Type | Status & genre | Peer-reviewed Article |
11. | Type | Type | actor-network theory |
12. | Format | File format | |
13. | Identifier | Uniform Resource Identifier | https://journals.equinoxpub.com/index.php/books/article/view/20104 |
14. | Identifier | Digital Object Identifier | 10.1558/equinox.20104 |
15. | Source | Journal/conference title; vol., no. (year) | Equinox eBooks Publishing; Buddy Holly |
16. | Language | English=en | en |
18. | Coverage | Geo-spatial location, chronological period, research sample (gender, age, etc.) |
West Texas; Lubbock, 1950s |
19. | Rights | Copyright and permissions | Copyright 2014 Equinox Publishing Ltd |