TY - BOOK AU - Nott,James J. TI - Music for the people: popular music and dance in interwar Britain T2 - Oxford historical monographs SN - 9780191554971 AV - ML3650.5 .N68 2002eb U1 - 781.64/0941/09042 22 PY - 2002/// CY - Oxford, New York PB - Oxford University Press KW - Popular music KW - Great Britain KW - 1921-1930 KW - 1931-1940 KW - Social aspects KW - Musique populaire KW - Grande-Bretagne KW - Aspect social KW - MUSIC KW - Genres & Styles KW - Pop Vocal KW - bisacsh KW - fast KW - Populaire muziek KW - gtt KW - Dansmuziek KW - Sociale aspecten KW - Electronic books N1 - Includes bibliographical references (pages 245-253) and indexes; Intro; TITLE PAGE; ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS; CONTENTS; LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS; LIST OF TABLES; ABBREVIATIONS; INTRODUCTION; Part I: The 'Mechanized' Popular Music Industry; 1: THE RISE OF THE GRAMOPHONE AND THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE BRITISH GRAMOPHONE INDUSTRY; Introduction; 1.1 Production patterns of the British gramophone industry, 1907-1939; 1.2 The development of the gramophone and record industries; Conclusion; 2: THE ROLE OF THE GRAMOPHONE IN DAILY LIFE IN INTERWAR BRITAIN AND ITS EFFECT ON MUSICAL CULTURE; Introduction; 2.1 The gramophone in daily life; 2.2 The music and marketing policies of the gramophone companies2.3 The cultural impact of the gramophone; Conclusion; 3: RADIO, CINEMA, AND POPULAR MUSIC IN INTERWAR BRITAIN; Introduction; 3.1 Popular music and the BBC; 3.2 Commercial radio; 3.3 The cinema; Conclusion; Part II: The 'Live' Popular Music Industry; 4: DEVELOPMENTS IN 'LIVE MUSIC' 1918 TO 1939: FROM 'PERFORMERS' TO 'LISTENERS'; Introduction; 4.1 Self-made 'live music': the public as performers; 4.2 Ready-made 'live music': the public as listeners; Conclusion; 5: 'LIVE MUSIC': DANCE BANDS, DANCE MUSIC, AND DANCE MUSICIANS; Introduction5.1 The size and scope of the dance music profession; 5.2 Dance band musicians; 5.3 Dance bands, employment, and employers; Conclusion; 6: THE EXPANSION AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE DANCE HALL INDUSTRY; Introduction; 6.1 The growth of dancing and the dance hall industry; 6.2 Mecca and the commercialization of dancing; Conclusion; 7: THE EXPERIENCE OF DANCING, DANCE HALLS, AND THE 'DANCE CULTURE', 1918-1939; Introduction; 7.1 'Going to the palais'; 7.2 Dancers, dance culture, and interwar society; 7.3 Dance halls and sex; Conclusion; Part III: Popular Music and Popular Music Artists; 8: TASTES IN POPULAR MUSIC, 1918-1939Introduction; 8.1 Popular genres and artists; 8.2 Popular song titles: origins and content; 8.3 The determination of popular tastes; Conclusion; CONCLUSION; APPENDIX: The Most Popular Songs, 1919-1939; SELECT BIBLIOGRAPHY; INDEX OF SONG TITLES; GENERAL INDEX N2 - This lively and readable study explores popular music between the wars, the era of Noel Coward and Ivor Novello, Gracie Fields and George Formby. James J. Nott tells the story from the days of the jazz mania of the 1920s to the outbreak of the Second World War. He examines the huge popularity of dance halls such as the fabled Hammersmith Palais, and concludes with a fascinating checklist of the most popular songs UR - https://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&scope=site&db=nlebk&AN=150014 ER -