Liner Notes for the Revolution, Daphne A. Brooks
Liner Notes for the Revolution, Daphne A. Brooks
List: $29.99 | Sale: $21.00
Club: $14.99

Liner Notes for the Revolution
The Intellectual Life of Black Feminist Sound

Author: Daphne A. Brooks

Narrator: Janina Edwards

Unabridged: 20 hr 26 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Tantor Media

Published: 05/24/2022


Synopsis

Daphne A. Brooks explores more than a century of music archives to examine the critics, collectors, and listeners who have determined perceptions of Black women on stage and in the recording studio. How is it possible, she asks, that iconic artists such as Aretha Franklin and Beyoncé exist simultaneously at the center and on the fringe of the culture industry?

Liner Notes for the Revolution offers a startling new perspective on these acclaimed figures—a perspective informed by the overlooked contributions of other Black women concerned with the work of their musical peers. Zora Neale Hurston appears as a sound archivist and a performer, Lorraine Hansberry as a queer Black feminist critic of modern culture, and Pauline Hopkins as America's first Black female cultural commentator. Brooks tackles the complicated racial politics of blues music recording, song collecting, and rock and roll criticism. She makes lyrical forays into the blues pioneers Bessie Smith and Mamie Smith, as well as fans who became critics, like the record-label entrepreneur and writer Rosetta Reitz. In the twenty-first century, pop superstar Janelle Monae's liner notes are recognized for their innovations, while celebrated singers Cécile McLorin Salvant, Rhiannon Giddens, and Valerie June take their place as cultural historians.

About Daphne A. Brooks

Daphne A. Brooks is the author of Jeff Buckley's Grace and Bodies in Dissent, winner of the Errol Hill Award for outstanding scholarship in African American performance studies. The William R. Kenan Jr. Professor of African American Studies and Professor of Theater Studies, American Studies, and Women's, Gender, and Sexuality Studies at Yale University, Brooks has written liner notes to accompany the recordings of Aretha Franklin, Tammi Terrell, and Prince, as well as stories for the New York Times, the Guardian, the Nation, and Pitchfork.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Tosh on May 15, 2021

Kimley and I will be interviewing Daphne A. Brooks on her "Liner Notes for the Revolution" this coming May 15th. It's an excellent book and a wonderful guest: Listen to it here: Book Musik podcast......more

Goodreads review by Casey on January 20, 2024

Please someone make this into a podcast!!! The writing was so academic and inaccessible. Who was the intended audience? It seems to be her peers rather than the public and that is a shame because it’s brilliant and people would love it. There were just so many sentences with way too much packed in to......more

Goodreads review by Dan on May 07, 2021

A staggering, monumental, and quite overwhelming work of Black feminist scholarship. It's theoretically solid but eminently readable, its focus always on Black women's unsung creative and intellectual labor in and around the music industry.......more

Goodreads review by Andrea on March 29, 2023

For anyone interested in a deep dive of Black women in music, this is an amazing resource. The narration is excellent but I do wish I'd read it off the page because many of the women she references were unfamiliar to me and I just wanted to Google them and/or listen to their music while reading. This......more

Goodreads review by Matthew on March 21, 2023

There's a lot of good material in this book about Black women's production of music (mostly throughout the early-mid 20th century) and about archival practices regarding popular culture and music, but this comes with just as much if not more overly abstract academic theory that seriously hampers the......more