𝔖 Bobbio Scriptorium
✦   LIBER   ✦

Cover of Ready for a Brand New Beat: How 'Dancing in the Street' Became the Anthem for a Changing America

Ready for a Brand New Beat: How 'Dancing in the Street' Became the Anthem for a Changing America

✍ Scribed by Kurlansky, Mark


Book ID
108461342
Publisher
Penguin Publishing Group
Year
2013
Tongue
en-US
Weight
5 MB
Category
Fiction
ISBN-13
9781101616260

No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.

✦ Synopsis


Can a song change a nation? In 1964, Marvin Gaye, record producer William “Mickey” Stevenson, and Motown songwriter Ivy Jo Hunter wrote “Dancing in the Street.” The song was recorded at Motown’s Hitsville USA Studio by Martha and the Vandellas, with lead singer Martha Reeves arranging her own vocals. Released on July 31, the song was supposed to be an upbeat dance recording—a precursor to disco, and a song about the joyousness of dance. But events overtook it, and the song became one of the icons of American pop culture. The Beatles had landed in the U.S. in early 1964. By the summer, the sixties were in full swing. The summer of 1964 was the Mississippi Freedom Summer, the Berkeley Free Speech Movement, the beginning of the Vietnam War, the passage of the Civil Rights Act, and the lead-up to a dramatic election. As the country grew more radicalized in those few months, “Dancing in the Street” gained currency as an activist...


📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES


cover
✍ Fallon, K J 📂 Fiction 📅 2018 🏛 Skyhorse Publishing 🌐 English ⚖ 354 KB

Reminiscent of God in a Cup and The Devil's Cup, this is an inside look into the modern business of making coffee. But rather than a general history, Coffee for One focuses on the revolution that made single serve such a popular way to consume coffee worldwide, and the competition and conflict that

Don Lattin. The Harvard Psychedelic Club
✍ Nancy D. Campbell 📂 Article 📅 2010 🏛 John Wiley and Sons 🌐 English ⚖ 107 KB

Readers interested in the history of hallucinogens would do better to turn to Erika Dyck's Psychedelic Psychiatry: LSD from Clinic to Campus (2008), which chronicles the reorientation of LSD from a psychotherapeutic tool and an object of legitimate clinical research to a "catalyst for a cultural rev