Listen to This: Unabridged edition

By Alex Ross, Read by Alex Ross

In Listen to This, Alex Ross, the music critic for The New Yorker, looks both backward and forward in time, capturing essential figures and ideas in classical-music history as well as giving an alternative view of recent pop music that emphasizes the power of the individual musical voice in whatever genre.

In Listen to This, Alex Ross will combine a selection of his New Yorker essays with new material that will serve as an introduction to some basic classical-music concepts and figures and will give an alternative view of recent pop music. It will demonstrate the essential equality of great musical creators in whatever genre.

It begins with ‘Listen To This’, his most famous New Yorker essay, an autobiographical account of his early passion for classical music and belated discovery of pop music in college. It sets forth the themes of the book as a whole: how classical music can become a vital part of wider contemporary culture, how it can survive and even prosper in the face of proclamations of its decline.
There follows a new essay tracing the history of the chacona, a dance form based on a descending bass line, which originated as an erotic Afro-Caribbean dance in the sixteenth century, then migrated to Europe and inspired such Baroque masterpieces as Bach’s Chaconne in D minor, and later found echoes in the bass lines both of twentieth-century classical masterpieces and African-American blues. Led Zeppelin’s ‘Dazed and Confused’ and Bob Dylan’s ‘Simple Twist of Fate’, among other songs, extend the principle. This chapter develops, in a less personal way, the themes of ‘Listen to This’, and serves as a kind of whirlwind tour of five centuries of music history. Third in the introductory section is ‘The Record Effect,’ an account of technology’s impact on pop and classical music.

Author: Alex Ross
Format: Audio-Book
Release Date: 25 Nov 2010
Pages: None
ISBN: 978-0-00-742106-0
Detailed Edition: Unabridged edition
ALEX ROSS has been the music critic of The New Yorker since 1996. From 1992 to 1996 he wrote for the New York Times. His first book, The Rest is Noise: Listening to the Twentieth Century, published in 2007, was awarded The Guardian First Book Award and was shortlisted for the Pulitzer and Samuel Johnson prizes. In 2008 he became a MacArthur Fellow. A native of Washington, DC, he now lives in Manhattan.

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