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Good Booty: Love and Sex, Black & White, Body and Soul in American Music
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HarperCollins 2017
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Description

NPR Best Books of 2017

In this sweeping history of popular music in the United States, NPR’s acclaimed music critic examines how popular music shapes fundamental American ideas and beliefs, allowing us to communicate difficult emotions and truths about our most fraught social issues, most notably sex and race.

In Good Booty, Ann Powers explores how popular music became America’s primary erotic art form. Powers takes us from nineteenth-century New Orleans through dance-crazed Jazz Age New York to the teen scream years of mid-twentieth century rock-and-roll to the cutting-edge adventures of today’s web-based pop stars. Drawing on her deep knowledge and insights on gender and sexuality, Powers recounts stories of forbidden lovers, wild shimmy-shakers, orgasmic gospel singers, countercultural perverts, soft-rock sensitivos, punk Puritans, and the cyborg known as Britney Spears to illuminate how eroticism—not merely sex, but love, bodily freedom, and liberating joy—became entwined within the rhythms and melodies of American song. This cohesion, she reveals, touches the heart of America's anxieties and hopes about race, feminism, marriage, youth, and freedom.

In a survey that spans more than a century of music, Powers both heralds little known artists such as Florence Mills, a contemporary of Josephine Baker, and gospel queen Dorothy Love Coates, and sheds new light on artists we think we know well, from the Beatles and Jim Morrison to Madonna and Beyoncé. In telling the history of how American popular music and sexuality intersect—a magnum opus over two decades in the making—Powers offers new insights into our nation psyche and our soul.

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Format:
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Street Date:
08/15/2017
Language:
English
ISBN:
9780062463715
ASIN:
B01LYS5TQF
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APA Citation (style guide)

Ann Powers. (2017). Good Booty: Love and Sex, Black & White, Body and Soul in American Music. HarperCollins.

Chicago / Turabian - Author Date Citation (style guide)

Ann Powers. 2017. Good Booty: Love and Sex, Black & White, Body and Soul in American Music. HarperCollins.

Chicago / Turabian - Humanities Citation (style guide)

Ann Powers, Good Booty: Love and Sex, Black & White, Body and Soul in American Music. HarperCollins, 2017.

MLA Citation (style guide)

Ann Powers. Good Booty: Love and Sex, Black & White, Body and Soul in American Music. HarperCollins, 2017.

Note! Citation formats are based on standards as of July 2022. Citations contain only title, author, edition, publisher, and year published. Citations should be used as a guideline and should be double checked for accuracy.
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        Ann Powers is NPR's music critic and correspondent. In the decade she has worked with NPR, she has written extensively on music and culture, appeared regularly on the All Songs Considered podcast, and news shows including All Things Considered and Morning Edition. Her books include a memoir, Weird Like Us: My Bohemian America, Good Booty: Love and Sex, Black and White, Body and Soul in American Music and Piece by Piece with Tori Amos. She lives in Nashville.

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fullDescription

NPR Best Books of 2017

In this sweeping history of popular music in the United States, NPR’s acclaimed music critic examines how popular music shapes fundamental American ideas and beliefs, allowing us to communicate difficult emotions and truths about our most fraught social issues, most notably sex and race.

In Good Booty, Ann Powers explores how popular music became America’s primary erotic art form. Powers takes us from nineteenth-century New Orleans through dance-crazed Jazz Age New York to the teen scream years of mid-twentieth century rock-and-roll to the cutting-edge adventures of today’s web-based pop stars. Drawing on her deep knowledge and insights on gender and sexuality, Powers recounts stories of forbidden lovers, wild shimmy-shakers, orgasmic gospel singers, countercultural perverts, soft-rock sensitivos, punk Puritans, and the cyborg known as Britney Spears to illuminate how eroticism—not merely sex, but love, bodily freedom, and liberating joy—became entwined within the rhythms and melodies of American song. This cohesion, she reveals, touches the heart of America's anxieties and hopes about race, feminism, marriage, youth, and freedom.

In a survey that spans more than a century of music, Powers both heralds little known artists such as Florence Mills, a contemporary of Josephine Baker, and gospel queen Dorothy Love Coates, and sheds new light on artists we think we know well, from the Beatles and Jim Morrison to Madonna and Beyoncé. In telling the history of how American popular music and sexuality intersect—a magnum opus over two decades in the making—Powers offers new insights into our nation psyche and our soul.

reviews
      • premium: False
      • source: Amanda Petrusich, author of Do Not Sell At Any Price
      • content:

        "No writer is better equipped than Ann Powers to clarify and dissect the fundamental American myths that power our popular music. Good Booty is an expansive, electrifying, and important book. It changed the way I listen." — Amanda Petrusich, author of Do Not Sell At Any Price

        "No writer on music has as keen a mind or as great a heart as Ann Powers. Sex is the subject, but Good Booty is really a tour-de-force history of an entire century of pop, rich in feeling and fierce in insight. It's a dazzling achievement." — Alex Ross, The Rest is Noise

        "A revelatory road trip through the erotic fever dreams of American culture . . . tells the whole epic saga of how music became the confessional where we go to share our deepest secrets and desires . . . Only Ann Powers could make this story so head-spinning—and often heartbreaking." — Rob Sheffield, author of Dreaming the Beatles

        "A fearless and often funny, feminist work. I feel like I have been waiting my whole life for this book—Good Booty is glorious!" — Jessica Hopper, author of The First Collection of Criticism by a Living Female Rock Critic

        "An instant, indispensable classic, for a culture that always needs sexual healing." — Carl Wilson, author of Let's Talk About Love

        "A major, original, comprehensive piece of rock history and analysis." — Robert Christgau, author of Going Into the City

        "With precision and wit, and across multiple musical genres, Powers contextualizes the complicated interplay of gender, sex, and race inherent in popular music within and against the backdrop of America's puritanical founding." — Library Journal, starred review

        "Fascinating. . . . readers won't look at Lady Gaga or Nicki Minaj the same way." — Kirkus

        "Informative and entertaining ... Powers reveals an extraordinary breadth of knowledge and insight and has produced an absolutely essential addition to any pop-culture collection." — Booklist, starred review

        "NPR music critic Ann Powers explores themes of gender, sexuality, race and identity in this sweeping survey of popular music." — Chicago Tribune, Summer Reading Round Up

        "Stirring." — O, the Oprah Magazine

        "Both an indispensable guide to American pop music and a damned fine read . . . The best thing about Good Booty is that it reminds us that the right song shows us how to be somebody in a way that's not possible with any other art form." — Wall Street Journal

        "A fascinating history of popular music." — Bustle, "Best Nonfiction of the Month"

        "If for no other reason—though there are lots of other reasons—the book is worth a read for its mapping of the way hope and joy are present even in the darkest times. . . Powers' writing is deeply compassionate and nuanced." — Chapter 16

        "A fascinating history of popular music." — Bustle, Best Nonfiction Books of August 2017

      • premium: True
      • source: Publisher's Weekly
      • content:

        June 12, 2017
        In her ambitious history of American pop music, NPR critic and correspondent Powers delves into a diverse range of music forms including Creole love songs and tracks to twerk to on MTV. Above all, Powers (Weird like Us) embraces the profound, and often illicit, influence African-American music had on mainstream culture. Beginning her book in early 19th-century New Orleans, Powers examines the exotic appeal of the city’s diverse cultures on the divided nation that absorbed it. From there she speeds through two centuries of music including ragtime, gospel, R&B, rock and roll, punk, disco, and hip-hop, focusing on artists and genres that transformed the way people move on the dance floor and in the bedroom. The sweeping themes and expansive time span make for a daunting endeavor, one that Powers further complicates by tackling big related topics such as marriage and the internet. Broad overviews of musical eras highlight important artists, some well-known (Elvis, Hendrix, Madonna, Beyoncé), others less so (Florence Mills, Dorothy Love Coates, Tribe 8). Powers alternates between basic Wikipedia-level historiography and academic theorizing, focusing on the interchanges between song, identity, and the body. Powers’s inevitable neglect of dominant genres (swing-era jazz) and essential figures (James Brown) exposes the impossibility of her undertaking. Still, as an introduction to the racially and sexually charged legacy of pop music in the U.S., this book is well worth a spin.

      • premium: True
      • source: Kirkus
      • content:

        June 1, 2017
        Forget drugs: sex and rock & roll are where it's at in this survey of the devil's music and its carnal dimensions.NPR music critic Powers (Weird Like Us: My Bohemian America, 2000, etc.) opens on a political note, observing, "America's erotic drive emerged as inseparable from the fact of its troubled multiculturalism." Take it as a given that nations have "erotic drives" and that any discussion of "American bodies" requires us to acknowledge "the legacy of gross inequality that begins in the enslavement of Africans." The author then settles into her occasionally diffuse narrative that connects Congo Square to Beyonce and bemoans the devolution of Ma Rainey's bawdy to the pornified, auto-tuned hip-hop of today. Where Powers successfully connects the dots, light bulbs flash: it is fascinating to watch her join the gay subculture of disco to the success of the sisters Labelle, nee the Blue Bells, remade in "a previously unexplored space where glam met funk met soul via strictly female interplay." (Well, perhaps not strictly female, since, as Powers notes, the designer of Labelle's outrageously flamboyant costumes went on to invent the costumes of the swaggering cartoon band KISS.) Even where she does not successfully make those connections, as with her notes on the apache ("pronounced A-POSH, not like the Native American tribal name") dance and its not-so-subtle masochism, which never quite caught on in the larger culture, she ventures interesting theses. Mostly, the author strings together bright tidbits of cultural trivia to reconstruct and deconstruct the kinship of dirty blues and gospel, the shared underage girlfriends of now-iconic British rock stars, and other points of prurient interest. A mixed bag, sometimes entertaining, sometimes arid, but full of useful insights; readers won't look at Lady Gaga or Nicki Minaj the same way after considering them among the "cartoonish card deck of sexualized female archetypes" that constitutes so much of the present pop scene.

        COPYRIGHT(2017) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

      • premium: True
      • source: Library Journal
      • content:

        Starred review from June 15, 2017

        From Britney Spears's manufactured sex appeal to Jim Morrison's toxic masculinity, NPR music critic Powers (Piece by Piece; Weird Like Us: My Bohemian America) explores the intersection between America's musical landscape and its overwrought cultural views of sex. She opens with a meditation on the interplay between body and sound crystallized in New Orleans' Congo Square in the 19th century. Here, confluences of African and European musical styles blended to create the roots of jazz and what would become rock and roll. As a corollary, popular music became an amalgam of racial tension, sexual expression, and gender expectations that continue to reverberate into the new millennia. From Miley Cyrus's twerking to Beyonce's "Formation," Powers articulates how artists have manipulated or experimented with each of these threads to forge their own musical identity and sound. VERDICT With precision and wit, and across multiple musical genres, Powers contextualizes the complicated interplay of gender, sex, and race inherent in popular music within and against the backdrop of America's puritanical founding.--Joshua Finnell, Los Alamos National Lab., NM

        Copyright 2017 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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NPR Best Books of 2017

In this sweeping history of popular music in the United States, NPR’s acclaimed music critic examines how popular music shapes fundamental American ideas and beliefs, allowing us to communicate difficult emotions and truths about our most fraught social issues, most notably sex and race.

In Good Booty, Ann Powers explores how popular music became America’s primary erotic art form. Powers takes us from nineteenth-century New Orleans through dance-crazed Jazz Age New York to the teen scream years of mid-twentieth century rock-and-roll to the cutting-edge adventures of today’s web-based pop stars. Drawing on her deep knowledge and insights on gender and sexuality, Powers recounts stories of forbidden lovers, wild shimmy-shakers, orgasmic gospel singers, countercultural perverts, soft-rock sensitivos, punk Puritans, and the cyborg known as Britney Spears to illuminate how eroticism—not merely sex, but love,...

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