
Steve Waksman
Author of Instruments of Desire: The Electric Guitar and the Shaping of Musical Experience
About the Author
Steve Waksman is Associate Professor of Music and American Studies at Smith College. He is the author of Instruments of Desire: The Electric Guitar and the Shaping of Musical Experience
Works by Steve Waksman
This Ain't the Summer of Love: Conflict and Crossover in Heavy Metal and Punk (2009) 32 copies, 1 review
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Gender
- male
Members
Reviews
This Ain't the Summer of Love: Conflict and Crossover in Heavy Metal and Punk (Roth Family Foundation Music in America Imprint) by Steve Waksman
Waksman demonstrates the formal give and take between metal and punk. He successfully illustrates that within the music itself there was always a dialogue between the two as opposed to the malignant verbal snowball fight took place within the media starting in the late 1970s. Not that said dialogue was always as hot as a teenage makeout session. In early chapters Waksman contrasts ideological strains by comparing artists: the Runaways vs. the Dictators; Iggy Pop vs. Alice Cooper. The word show more “grunge” appears nowhere on the book's cover, yet Seattle's finest is Waksman's great synthesis. Waksman's own unsaid ideology is that even in rock, that most populist of mediums, there is an underground, critically fecund history that differs from the mainstream narrative. The underground hidden channel is where new forms are born and therefore the specimens which get canonized are made. Waksman knows that the critics that know best wrote in zines not magazines. Another emerging thesis: any label that released Black Flag's My War, Minutemen's Double Nickels On the Dime, and Husker Du's Zen Arcade all in the same year has a right to claim best rock label of the 1980s (or maybe any other decade for that matter). The label: SST Records. The year: 1984. show less
Awards
Statistics
- Works
- 3
- Members
- 71
- Popularity
- #245,551
- Rating
- 3.9
- Reviews
- 1
- ISBNs
- 10




