Acknowledgments Prologue Introduction: Music on My Mind Rhythm 1. Revolutionary Mixtape 2. Grown-Ass Women 3. Digging the Scene (with the Gangsta Lean) 4. Habermas in the Hood 5. Oh My! (The Sexual Healing Interlude) 6. The E-Double and the Trouble Man 7. Bellbottoms, Bluebelles, and the Funke-Ass White Girl 8. Nuyorican Nostalgia 9. Some Otha Shit And Blues 10. Radio Free Soul 11. Big Pimpin' 12. But It's Not a Rap CD 13. Three the Hard Way
Mark Anthony Neal is Associate Professor of Black Popular Culture in the Program in African and African-American Studies at Duke University. Neal is the author of Whatthe Music Said, Soul Babies, and Songs in the Key ofBlack Life, all published by Routledge.
"Neal avoids polemics on the lyrical banality of black music or the
over-hyped, oversexed videos pervading Black Entertainment
Television. He redefines the terrain by advancing a discussion of
artists working and succeeding within--and along the boundaries
of--the existing subgenres of black popular music." -- The
Washington Post
"Neal creates a dense, sensuous space for a critical cultured black
perspective, what Soul Babies called the 'post-soul aesthetic' in
black America. He illustrates his thesis through use of black
vernacular forms to produce a voice that is both streetwise and
scholarly ...Neal may be the first writer capable of developing
groundbreaking ideas in the academy and getting a new sticker on
his 'ghetto pass' in one stroke." -- TheWashington Post
"Neal's vision is (as always) right on target, and he does analyze
important subjects never heretofore treated in depth. Surely worthy
of consideration by those academic libraries with a strong interest
in contemporary black American cultural studies." -- Library
Journal
"Reading this book is like sitting down to a plate of collard
greens with chopped up onions and tomatoes and a little touch of
wine vinegar. A mouth-watering piece of hot water corn bread. A
lean mean piece of short rib. And you know it's only going to get
better because there is a sumptuous banana pudding bringing up the
rear . . . . Smack those lips. Rub them hands. Say the blessing and
get ready to feast! Thank you Mark Anthony Neal. It is delicious
and truly delectable." -- Umar Bin Hassan, The Last Poets: Selected
Poems and a History of the LastPoetsn
"Engaging, smart, and funny as hell, Songs in the Key ofBlack Life
leaves no soul unturned. His lyrical analyses range from Patti
Labelle to Laura Nyro, Jill Scott to Jay Z, academia to black
radio. You won't find many scholars with Neal's deep and abiding
knowledge of contemporary black popular culture, and you won't find
any able to throw down such head-noddin' prose." -- Robin D. G.
Kelley, author of Freedom Dreams: The Black RadicalImagination
"Mark Anthony Neal is one of the most creative and insightful
intellectuals on the contemporary scene exploring how black popular
music, especially R&B, provides a complex and rich historical
legacy of submerged memories and communities of struggle that
encompass the lived experience of black life in the United States."
-- Henry Giroux, author of Impure Acts:The Practical Politics of
Cultural Studies
"Once again, Mark Anthony Neal has proven himself to be one of our
most astute critics of contemporary American music. Neal takes
readers on an exciting journey through the terrain of black popular
culture shedding new light on the relationship between power,
politics and cultural production. Courageous, Provocative and
Insightful, Songsin the Key of Black Life is sure to spark dialogue
and debate for all who read it." -- Farah Jasmine Griffin,
Professor of English and Comparative Literature at Columbia
University
"Reading this book is like sitting down to a plate of collard
greens with chopped up onions and tomatoes and a little touch of
wine vinegar. A mouth-watering piece of hot water corn bread. A
lean mean piece of short rib. And you know it's only going to get
better because there is a sumptuous banana pudding bringing up the
rear . . . . Smack those lips. Rub them hands. Say the blessing and
get ready to feast! Thank you Mark Anthony Neal. It is delicious
and truly delectable." -- Umar Bin Hassan, The Last Poets: Selected
Poems and a History of the LastPoets
"Neal creates a dense, sensuous space for a critical cultured black
perspective, what "Soul Babies" called the "post-soul aesthetic" in
black America. He illustrates his thesis throught use of black
vernacular forms to produce a voice that is both streetwise and
scholarly ...Neal may be the first writer capable of developing
groundbreaking ideas in the academy and getting a new sticker on
his "ghetto pass" in one stroke." -- TheWashington Post
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