Jack Hamilton is Assistant Professor of American Studies and Media Studies at the University of Virginia.
From Little Richard and Chuck Berry to the Dominoes, Ike Turner,
and Howlin’ Wolf, rock and roll’s founding figures were African
American, yet ‘rock’ as we know and hear it now is coded white…In
some of his sharpest passages, Hamilton shows how much rockism’s
whiteness depended on [the] confining ideas of blackness…He
contributes a new and valuable piece to a larger and still
contentious project: the struggle against the essentialization of
racial and ethnic identity.
*Los Angeles Review of Books*
Ambitious and rewarding… Just around Midnight seeks to tell the
story of [black] erasure [from rock ‘n’ roll], and it does so quite
compellingly by bringing together artists and songs that our
implicitly segregationist narratives have encouraged us to keep
apart.
*Chronicle of Higher Education*
Extraordinary…Hamilton doesn’t pretend to have all the answers in
Just around Midnight but he asks all the right questions. It
challenges so much of what we’ve taken for granted about rock and
roll history that one reading won’t do…Any future book that deals
with the social and racial aspects of popular music in the 20th
century will have to contend with Just around Midnight. The bar has
been raised.
*Arts Fuse*
Brilliant…[A] valuable engagement with the unheard narrative of
race in rock and roll.
*Times Higher Education*
To the age-old cries that ‘rock is dead,’ Jack Hamilton’s book
says, ‘Think again!’ Just around Midnight considers the
often-elided racial mythologies, cross-cultural intimacies, and
racially-charged aesthetic obfuscations that haunt the foundations
of American popular music culture. For anyone who remains easily
seduced by the romance of Rock and Roll Hall of Fame
canon-building, this book is a necessary read.
*Daphne Brooks, Yale University*
This new listening to the black-and-white racial politics of rock
in the 1960s is full of rich insights, provocative thinking, and
persuasive writing. As the revolutions of critical race and ethnic
studies continue to reveal new generations of critics born in their
wake, revisitations of rock history like this one will be crucial
to rethinking the musical past.
*Josh Kun, University of Southern California*
As musically detailed as it is theoretically expansive, Just around
Midnight reveals that popular music of the 1960s was defined by
more vibrant interracial collaborations and more violent anti-black
erasures than we could have imagined. This is a beautifully written
and provocatively argued work of intellect, heart, and soul.
*Emily Lordi, University of Massachusetts Amherst*
As Jack Hamilton makes clear in this exceptionally perceptive work,
the most common way to talk about race in rock music is to not talk
about it at all…Hamilton’s text is bold, sophisticated, and
brilliant. For anyone looking for a book challenging conventional
narratives of music history, this is a fantastic candidate.
*PopMatters*
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