Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

Torpedoing the authorship of popular music: a reading of Gorillaz' ‘Feel Good Inc.’

2009; Cambridge University Press; Volume: 28; Issue: 2 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1017/s0261143009001809

ISSN

1474-0095

Autores

Lars Eckstein,

Tópico(s)

Asian Culture and Media Studies

Resumo

Abstract This article addresses problems of authorship and creative authority in popular music, in particular in view of a pervasive split between modes of aesthetic production (involving modernist assemblage, multiple authorship, and the late capitalist logic of major label policies) and modes of aesthetic reception (which tend to take popular music as the organic output of individual performers). While rock musicians have attempted to come to terms with this phenomenon by either performing a ‘Romantic’ sense of authenticity (basically by importing folk values to the production process) or ‘Modernist authenticity’ (by highlighting experimentation and alienation), Damon Albarn and Jamie Hewlett, creators of Gorillaz, found a third way which ingeniously allows them to do both. By creating a virtual rock band, and by hiding their own media personalities behind those of their virtual alter egos, they brought themselves into a position which allows them to produce ‘sincere’ popular music which ‘playfully’ stages the absurdities of major label music business while very successfully operating within its very confines.

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