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Hold tight : black masculinity, millennials and the meaning of grime / by Jeffrey Boakye.

By: Boakye, Jeffrey [author.]Publisher: London : Influx Press, 2018Edition: New editionDescription: 379 pages ; 20 cmContent type: text Media type: unmediated Carrier type: volume001: 43835ISBN: 9781910312414 (pbk.) :Subject(s): Electronica (Music) -- Great Britain -- History and criticism | Blacks -- Great Britain -- Music -- History and criticism | Masculinity in music | MusicDDC classification: 781.648 BOA LOC classification: ML3540.5 | .B6 2018Summary: Celebrating over 50 key songs that make up grime's DNA, Jeffrey Boakye explores the meaning of the music and why it has such resonance in the UK. He also examines the representation of masculinity in the music and the media that covers it. Both a loving critique of grime and an investigation into life as a black man in Britain today, this book is an electrifying and wonderfully confident debut from a music and culture critic with a very bright future ahead of him.
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Item type Current library Collection Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode
Book MAIN LIBRARY Book PRINT 781.648 BOA (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 2 Available 113332

Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:

Hold Tight is the book that kick started the 'Grime Library'. Bursting into bookshops in July 2017 to rave reviews and a sold out event at Rough Trade East, Hold Tight paved the way for Grime-related books such as Wiley's Eskiboy (Penguin 2017), Dan Hancox's Inner City Pressure (4th Estate, 2018), and DJ Target's Grime Kids (Trapeze, 2018; now being made into a television series). This new edition of Hold Tight features new chapters for 2018, a brand new introduction from Boakye and a brand new cover. This makes Hold Tight the most up to date book on Grime in 2018. Celebrating over sixty key songs that make up Grime's DNA, Jeffrey Boakye explores the meaning of the music and why it has such resonance in the UK. Boakye also examines the representation of masculinity in the music and the media that covers it. Both a love letter to Grime and an investigation into life as a black man in Britain today, Hold Tight is insightful, very funny and stacked with sentences you'll want to pull up and read again and again.

Previous edition: 2017.

Includes bibliographical references and discography.

Celebrating over 50 key songs that make up grime's DNA, Jeffrey Boakye explores the meaning of the music and why it has such resonance in the UK. He also examines the representation of masculinity in the music and the media that covers it. Both a loving critique of grime and an investigation into life as a black man in Britain today, this book is an electrifying and wonderfully confident debut from a music and culture critic with a very bright future ahead of him.

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