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Articles

Musicians on Television: Visible, Audible and Ignored

Pages 310-330 | Published online: 29 Jan 2009
 

Abstract

This article focuses on the prominent anxieties generated by television broadcasts of musicians from the 1930s onwards. It explores three specific issues: first, a concern that television images of performing musicians are detrimental to the experience of music; second, negative judgments about the consequences of television sound quality; and, third, fears that musical value is undermined by the distracted character of television reception. Focusing on these particular points, the article also raises a series of more profound questions about how various strategies of looking and listening influence our understanding of music.

Additional information

Notes on contributors

Keith Negus

Keith Negus ([email protected]) has worked at the Universities of Leicester and Puerto Rico and is currently based in the Department of Music at Goldsmiths College.

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