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This is a excerpt of a patrons-only episode. To become a patron from just ÂŁ3pcm, visit Patreon.com/LoveMessagePod.

In the concluding episode of the mini-series, Jeremy completes his account of those Marxist academics and thinkers whose work either makes reference to music or can be brought to bear on it. Picking up in the 1950s, we hear about ways of understanding music's autonomous capacity to affect people's bodies and make them feel, desublimation, Structuralism and it's descendents, and vibe. Jeremy touches on the writing of Bloch, Marcuse, Freud, Barthes and Kristeva, as well as staples of the show Deleuze and Guattari. We hear about the 'grain' of the voice, the difference between the meaning and the material aspects of song, and finally return to the big question: what drives historical change?

Tracklist:

Pete Seeger - Which Side Are You On?

Ewan McColl & Peggy Seeger - The Shoals of Herring

The Grateful Dead - Birdsong

Books, articles etc:

#ACFM Podcast on folk music: https://novaramedia.com/2021/05/08/acfm-microdose-jeremy-gilbert-on-folk-music/

Ernst Bloch - The Spirit of Utopia

Herbert Marcuse - One Dimensional Man

Herbert Marcuse - Eros and Civilisation

Sigmund Freud - Civilization and its Discontents

Roland Barthes - Mythologies

Roland Barthes - The Grain of the Voice

Julia Kristeva - Revolutions in Poetic Language

Deleuze & Guattari - Anti-Oedipus

Deleuze & Guattari - A Thousand Plateaus

Jeremy Gilbert - 'Becoming Music: The Rhizomatic Moment of Improvisation’ in Deleuze and Music Buchanan & Swiboda (Eds)

Jaques Attali - Noise