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    How The Beatles Destroyed Rock 'N' Roll An Alternative History of American Popular Music

    Oxford University Press

    "There are no definitive histories," writes Elijah Wald, in this provocative reassessment of American popular music, "because the past keeps looking different as the present changes." Earlier musical styles sound different to us today because we hear them through the musical filter of other styles that came after them, all the way through funk and hiphop. 
    As its blasphemous title suggests, How the Beatles Destroyed Rock 'n' Roll rejects the conventional pieties of mainstream jazz and rock history. Rather than concentrating on those traditionally favoured styles, the book traces the evolution of popular music through developing tastes, trends and technologies—including the role of records, radio, jukeboxes and television —to give a fuller, more balanced account of the broad variety of music that captivated listeners over the course of the twentieth century. 

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