Author(s)
Season
Subject(s)

From Baby Boomers to millennials, attending a big music festival has basically become a cultural rite of passage in America. In Half a Million Strong, music writer and scholar Gina Arnold explores the history of large music festivals in America and examines their impact on American culture. Studying literature, films, journalism, and other archival detritus of the countercultural era, Arnold looks closely at a number of large and well-known festivals, including the Newport Folk Festival, Woodstock, Altamont, Wattstax, the New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival, Hardly Strictly Bluegrass, and others to map their cultural significance in the American experience. She finds that鈥攆ar from being the utopian and communal spaces of spiritual regeneration that they claim for themselves鈥攖hese large music festivals serve mostly to display the free market to consumers in its very best light. 

鈥淎t a moment when music festivals proliferate as both music and marketing phenomena, Gina Arnold deftly explores their fascinating history in this compulsively readable book. Arnold, as always, writes conversationally, as if she鈥檚 actively thinking on the page鈥攇enerating fresh ideas as they occur to her and following them in previously unexplored directions. That excites the reader鈥檚 own thinking鈥攁nd makes this book inspiring and a great, welcome pleasure.鈥濃擜nthony DeCurtis, author, Lou Reed: A Life 

鈥淗alf a Million Strong tracks the rapid rise of the festivalization of music, and outlines what it means to truly love and live through music and to be in community with other people who do too. With this book, Arnold offers a very necessary examination of just how we got here, as well as a rich, accessible history that is mandatory reading for anyone who has ever spent a day in a muddy field screaming along with their favorite band.鈥濃擩essica Hopper, author, The First Collection of Criticism by a Living Female Rock Critic 

鈥淔rom audience reactions to Dylan going electric at Newport in 1965 to Wattstax in Los Angeles in 1972 to the lost U.S. Festival in the 1980s and beyond, Gina Arnold鈥檚 wonderful individual take on what being at a rock festival means offers new insights by focusing not on the stage, but on us, the festival-going crowd.鈥濃擥eorge McKay, University of East Anglia 

鈥淎 much-needed, well-observed reevaluation of rock-and-roll audiences from a writer with decades in the trenches. An illuminating, historically informed conversation-starter for anyone with a stake in a live music community.鈥濃擩esse Jarnow, author, Heads: A Biography of Psychedelic America 

Paperback

ISBN-13
9781609386085
Retail price
$19.95

eBook, Perpetual

ISBN-13
9781609386092
Retail price
$19.95

Publication Details

Publication Details

Publication Date
11/15/2018
Pages
214 pages
Trim size
6 脳 9 inches
Art
4 b&w images
Edition
1st