The Beatles and Humour -

The Beatles and Humour

Mockers, Funny Papers, and Other Play
Buch | Softcover
280 Seiten
2025
Bloomsbury Academic USA (Verlag)
978-1-5013-7935-2 (ISBN)
36,15 inkl. MwSt
The Beatles are known for cheeky punchlines, but understanding their humor goes beyond laughing at John Lennon’s memorable “rattle your jewelry” dig at the Royal Variety Performance in 1963. From the beginning, the Beatles’ music was full of wordplay and winks, guided by comedic influences ranging from rhythm and blues, British radio, and the Liverpool pub scene. Gifted with timing and deadpan wit, the band habitually relied on irony, sarcasm, and nonsense. Early jokes revealed an aptitude for improvisation and self-awareness, techniques honed throughout the 1960s and into solo careers. Experts in the art of play, including musical experimentation, the Beatles’ shared sense of humor is a key ingredient to their appeal during the 1960s—and to their endurance.

The Beatles and Humour offers innovative takes on the serious art of Beatle fun, an instrument of social, political, and economic critique. Chapters also situate the band alongside British and non-British predecessors and collaborators, such as Billy Preston and Yoko Ono, uncovering diverse components and unexpected effects of the Beatles’ output.

Katie Kapurch is Associate Professor of English at Texas State University, USA. Her books include Victorian Melodrama in the Twenty-First Century (2016), New Critical Perspectives on the Beatles (2016 with Kenneth Womack), and Blackbird: How Black Musicians Sang the Beatles into Being (2023). Forthcoming books include Disney Plus Beatles with Bloomsbury Academic. Richard Mills is Senior Lecturer in Literature and Popular Culture at St Mary’s University, UK. He is the author of The Beatles and Fandom: Sex, Death and Progressive Nostalgia (2019) and co-editor of Mad Dogs and Englishness (2017). Forthcoming books include The Beatles and Black Music: Post-colonial Theory, Musicology and Remix Culture with Bloomsbury Academic. Matthias Heyman is Assistant Professor in the Arts at Vrije Universiteit Brussel and Lecturer at Koninklijk Conservatorium Brussel, where he is the Vice-chair of Research. He also is Postdoctoral Fellow at LUCA School of Arts, Leuven and freelances as a double bassist. He has a forthcoming monograph on jazz bassist Jimmie Blanton.

Editor and Contributor Bios
Introduction: Mockers, Funny Papers, and Rolling Up: Why the Beatles are Still in Play
Katie Kapurch, Texas State University, USA, Matthias Heyman, Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Belgium, and Richard Mills, St Mary's University, UK
PART I: Playing Together
1. The Beatles and the Bard, the Walrus and the Eggman: Playing with William Shakespeare and Lewis Carroll and/as Perspective by Incongruity
Katie Kapurch, Texas State University, USA
2. I Laugh and Act Like a Clown: The Beatles as Paradoxical Clowns
Matthias Heyman, Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Belgium
3. Defuse, Dilute, Deflate: The Beatles Turn It On and Laugh It Off
Aviv Kammay, Wingra School, USA
4. Billy Preston and the Beatles Get Back: Black Music and the Wisdom of Wordplay and Wit
Mike Alleyne, Middle Tennessee State University, USA, Walter Everett, University of Michigan, USA, and Katie Kapurch, Texas State University
PART II: Playing Solo
5. Madcap Laughs: The Evolution of John Lennon’s Humor
Jeffrey Roessner, Mercyhurst University, USA
6. “Shall We Dance? This is Fun!”: Paul McCartney’s Popular Song Pastiches
David Thurmaier, University of Missouri-Kansas City Conservatory, USA
7. “I Was So Young When I Was Born”: George Harrison and the Mansion of Mirth
John Covach, University of Rochester, USA
8. George Martin, Parlophone Records, and Great Britain’s Funnymen
Kenneth Womack, Monmouth University, USA, and Ed Zareh, writer, USA
9. Yoko Ono’s Avant-Garde Humor
Stephanie Hernandez, Independent Scholar, UK
PART III: Playing in Context
10. Bug Music: Beatle Memes in Sixties American Sitcoms
Matthew Schneider, High Point University, USA
11. The Beatles and the Birth of British Comedy in the 1960s with Beyond the Fringe and Monty Python's Flying Circus
Richard Mills, St Mary’s University, UK
12. Pastiche, Parody, or Post-Irony? The Beatles’ Influence on Tears for Fears
Mark Spicer, Hunter College and the Graduate Center, City University of New York, USA
Index

Erscheinungsdatum
Verlagsort New York
Sprache englisch
Maße 152 x 229 mm
Themenwelt Kunst / Musik / Theater Musik Pop / Rock
ISBN-10 1-5013-7935-6 / 1501379356
ISBN-13 978-1-5013-7935-2 / 9781501379352
Zustand Neuware
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