High Bias: The Distorted History of the Cassette Tape

$21.00

2020 in stock

SKU: 9781469675985 Category:

Description

The cassette tape was revolutionary. Cheap, portable, and reusable, this small plastic rectangle changed music history. Make your own tapes! Trade them with friends! Tape over the ones you don’t like! The cassette tape upended pop culture, creating movements and uniting communities.

This entertaining book charts the journey of the cassette from its invention in the early 1960s to its Walkman-led domination in the 1980s to decline at the birth of compact discs to resurgence among independent music makers. Scorned by the record industry for “killing music,” the cassette tape rippled through scenes corporations couldn’t control. For so many, tapes meant freedom–to create, to invent, to connect.

Marc Masters introduces readers to the tape artists who thrive underground; concert tapers who trade bootlegs; mixtape makers who send messages with cassettes; tape hunters who rescue forgotten sounds; and today’s labels, which reject streaming and sell music on cassette. Their stories celebrate the cassette tape as dangerous, vital, and radical.
Binding Type: Paperback
Author: Marc Masters
Published: 10/03/2023
Publisher: University of North Carolina Press
ISBN: 9781469675985
Pages: 224
Weight: 0.65lbs
Size: 0.60″ H x 8.90″ L x 5.90″ W

About the Author
Marc Masters is a music journalist whose work has appeared in the Washington Post , Pitchfork , Bandcamp Daily, NPR Music, and Rolling Stone. He is the author of No Wave.

Additional information

Weight 0.65 lbs
Dimensions 8.9 × 5.9 × 0.6 in
Physical Info

0.60" H x 8.90" L x 5.90" W (0.65 lbs) 224 pages

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