Full Description
Coughing and Clapping: Investigating Audience Experience explores the processes and experiences of attending live music events from the initial decision to attend through to audience responses and memories of a performance after it has happened. The book brings together international researchers who consider the experience of being an audience member from a range of theoretical and empirical perspectives. Whether enjoying a drink at a jazz gig, tweeting at a pop concert or suppressing a cough at a classical recital, audience experience is affected by motivation, performance quality, social atmosphere and group and personal identity. Drawing on the implications of these experiences and attitudes, the authors consider the question of what makes an audience, and argue convincingly for the practical and academic value of that question.
Contents
Chapter 1 Prelude, Stephanie Pitts, Karen Burland; Before the Event; Chapter 2 Marketing Live Music, Daragh O'Reilly, Gretchen Larsen, Krzysztof Kubacki; Chapter 3 Musical, Social and Moral Dilemmas, Stephanie Pitts; Chapter 4 Safe and Sound, Robert Kronenburg; During the Event; Chapter 5 Interlude - Audience Members as Researchers, Stephanie Pitts, Karen Burland; Chapter 6 The Value of 'Being There', Jennifer Radbourne, Katya Johanson, Hilary Glow; Chapter 7 In the Heat of the Moment, Catherine J. Stevens, Roger T. Dean, Kim Vincs, Emery Schubert; Chapter 8 Texting and Tweeting at Live Music Concerts, Lucy Bennett; Chapter 9 Moving the Gong, Karen Burland, Luke Windsor, Christophe de Bézenac, Matthew Bourne, Petter Frost Fadnes, Nick Katuszonek; Chapter 10 Context, Cohesion and Community, Sidsel Karlsen; Chapter 11 Interlude - Lasting Memories of Ephemeral Events, Karen Burland, Stephanie Pitts; Chapter 12 'The Gigs I've Gone To', Sara Cohen; Chapter 13 Warts and All, Paul Long; Chapter 14 Staying Behind, Melissa C. Dobson, John Sloboda; Chapter 15 Postlude, Karen Burland, Stephanie Pitts;