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9781478026976 Academic Inspection Copy

Under Pressure

A Song by David Bowie and Queen
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In 1981, David Bowie and Queen both happened to be in Switzerland: They met and made "Under Pressure." Recorded on a lark, the song broke the path for subsequent pop anthems. In Under Pressure, Max Brzezinski tells the classic track's story, charting the relationship between pop music, collective politics, and dominant institutions of state, corporations, and civil society. Brzezinski shows that, like all great pop anthems, "Under Pressure" harnesses collective sentiments in order to model new ways of thinking and acting. As we continue to live under the sign of the global oppressive power the song names, analyzes, and attempts to move beyond, we remain, in Bowie and Freddie Mercury's phrase, under pressure.
Max Brzezinski is the author of Vinyl Age: A Guide to Record Collecting Now.
Introduction. Anthem, Counter-Anthem, Anthemic 1 1. Pressure 2. People 3. Streets 4. Love and Terror Acknowledgments Notes Bibliography Index
"In this provocative, cutting-edge, and gorgeously written book, Max Brzezinski complicates the conventional understanding of the duet by making sense of David Bowie's and Freddie Mercury's distinct contributions while arguing that the subject of the song is people. Brzezinski's interpretations are simultaneously clever and historically grounded, leaving no stone unturned. Under Pressure sets the bar for popular music writing." - Richard T. Rodriguez, author of (A Kiss Across the Ocean: Transatlantic Intimacies of British Post-Punk and US Latinidad) "Max Brzezinski's riveting and learned account of Queen and David Bowie's 'Under Pressure' could not be more timely. Given the turns of recent events too gruesome but also too well known to enumerate, the song's outro lines-'This is our last dance / This is our last dance / This is ourselves'-hit the spot marked X in our present moment." - Eric Lott, author of (Black Mirror: The Cultural Contradictions of American Racism)
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