Tuned to the Nation’s Mood: Popular Music as a Mnemonic Cultural Object

TitleTuned to the Nation’s Mood: Popular Music as a Mnemonic Cultural Object
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2011
AuthorsMotti Neiger, Oren Meyers, Eyal Zandberg
JournalMedia, Culture & Society
Volume33
Issue7
Pagination971-987
ISSN0163-4437, 1460-3675
Abstract

This article explores the concept of sonic memory via the investigation of popular music that constitutes a radio playlist. Our case study focuses on the songs aired on Israel’s Memorial Day for the Holocaust and the Heroism during the state’s first decade of local-commercial radio broadcasting (1993–2002). The critical analysis sought to understand what makes certain songs so identifiable with the national mourning ritual and the ways in which such songs gain the authority to symbolize and shape social memories. The article deconstructs the songs’ commemorative authority through three primary questions: (1) What is one permitted to sing about when addressing the Holocaust in popular music? (2) Who is permitted to sing or write about it? (3) How are those individual artists permitted to sing about the Holocaust within the context of popular music? The findings suggest that the authority of the songs as ‘cultural objects’ is derived from a complex combination of their quiet tone and slow tempo, the biographies of their creators and performers, and their lyrics, written by poets who embrace a philosophical-existential point of view. Beyond this analysis, the article seeks to understand the power and efficacy of popular music as a cultural object.

URLhttp://mcs.sagepub.com/content/33/7/971
DOI10.1177/0163443711415741
Short TitleTuned to the nation’s mood