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Author (up) Hudson, Stephen S.
Title Song form and storytelling in mainstream metal Type Journal Article
Year 2023 Publication Metal Music Studies Abbreviated Journal
Volume 9 Issue 1 Pages 7-26
Keywords Musicology; Analysis; Narrative
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ISSN 2052-3998 ISBN Medium
Area Expedition Conference
Notes Approved no
Call Number UCM-CAM @ amaranta.saguar.garcia @ Serial 2447
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Author (up) Hudson, Stephen S.
Title Bang Your Head: Construing Beat Through Familiar Drum Patterns in Metal Music Type Journal Article
Year 2022 Publication Music Theory Spectrum Abbreviated Journal
Volume 44 Issue 1 Pages s.p.
Keywords Headbanging; Rythm
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Notes Approved no
Call Number UCM-CAM @ amaranta.saguar.garcia @ Serial 2246
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Author (up) Hudson, Stephen S.
Title Thirty-one years later: A review of Metallica’s “Black Album” and its legacy on alternative metal and alt-right politics Type Journal Article
Year 2021 Publication Metal Music Studies Abbreviated Journal
Volume 7 Issue 3 Pages 475-478
Keywords Metallica (band); Black Album (album); Politics; Alternative Metal
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Notes Approved no
Call Number UCM-CAM @ amaranta.saguar.garcia @ Serial 2247
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Author (up) Hudson, Stephen S.
Title Compound AABA Form and Style Distinction in Heavy Metal Type Journal Article
Year 2021 Publication Music Theory Online Abbreviated Journal
Volume 27 Issue 1 Pages n.p.
Keywords Musicology
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Notes Approved no
Call Number UCM-CAM @ amaranta.saguar.garcia @ Serial 2083
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Author (up) Hudson, Stephen S.
Title Feeling Beats and Experiencing Motion: A Construction-based Theory of Meter Type Book Whole
Year 2019 Publication Abbreviated Journal
Volume Issue Pages 334
Keywords Cognitive science; Embodiment; Meter; Motion; Music theory; Performance studies; Rhythm
Abstract Musical meter is often described as an objective grid-like system of time-points that is created by musical sounds. I define meter instead as any pattern of felt beats an individual listener chooses to hear, a physical and cognitive interpretation of the music that is (re-) created in the moment of listening. We construe meter through embodied metering practices: dance gestures, patterns of counting, or epistemologies of rhythmic motion. Many metering practices have conventional metering constructions, specific associations between sounding features, patterns of felt beats, and paths of motion through these beats. Drawing on concepts from cognitive science and performance studies, I explore how this embodied knowledge is constituted and applied in both planning of musical phrases by a performer, and in-time perception and cognition of musical rhythms by any listener or participant.

Metering constructions and practices are often performed by and associated with certain communities and identities. I take a culturally-situated approach to meter and felt motion, studying traditions of embodied movement and bodily discipline including headbanging in heavy metal (Chapter 1), characteristic dance rhythm topics in non-dance concert music of the eighteenth century (Chapter 2), motivic manipulation and developing variation in late Romantic chamber music (Chapters 3 and 4), and prosody and speech gestures in operatic recitative (Chapter 5). Contrary to many existing theories of meter, I argue that our feelings of beat are not necessarily organized in cyclical grids, but are improvised on the spot by stitching together familiar motions. I also explore how movements often embody and perform aesthetic ideologies and cultural meanings, with these hermeneutic frameworks often shaping listeners’ choice of movements, their proprioception of their own movements, and their perception of the qualities of rhythm and motion in the music they are listening to.
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Corporate Author Thesis Ph.D. thesis
Publisher Northwestern University Place of Publication Editor
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ISSN ISBN 9781085600613 Medium
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Notes Approved no
Call Number INTech @ brianhickam2019 @ Serial 2202
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