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"This delightful book provides an original perspective on Los Angeles history. Kenneth Marcus surveys the city and the region's musical history, finding diversity, enthusiasm, and trend-setting in Los Angeles music culture . . . The above summary doesn't do enough justice to a book rich with insights, a fresh view of Los Angeles history, and the importance of Los Angeles in its support of music in all its varied richness." --Abraham Hoffman, author of Unwanted Mexican Americans In The Great Depression; Repatriation Pressures, 1929-1939.
"In Musical Metropolis, Kenneth Marcus . . . has produced a highly literate, often enchanting and always insightful history of L.A.'s grand musical heritage . . . Musical Metropolis offers a wealth of information and inspiration about Los Angeles and its music, and the author's research clearly was painstakingly thorough . . . Musical Metropolis is a reflection of Los Angeles itself: public celebration of life and art. This perspective on America and its people, its origins and its future, is an important one. And it's a whole lot of fun to read." --Russ Schach, Pasadena Star-News
"Asking why and how music is both an exemplary and exceptional catalyst for these wider urban processes, helping shape the city and its citizens, is a door Marcus has opened, laying the foundation for what promises to be a rich field of further inquiry and investigation." --Marina Peterson, Southern California Quarterly
"As Tennyson said of Camelot, Los Angeles was a city
built to music. Choirs, touring opera companies, a symphony orchestra,
musical pageants, the Hollywood Bowl, film scores of surprising power,
and radio provided building blocks of identity for the City of Angels
equal to aqueduct, automobile, or freeway. Comprehensively, Kenneth H.
Marcus has assembled the story and scores of the music that helped build
a city." --Kevin Starr, University Professor of
History, University of Southern California and State Librarian Emeritus --Gloria Ricci Lothrop, Professor of History Emerita,
California State University, Northridge --William Deverell, Director, Huntington-USC Institute
on California and the West
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