Mafias - Live Music
Live tours used to promote albums, now albums promote live tours: how did live music overtake recorded in terms of economic value? Also, organised crime goes international.
Woodstock did not have a sponsor, people flooded to Hyde Park for a free concert from the Rolling Stones but now a top price ticket to see Bon Jovi - the 'Diamond Circle VIP Experience' - can cost you something approaching $2,000. What has happened to live music to transform it into the industry it has become? How have concert performances become a successful way of funding music when recorded music has been in retreat? Laurie Taylor speaks to two authorities in the field of popular music studies, Simon Frith and Martin Cloonan, to discuss the social and economic changes which have brought music performance to the fore.
Also we hear of Russian mobsters in New York, Chinese Triads in London and Italian Mafias across the western world, but is organised crime really spreading like a global virus? The criminologist Federico Varese explores the capacities of mafias trying to conquer new territories.
Producer: Charlie Taylor.
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- Wed 30 Mar 2011 16:00Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ Radio 4 FM
- Mon 4 Apr 2011 00:15Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ Radio 4
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