Tuesday 13 March 2012

Tips for using e-books

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Banding together : how communities create genres in popular music / Jennifer C. Lena


Why do some music styles gain mass popularity while others thrive in small niches? "Banding Together" explores this question and reveals the attributes that together explain the growth of twentieth-century American popular music.
 
As well as reading this book online, you can download it onto your desktop for a maximum of three days. Some publishers such as this one - Princeton University Press, have relaxed their publishing and copyright restrictions, which means you can now print 20% or copy 10% of the book if you are viewing it online.
 
If you are a Mac user you may have had some problems with e-books opening one page at a time in separate pdf files when you try to read online and scrambled content when downloading e-books.


If you have Safari 5.1

• download and use Google Chrome (in Google Chrome, type about:plugins in the address bar and check that Chrome PDF Viewer is enabled) and/or

• download the Schubert plugin http://www.schubert-it.com/pluginpdf/

If you have Safari 5.0 or lower

Files downloaded from Dawsonera do not work with Preview, the default pdf viewer on a Mac. Users need to download the latest Adobe Acrobat reader and open the file using that program. To set Adobe Acrobat as the default PDF viewer, CTRL-click on any pdf document in the Finder window, click Get Info, then choose Adobe in the “open with” dropdown list and also click on the “change all” button.


The problem of each page opening in a separate pdf window when reading online should be solved by checking the settings in Adobe itself. Open Adobe Reader and go to Adobe>Preferences>Internet and make sure that “display PDF in browser using:” is checked.


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new e-books added to the library collection

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We've just added the following music e-books to the library resources

Popular music and the state in the UK : culture, trade or industry? / Martin Cloonan
Martin Cloonan examines why politicians and policymakers in the UK have sought to intervene in popular music. The author traces the development of government attitudes and policies towards popular music from the 1950s to the present, discovering the prominence of two overlapping concerns: public order and the political economy of music.



Performing Class in British Popular Music examines the role that class signification plays in popular music in the UK, from folk music through to the present day. Rather than seeing class as a purely social or economic concept, Nathan Wiseman-Trowse understands it as a mythological concept that is constructed through the musical text in order to assure the listener of the authenticity of a piece of pop music

Log-in with your University username and password to access these and many more titles.

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Friday 9 March 2012

E-books

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Westminster students find out more about e-books here





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Thursday 8 March 2012

Diamond Times for NME

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Happy 60th Birthday to NME.


 This year NME  are also celebrating their Diamond Jubilee
The first issue was published 7th March 1952 when the Accordian Times was merged with Musical Express. Although the library at Harrow doesn't hold the very first issue we have got a large collection of NMEs dating back as far as 1975.

Spend a few happy hours browsing the collection and enjoy music journalism and photography from a great British institution.


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