Wednesday, 3 November 2010

Stars and Stardom - Richard Dyer

• In order to understand the relationship between the music industry and its audiences, it is important to consider the role of music star

• The term ‘star’ refers to the semi-mythological set of meaning constructed around music performers in order to sell the performer to a large and loyal audience


Some Common Values of Music Stardom
• Youthfulness
• Rebellion
• Sex magnetism
• An anti-authoritarian attitude
• Originality
• Creativity/talent
• Aggression/anger
• A disregard for social values relating to drugs, sex and polite behaviour
• Conspicuous consumption, of sex drugs and material goods
• Success against the odds

Richard Dyer

• Dyer has written extensively about the role of stars in film, TV and music.
• Irrespective of the medium, stars have some key features in common:
• A star is an image, not a real person, this is constructed(as any other aspect of fiction is)out of a range of material (e.g. advertising, magazines etc as well as films music)
• Stars as commodities produced and consumed on the strength of their meanings

• Stars depend upon a range of subsidiary media- magazine, TV, radio, the internet – in order to construct an image is made up of a range of meanings which are attractive to the target audiences.

• Fundamentally, the star image is incoherent, that is incomplete and ‘open’. Dyer says that this is because it is based upon two key paradoxes.

Paradox 1
• The star must be simultaneously ordinary and extraordinary for the consumer

Paradox 2
• The star must be simultaneously present and absent for the consumer.

The star Image
• The incoherence of the star image ensures that audiences continually strive to ‘complete’ or to ‘make sense’ of the image.
• This is achieved by continued consumption of the star through his or her products
• In the music industry, performance seems to promise the completion of the image, but it is always ultimately unsatisfying
• This means that fans will go away determined to continue consuming the star in order to carry on attempting to complete their image.
• Finally, the star image can be used to position the consumer in relation to dominant social values (that is hegemony).
• Depending upon the artist, this may mean that the audience are positioned against the mainstream (though only to a limited degree, since they are still consumers within a capitalist system) or within the mainstream, or somewhere in between.

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