A Modern Masculine Study and Their Self-Alignment

Projects


  • On “Strawberry Fields Forever”

    On “Strawberry Fields Forever”

    The energy in the room was staggering; it was almost as if the band’s creative energies had been bottled up for too long. Geoff Emerick, Here, There, Everywhere, 135. Geoff Emerick recalled the atmosphere in the studio when The Beatles finally reunited in November 1966 at EMI after their last public performance at Candlestick Park…

  • On Walter Cronkite

    On Walter Cronkite

    Cronkite used his elder leadership position as a news executive as well as a father to wield authority and sway for the benefit of his media company community and the communal representation of his family. He was a father of two teenage daughters and arranged to be backstage at The Beatles’ debut performance on the…

  • On Ringo Starr

    Starr represented a strong communal and self-made passionate masculinity that Best lacked. McCartney and Harrison were already comfortable with Lennon as an older leader, but Starr’s appearance jolted the band’s realization that their masculine standards were expanding even further. This appealed to McCartney’s penchant for a good public display and a solid passionate trait of…

  • On Paul McCartney (Lovely Rita)

    On Paul McCartney (Lovely Rita)

    By this time, there were no other feasible solutions to creating stronger bass sounds for McCartney, but he did not stop demanding to find one. This song allowed McCartney to experiment with his bass in another way never attempted before, expanding his dominant bass player’s masculine identity expressions which did not require any supportive technology…

  • Kurt Cobain

    Kurt Cobain

    Kurt Cobain’s second-generation Beatles’ self-aligned fanship combined both heavy metal and punk that voiced with even greater insistence than his predecessors, that there was no need to defend personal masculine expressions with trendy costumes or other styles that did not represent an authentic self-representation. His self-defined grunge genre may have had more to do with…

  • On Brian Epstein

    On Brian Epstein

    You must be out of your mind. These boys are going to explode. I am completely confident that one day they will be bigger than Elvis Presley – Brian Epstein to Dick Rowe, March 1962. Brian Epstein, A Cellarful of Noise, 63. Brian Epstein became The Beatles’ manager, being the first to recognize the group…