Musical Past as Cultural Heritage in North English Working Towns: The Case of Salford
Over the past 30-35 years, the concept of cultural heritage has undergone significant transformation. This shift reflects an expanded understanding of cultural value, encompassing both the recent past and previously marginalized cultural forms, particularly those associated with popular culture. British urban regeneration projects from the 1980s to the 2000s exemplify diverse approaches to framing the urban past as cultural heritage. In Northern England, where cities were deeply affected by the deindustrialization crisis, the concept of “cultural heritage” came to include the region’s rich musical history. This history became not merely a complement to urban narratives but a powerful resource for development. The Salford Lads’ Club (Greater Manchester) serves as a prime example of this reconciliation between social and musical history. It functions both as a site preserving and sustaining the working-class history of the region and as an iconic landmark in the story of British popular music. The club’s hallmark activity was organizing annual camping trips, which served as a form of youth engagement, combining education and discipline with support for the children of working families in Greater Manchester’s (post)industrial urban areas. Over time, the Salford Lads’ Club also emerged as a significant destination for music fans. This transformation was driven, in part, by the inclusion of a photograph of the British rock band The Smiths in front of the club’s main entrance in the booklet for their 1986 album The Queen Is Dead. This image turned the club into a pilgrimage site for fans from around the world. During the Greater Manchester regeneration project, which began in the 2000s, the Salford Lads’ Club became one of the iconic symbols of the region’s renewed urban historical policy and a key example of how the cultural heritage of Northern England was reimagined and celebrated. The author declares no conflict of interests.
Keywords
musical heritage,
working heritage,
Northern England,
Salford,
The SmithsAuthors
Kolesnik Alexandra S. | National Research University “Higher School of Economics” | aleksa-kolesnik@yandex.ru |
Всего: 1
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