Introduction
by Thomas M. Kitts
Part One. "Born on the Bayou"
Chapter One. "Born on the Bayou": CCR and the Evocation of
Place
by Jeff Sellars
Chapter Two. Reviving the Pre-Sixties: Creedence on a
Sixties/Seventies Cusp
by Stephen Paul Miller
Chapter Three. John Fogerty: Middle-Class Hero
by Jake Sudderth
Chapter Four. Down to the River: Narrative, Blues, and the Common
Man in John Fogerty's Imagined Southern Gothic
by Robert McParland
Part Two. "Run Through the Jungle"
Chapter Five. "Devil's on the Loose": Creedence Clearwater Revival
and the Religious Imagination
by Theodore Louis Trost
Chapter Six. Flying the Flannel: An Americana Salute to Creedence
Clearwater Revival
by Timothy Gray
Chapter Seven. The 1969 Creedence Clearwater Revival Recording
Contract and How it Shaped the Future of the Group and its
Members
by Hank Bordowitz
Part Three. "Centerfield"
Chapter Eight. America as Patron and Muse: The Creation of the Blue
Ridge Rangers
by Lawrence Pitilli
Chapter Nine. The 1980s Comeback of John Fogerty
by Thomas M. Kitts
Chapter Ten. Multimodal Fogerty: Scoring and Scaffolding the Music
of CCR to a Vietnam War Literature Unit
by Christian Z. Goering and Wiliam C. Sewell
Part Four. "Keep on Chooglin"
Chapter Eleven. John Fogerty and America's Three Rock
Generations
by B. Lee Cooper, with research assistance from William L.
Schurk
Chapter Twelve. The Political Legacy of Fogerty: Forty Years of
Parallel Messages
by William J. Miller and Jeremy D. Walling
Chapter Thirteen. "Rockin' All Over the World": John Fogerty's
Place in American Popular Music
by Nick Baxter-Moore
Thomas M. Kitts is professor of English and Chair of the Division of English and Speech at St. John’s University, New York.
A lively gathering of essays on John Fogerty's Creedence Clearwater
Revival, the funky (but clean-cut) Americana rock band that scored
a fistful of Top Ten hits in the 60s, without finding a firm place
in the decade's rock hierarchy. Here a baker's dozen of perceptive
music writers tell how good the band was and why it ended up an
inch away from super-stardom.
*Michael Lydon, author of Rock Folk and Ray Charles: Man and
Music*
Editor Thomas M. Kitts has recognized that John Fogerty deserves. .
. attention too, and this volume, Finding Fogerty:
Interdisciplinary Readings of John Fogerty and Creedence Clearwater
Revival, works to place the artist in the context of his creative
work, commercial predicaments, and cultural impact. ... Kitts’
Finding Fogerty offers a strong reminder of how important a
songwriter’s influence can be and contains a thorough analysis of
Fogerty’s career as a band member and as a soloist, does not flinch
from the critical and commercial difficulties he has faced, and
avoids overselling his achievements. It describes what can happen
when business associations can become so convoluted that a creator
can be sued for plagiarizing himself and the emotional battering a
performer can suffer while reconciling himself with his works from
the past. Finding Fogerty should convince its readers that
Fogerty’s influence on American culture deserves even fuller
consideration; this volume offers a welcome start.
*Journal of American Culture*
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