Error loading page.
Try refreshing the page. If that doesn't work, there may be a network issue, and you can use our self test page to see what's preventing the page from loading.
Learn more about possible network issues or contact support for more help.

The Secret Public

How Music Moved Queer Culture From the Margins to the Mainstream

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Rolling Stone [UK] — Best Music Books of the Year

A monumental history of the gay influence on popular culture, from the rise of Little Richard to the collapse of disco in 1979: award-winning author Jon Savage takes us on a fast and captivating journey through the history of pop music as seen through the eyes of queer artists.

Jon Savage, the author of the canonical England's Dreaming, explodes new ground in this electrifying history of pop music from 1955 through 1979. In demonstrating that gay and lesbian artists were responsible for many of the greatest cultural breakthroughs in the last half of the twentieth century, he shows that it was their secretly encoded music—appealing to a closeted but greatly oppressed public—which led to the historic dismantling of discriminatory gay laws and the fusion of queer and straight culture.

Fittingly, Savage's kaleidoscopic work begins with the pomp-and-pompadour appearance of Little Richard, whose relentlessly driving sound, replete with gospel shrieks and sexual contortions, enthralled a generation of 1950s stultified white teenagers. Things soon went mainstream, as Elvis enthralled a nation with his seductive low moans and bump-and-grind twists, heavily derivative of Black music, while James Dean and Rock Hudson became the face of 1950s Hollywood; yet this explosion of queer expression remained covert and could not be accepted for what it was.

While music, with supporting roles from cinema and fashion, became the key medium through which homosexuality could be clandestinely enacted, overt expressions of gay behavior were met with arrests and crackdowns. While hippies reveled in 1967's "Summer of Love," gays remained "harassed by police, demonized by the media and politicians, imprisoned simply for being who they were." J. Edgar Hoover, himself a closeted homosexual, continued to spy on homosexual deviants; CBS's Mike Wallace aired an invidious show about homosexuality; and the New York police continued to raid gay bars.

Yet the music itself produced a cultural eruption that simply could not be stanched. While Bette Midler sang "Boogie Woogie Bugle Boys" to a Continental Baths audience of 600 gay men, all naked except for towels, David Bowie "blew the whole topic wide open" and "became the most totemic pop star of his generation." Even though roadblocks remained, the gear-grinding crunch of the music signaled that the gay civil rights movement could no longer be suppressed.

Ending the narrative with the sudden collapse of disco, The Secret Public asserts then that the genie was out of the bottle, that queer culture had finally entered the mainstream, producing a transcendent vision of pop culture that could never be marginalized again.

  • Creators

  • Publisher

  • Release date

  • Formats

  • Languages

  • Reviews

    • Library Journal

      Starred review from January 1, 2025

      Savage's 1991 book England's Dreaming: Anarchy, Sex Pistols, Punk Rock, and Beyond still stands as a definitive work on punk history, and his latest is an equally crucial work on the impact of queer performers, managers, producers, and artists on pop culture from the 1950s to the 1970s. Savage focuses on five central moments and their preceding and succeeding events in the States and UK, in a 23-year sweep that encompasses Little Richard, James Dean, Andy Warhol, David Bowie, and the rise and fall of disco. (As he concedes in the introduction, with the overall bias of public attention toward men, the representation of queer women and transgender people in the text is lighter, although Dusty Springfield and Warhol superstar Jackie Curtis are featured.) While music is the central topic, Savage also weaves in boundary-pushing movements in fashion, film, and the arts and sets them alongside threads of everyday LGBTQIA+ existence and resistance, showing how cross-pollination among them all provided critical influence for changing attitudes in multiple directions. VERDICT This title is not merely essential for any collection on popular music or queer history. Savage's ability to turn a wealth of information into a compellingly readable narrative should make this volume of interest to readers of all stripes.--Kathleen McCallister

      Copyright 2025 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Kirkus

      Starred review from January 1, 2025
      Songs of freedom. When Little Richard's "Tutti Frutti" landed in November 1955, homosexuality was a crime in Britain, and gay bars in the U.S. were routinely violently raided by the police. Politicians and major media in both countries referred to people we now call LGBTQ+ as "morally repugnant"--or worse. "Experts" attributed queerness to mental illness that could be "cured." But as the openly gay American rocker Jobriath (1946-1983) sang in 1973's "Rock of Ages," his ode to gay liberation through rock 'n' roll, "A Little Richard goes a long long way." Savage, a deeply knowledgeable British music journalist whose subjects have included the Sex Pistols, Joy Division, and teenage culture, tells this enthralling story by focusing on five moments between 1955 and 1979, when gay culture and popular youth culture, in tandem, took quantum leaps into public consciousness, along with the civil rights and women's rights movements. Savage zooms in and out, from close-ups on artists who pushed the limits of queer art's popularity in the world at large, to views of the effects they had on British and American societies. His encyclopedic scope ranges from the famous--James Dean, Andy Warhol, the Kinks, David Bowie, Bette Midler, Sylvester--to the less known but no less consequential contributors. This is a longtime project of Savage's. "As I engaged with performers, fans and other writers during the early 1980s and beyond," he writes, "I realised that the topic...wasn't just about freedom for gay people; it was about freedom for all." A keenly intelligent, comprehensive survey of some of the bravest artists in history.

      COPYRIGHT(2025) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      January 6, 2025
      From the first days of rock ’n’ roll to the last days of disco, pop culture was markedly influenced by gay themes and undertones in movies, music, and art, according to this exuberant history. Journalist Savage (England’s Dreaming) surveys American and British showbiz figures, from rocker Little Richard, who deleted the explicit anal sex lyrics from his 1955 hit “Tutti Frutti,” but got plenty of "fruity" subtext across anyway, to the late 1970s disco group Village People, whose overt hymns to gay bliss became standards at straight weddings. Among the other cultural phenomena that he revisits are Andy Warhol’s elevation of camp into high art, David Bowie’s androgynous style and his 1972 confession that he was gay, and the 1977 movie Saturday Night Fever, which brought disco, a musical style incubated in gay dance clubs, to its peak popularity. (The movie and its star John Travolta fairly oozed a homoerotic vibe, Savage contends, while deflecting it with a few homophobic scenes.) Savage offers a rich analysis of the symbiosis of gay subculture and the dominant postwar youth culture, both yearning for more sexual freedom, and backgrounds his narrative with the story of the evolving gay rights movement (he depicts the 1979 “Disco Sucks” destruction of thousands of disco records in Chicago's Comiskey Park as partly fueled by antigay backlash). Perceptive and elegantly written, this captivates.

    • Booklist

      Starred review from January 1, 2025
      The "performers" in music journalist Savage's masterful exploration of the LGBTQ cultural world range from Little Richard and Johnnie Ray to Andy Warhol and David Bowie. Some are ambiguous, including James Dean. As he focuses on moments in LGBTQ+ history, such as Stonewall and its aftermath, specific themes recur, namely, demonization, othering, and prejudice. Savage is a writer of keen insight with a knack for the telling detail, such as when he places Little Richard's "Tutti Frutti" and its ostensibly nonsensical lyric, "A wop bop a loo mop a lop bam boom," into Black music history. He looks at the secret lives of actors (Rock Hudson, Tab Hunter) who flaunted their good looks in 1950s Hollywood to survive and considers a trio of vastly different but culturally significant female singers. Dusty Springfield hid behind beehive wigs and black eye make-up to conceal a devastating lack of self-confidence and crippling shyness. Janis Joplin had affairs with men and women. Janis Ian's songs, especially "Society's Child," reflected confusion about her place in the world. He discusses gay liberation, glam, camp, and disco, Brian Epstein and Lou Reed, the New York Dolls, Harvey Milk, the Village People, and more, all within the framework of how a minority subculture went mainstream. Astute, sharp, and savvy.

      COPYRIGHT(2025) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

Formats

  • Kindle Book
  • OverDrive Read
  • EPUB ebook

Languages

  • English

Loading