Alan Light

Alan Light

Five Things I’ve Learned about America

  1. American music is always more complicated than it seems.
  2. Our best – and the best of our music – is based on open mind, a generous heart, and genuine empathy.
  3. Our art and our country both struggle within the potential and the conflicts between genius, commerce, and technology.
  4. Our music is also a reminder of the possibilities and the limitations of activism in American music.
  5. Consensus is still in our grasp, through authenticity and strategy.

July 8, 2024

View my free, 90-minute conversation, Five Things I’ve Learned about America, with Resolute Square’s Megan Matson.

I’m Alan Light, music journalist and author, and I invite you to join me for my upcoming class, Five Things I’ve Learned About America – from Five American Musicians.

As we’ll explore during this free, 90-minute session, my career has given me the opportunity to work with and think about many of the giants of American music, and to learn from them about music as a way to think about American culture, offering both great potential and constant reality checks about our history and our future.

For more than thirty years, I’ve been working as a writer, editor, and broadcaster concentrating on popular music of various genres. I have been a Senior Writer at Rolling Stone, the editor-in-chief of Vibe and Spin magazines, and a regular contributor to the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, and numerous other publications. I’ve written numerous books, worked on several documentary films (winning an Emmy Award along the way), and spent many years hosting a music-talk show on SiriusXM. In college, I was an American Studies major, and themes and thoughts about the relationships between our country and its music are never far from my mind.

I’m very happy to say that I’m joined in conversation during this session by my friend, Resolute Square’s Megan Matson. Together, we’ll look closely at five artists I have written about and spent time with over the years, and at the lessons they offer about power, commerce, and creativity.

  1. American music is always more complicated than it seems.
  2. Our best – and the best of our music – is based on open mind, a generous heart, and genuine empathy.
  3. Our art and our country both struggle within the potential and the conflicts between genius, commerce, and technology.
  4. Our music is also a reminder of the possibilities and the limitations of activism in American music.
  5. Consensus is still in our grasp, through authenticity and strategy.

I hope that you will explore this Five Things I’ve Learned about America class. I hope, too, that you’ll explore others in this complimentary series.

In the face of the challenges America faces today, I believe that the ideals these musicians represent—their ambitions and achievements—offer the opportunity to better understand each other and some models for continuing to move forward, as listeners and as citizens.

– Alan Light

New York City, New York

About Alan

Alan Light is one of America’s leading music journalists and is the cohost of the music news podcast Sound Up!. He was a senior writer at Rolling Stone, founding music editor and editor-in-chief of Vibe, and editor-in-chief of Spin. He is a frequent contributor to The New York TimesThe Wall Street Journal, and Esquire, among other publications. Alan is the author of Let’s Go Crazy: Prince and the Making of Purple Rain; biographies of Johnny Cash, Nina Simone, and the Beastie Boys; and was the cowriter of New York Times bestselling memoirs by Gregg Allman and Peter Frampton.

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