Popular Music and the Secret Service in Hungary, 1945?1990
Records, Files and Uncovered Stories
Series: Slavonic and East European Music Studies;
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Product details:
- Edition number 1
- Publisher Routledge
- Date of Publication 10 November 2025
- ISBN 9781032313719
- Binding Hardback
- No. of pages356 pages
- Size 234x156 mm
- Weight 820 g
- Language English
- Illustrations 58 Illustrations, black & white; 58 Halftones, black & white 780
Categories
Short description:
This book is a result of decades-long research into declassified files, offering a unique perspective for writing post-World War Two cultural history through the lens of the political police.
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Long description:
This book is a result of decades-long research into declassified files, offering a unique perspective for writing post-Second World War cultural history through the lens of the political police.
This is the first in-depth, document-based monographic account of how secret services attempted to oppress dissent in popular music in post-war socialist Hungary. The documents reveal the goals, methods and means of the political police in their efforts to exercise control over the world of popular music, including musicians, fans and institutions. Through a series of case studies, the book sheds light on the activities of state security against various musical genres ? ranging from jazz to beat, folk, religious music, rock, disco, punk, new wave and oi ? and youth subcultures, such as hooligans, hippies, rockers, folk enthusiasts, punks and skinheads. The secret service operated following the resolutions and cultural policy of the communist party and employed a network of secret informants alongside its apparatus until the collapse of the regime in 1990.
Readers interested in a specific narrative of 20th-century pop and politics, culture and the Cold War, secret services and socialist countries, will find it essential reading. It will appeal to scholars and students of humanities, arts, music and European history, as well as professionals such as journalists, art historians, musicologists, musicians, curators, teachers and music lovers alike.
"This is a fine contribution to popular music studies. It is a report back from a journey through the archives of Hungary?s state security services and valuable for its insights into the problems that faced Hungary?s communist cultural policy makers as they sought to control young people?s music making. But it also reads, exhilaratingly, like a hallucinatory version of a pop story I thought I already knew, as it chronicles what happened to the flow of sounds, ideas and images across an iron curtain that was, in fact, always permeable."
Simon Frith, Emeritus Professor of Music, University of Edinburgh
"More so than any of its Warsaw Pact neighbours, Hungary developed an extraordinarily rich postwar popular culture ? not for want of the state?s attempts to control or undermine it. Through his exhaustive readings of the secret police?s extensive archives, Tam
Table of Contents:
CHAPTER 1: A Short History of Hungary, its Secret Services and Music Industry in the Cold War
1.1 Preface
1.2 Historical Background
1.3 The Goals, Methods and Means of the State Security Service
1.4 The Institutional System of Popular Music
CHAPTER 2: The 1940s and 1950s
2.1 The Sovietisation of Sounds
2.2 Singers Seeking Refuge in Exile
CHAPTER 3: The 1960s
3.1 Sorrowful Songsmiths under Surveillance
3.2 The Lure of the West
3.3 Beat Bands, Youth Gangs and the Long Arm of Law
Before and after 1968
4.1 Lefties, Hippies and Religious Rockers in the Crosshairs
4.2 Attempts at Disrupting Three Top Bands
CHAPTER 5: The 1970s
5.1 The Consequences of March Riots and Careless Words
5.2 Fear of the Folk Dance Houses
5.3 Fear of the Disco
CHAPTER 6: The 1980s
6.1 Policing the Crowd and Hunting for the Black Sheep of Hard Rock
6.2 New Waves of Dissent
6.3 Punks and Skinheads on Trial
6.4 Foreign Guests are Welcome and Watched
CHAPTER 7: Hungarian Musicians under Observation in Other Socialist Countries until 1989
7.1 Survival and Surveillance in the Socialist Bloc
7.2 Concluding Remarks
CHAPTER 8: Appendix
8.1 Archival Sources
8.2 Abbreviations
8.3 Index of Names
8.4 Acknowledgements