'Saying Things That You Can't Say Tomorrow Day': Accommodation Theory & Authenticity in Alex Turner of Arctic Monkeys

This article investigates whether Arctic Monkeys frontman Alex Turner’s use of northern English linguistic features decreased from the band’s first album Whatever People Say I am, That's What I'm Not (WPS) (2006) to their fifth album AM (2013); whether this was because Turner began to acco...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Ley, Malene
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Department of English, Aarhus University 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://tidsskrift.dk/lev/article/view/132074
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spelling ftsbaarhusojs:oai:ojs.tidsskrift.dk:article/132074 2023-05-15T14:49:39+02:00 'Saying Things That You Can't Say Tomorrow Day': Accommodation Theory & Authenticity in Alex Turner of Arctic Monkeys Ley, Malene 2022-03-22 application/pdf https://tidsskrift.dk/lev/article/view/132074 eng eng Department of English, Aarhus University https://tidsskrift.dk/lev/article/view/132074/177450 https://tidsskrift.dk/lev/article/view/132074 Copyright (c) 2022 Leviathan: Interdisciplinary Journal in English http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0 CC-BY-NC-ND Leviathan: Interdisciplinary Journal in English; No. 8 (2022); 31–44 Leviathan: Interdisciplinary Journal in English; Nr. 8 (2022); 31–44 2446-3981 Arctic Monkeys accommodation theory authenticity dialects and accents sociolinguistics English Linguistics 3: English in Its Social and Regional Settings info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion 2022 ftsbaarhusojs 2022-03-23T23:50:46Z This article investigates whether Arctic Monkeys frontman Alex Turner’s use of northern English linguistic features decreased from the band’s first album Whatever People Say I am, That's What I'm Not (WPS) (2006) to their fifth album AM (2013); whether this was because Turner began to accommodate to American audiences instead of British audiences. An auditory analysis of two songs from each album was conducted to see if Turner’s use of glottalisation and th-fronting, typical northern English variants, changed. The results showed a clear decline in Turner’s use of northern English linguistic features between the two albums. The article concludes that British youth was the intended audience in WPS, but it is unclear who the intended audience is in AM as Turner continued to use other non-standard features that index Turner’s British roots. Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic Aarhus University: OJS at The State and University Library Arctic
institution Open Polar
collection Aarhus University: OJS at The State and University Library
op_collection_id ftsbaarhusojs
language English
topic Arctic Monkeys
accommodation theory
authenticity
dialects and accents
sociolinguistics
English Linguistics 3: English in Its Social and Regional Settings
spellingShingle Arctic Monkeys
accommodation theory
authenticity
dialects and accents
sociolinguistics
English Linguistics 3: English in Its Social and Regional Settings
Ley, Malene
'Saying Things That You Can't Say Tomorrow Day': Accommodation Theory & Authenticity in Alex Turner of Arctic Monkeys
topic_facet Arctic Monkeys
accommodation theory
authenticity
dialects and accents
sociolinguistics
English Linguistics 3: English in Its Social and Regional Settings
description This article investigates whether Arctic Monkeys frontman Alex Turner’s use of northern English linguistic features decreased from the band’s first album Whatever People Say I am, That's What I'm Not (WPS) (2006) to their fifth album AM (2013); whether this was because Turner began to accommodate to American audiences instead of British audiences. An auditory analysis of two songs from each album was conducted to see if Turner’s use of glottalisation and th-fronting, typical northern English variants, changed. The results showed a clear decline in Turner’s use of northern English linguistic features between the two albums. The article concludes that British youth was the intended audience in WPS, but it is unclear who the intended audience is in AM as Turner continued to use other non-standard features that index Turner’s British roots.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Ley, Malene
author_facet Ley, Malene
author_sort Ley, Malene
title 'Saying Things That You Can't Say Tomorrow Day': Accommodation Theory & Authenticity in Alex Turner of Arctic Monkeys
title_short 'Saying Things That You Can't Say Tomorrow Day': Accommodation Theory & Authenticity in Alex Turner of Arctic Monkeys
title_full 'Saying Things That You Can't Say Tomorrow Day': Accommodation Theory & Authenticity in Alex Turner of Arctic Monkeys
title_fullStr 'Saying Things That You Can't Say Tomorrow Day': Accommodation Theory & Authenticity in Alex Turner of Arctic Monkeys
title_full_unstemmed 'Saying Things That You Can't Say Tomorrow Day': Accommodation Theory & Authenticity in Alex Turner of Arctic Monkeys
title_sort 'saying things that you can't say tomorrow day': accommodation theory & authenticity in alex turner of arctic monkeys
publisher Department of English, Aarhus University
publishDate 2022
url https://tidsskrift.dk/lev/article/view/132074
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
genre_facet Arctic
op_source Leviathan: Interdisciplinary Journal in English; No. 8 (2022); 31–44
Leviathan: Interdisciplinary Journal in English; Nr. 8 (2022); 31–44
2446-3981
op_relation https://tidsskrift.dk/lev/article/view/132074/177450
https://tidsskrift.dk/lev/article/view/132074
op_rights Copyright (c) 2022 Leviathan: Interdisciplinary Journal in English
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0
op_rightsnorm CC-BY-NC-ND
_version_ 1766320727971069952