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Books > Music > Non-Western music, traditional & classical
This Is A New Release Of The Original 1907 Edition.
This is a new release of the original 1942 edition.
The lively oral history of J.D. Nicholson, a sought-after club and
session piano player who influenced the L.A. blues scene from
1950-80.
This is a new release of the original 1942 edition.
The transplantation of African musical cultures to the Americas was
a multi-track and multi-time process. In the past many historical
studies of African diaspora music, dance and other aspects of
expressive culture concentrated on events in the Americas. What
happened before the American trauma and simultaneously in Africa
was often looked at unhistorically. In this book, world-renowned
ethnomusicologist Gerhard Kubik considers African music and dance
forms as the products of people living in various African cultures
which have changed continuously in history, absorbing and
processing elements from inside and outside the continent, creating
new styles and fashions all the time. African diaspora music then
appears as a consequent and creative extension overseas of African
musical cultures that have existed in the period between the
sixteenth and the twentieth century. From this perspective African
diaspora music cannot be described adequately in terms of
"retentions" and "survivals," as if African cultures in the
Americas were doomed from the outset and perhaps only by some act
of mercy permitted to "retain" certain elements. Using field
research and documentary sources, Kubik tracks down some aspects of
the Angolan dimension in the panorama of African music and dance
cultures in Brazil, and also addresses methodology applicable in
the wider context of African diaspora cultural studies.
Music is a revealing and significant area of exploration when
examining the relationship between the western world and China.
Australia, unequivocally a western nation situated in the Asia
Pacific, has grappled to define and redefine its connection with
the "Middle Kingdom" since the earliest times of Chinese migration.
The saga of musical encounters between Australia and China
continues to this very day. Addressing the themes of: music and
history; tradition versus innovation; cultural
diversity/intercultural creativity; and music and the related arts;
this book focuses on encounters between China and Australia from
the earliest imaginings and representations to the latest cultural
exchanges. Here, the reader will find of stories of forbidden love,
prejudice and deceit, of gestures of harmony and the fulfilment of
dreams and wishes. Ethnomusicologists, composers, performers,
historians and cultural theorists alike explore the past, present,
and future of a long, complex and culturally rich interaction.
Their writings, so varied and diverse, celebrate a multiplicity of
identities, and present a challenging array of research avenues and
perspectives through which to view the Australian-Chinese
connection.
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