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Books > Arts & Architecture > Music > Contemporary popular music > Rock & pop > World music
The term 'world music' encompasses both folk and popular music
across the globe, as well as the sounds of cultural encounter and
diversity, sacred voices raised in worship, local sounds, and
universal values. It emerged as an invention of the West from
encounters with other cultures, and holds the power to evoke the
exotic and give voice to the voiceless. Today, in both sound and
material it has a greater presence in human societies than ever
before. The politics of which world music are a part -
globalization, cosmopolitanism, and nationalism - play an
increasingly direct role in societies throughout the world, but are
at the same time also becoming increasingly controversial. In this
new edition of his Very Short Introduction, Philip Bohlman
considers questions of meaning and technology in world music, and
responds to the dramatically changing political world in which
people produce and listen to world music. He also addresses the
different ways in which world music is created, disseminated, and
consumed, as the full reach of the internet and technologies that
store and spread music through the exchange of data files spark a
revolution in the production and availability of world music.
Finally, Bohlman revises the way we think of the musician, as an
increasingly mobile individual, sometimes because physical borders
have fallen away, at other times because they are closing. ABOUT
THE SERIES: The Very Short Introductions series from Oxford
University Press contains hundreds of titles in almost every
subject area. These pocket-sized books are the perfect way to get
ahead in a new subject quickly. Our expert authors combine facts,
analysis, perspective, new ideas, and enthusiasm to make
interesting and challenging topics highly readable.
Listening to the sound practices of bands and musicians such as the
Asian Dub Foundation or M.I.A., and spanning three decades of South
Asian dance music production in the UK, Transcultural Sound
Practices zooms in on the concrete sonic techniques and narrative
strategies in South Asian dance music and investigates sound as
part of a wider assemblage of cultural technologies, politics and
practices. Carla J. Maier investigates how sounds from Hindi film
music tunes or bhangra tracks have been sampled, cut, looped and
manipulated, thus challenging and complicating the cultural
politics of sonic production. Rather than conceiving of music as a
representation of fixed cultures, this book engages in a study of
music that disrupts the ways in which ethnicity has been written
into sound and investigates how transcultural sound practices
generate new ways of thinking about culture.
Should we talk of European jazz or jazz in Europe? What kinds of
networks link those who make it happen 'on the ground'? What
challenges do they have to face? Jazz is a part of the cultural
fabric of many of the European countries. Jazz in Europe:
Networking and Negotiating Identities presents jazz in Europe as a
complex arena, where the very notions of cultural identity, jazz
practices and Europe are continually being negotiated against an
ever changing social, cultural, political and economic environment.
The book gives voice to musicians, promoters, festival directors,
educators and researchers regarding the challenges they are faced
with in their everyday practices. Jazz identities in Europe result
from the negotiation between discourse and practice and in the
interstices between the formal and informal networks that support
them, as if 'Jazz' and 'Europe' were blank canvases where
diversified notions of what jazz and Europe should or could be are
projected.
Dundee Street Songs,Rhymes and Games: The William Montgomerie
Collection, 1952 - In 1952 when these songs and rhymes were
recorded in Hilltown, Dundee there may not have been a street or
playground anywhere where the sound of children singing and playing
was part of everyday life. Although there had been Scottish
collectors of 'bairn sangs' since the 1820s, it was not until the
1940s that anyone in Scotland audio-recorded the actual sound of
playground voices. These recordings of school children captured the
vitality of the local dialect, the spontaneity of their
language-use outside the classroom, their repertoire of songs,
rhymes and games, their musicality , as well as the sounds that
echo the speed and accuracy of their hand-eye co-ordination. (Audio
links included in the notes).
In Tokyo in the early 1990s, an indie band called Flipper's Guitar
was at the forefront of a new wave in Japanese popular music known
as Shibuya-kei. The band's founder, Keigo Oyamada, would go on to
produce, under the name Cornelius, a series of albums that are
among the most innovative in Japanese popular music of the past two
decades. Oyamada's third album under his Cornelius alter-ego,
Fantasma (1997), played a key role in putting J-pop on the world
map for Western music fans, and Oyamada himself is today one of the
most respected figures in the Japanese music industry. This book
tells the story of Fantasma's emergence from the Shibuya-kei scene
and considers the wider impact of Oyamada's work both
internationally and on Japanese popular music today. 33 1/3 Global,
a series related to but independent from 33 1/3, takes the format
of the original series of short, music-based books and brings the
focus to music throughout the world. With initial volumes focusing
on Japanese and Brazilian music, the series will also include
volumes on the popular music of Australia/Oceania, Europe, Africa,
the Middle East, and more.
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