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Gongs and Pop Songs - Sounding Minangkabau in Indonesia (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R2,216
Discovery Miles 22 160
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Gongs and Pop Songs - Sounding Minangkabau in Indonesia (Hardcover)
Series: Research in International Studies, Southeast Asia Series
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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"Fraser discusses the aesthetics and system of ideal musical styles
employed by talempong players, the history of the talempong, and,
most compellingly, the newer styles of practice, including
repertoires that incorporate popular music genres from around the
world. The author's discussion of institutionalization,
professionalization, and monetization of Minangkau arts in general
and talempong styles specifically gives this book broader
relevance...SUMMING UP: Recommended." -CHOICE Scholarship on the
musical traditions of Indonesia has long focused on practices from
Java and Bali, including famed gamelan traditions, at the expense
of the wide diversity of other musical forms within the
archipelago. Jennifer A. Fraser counters this tendency by exploring
a little-known gong tradition from Sumatra called talempong, long
associated with people who identify themselves as Minangkabau.
Grounded in rich ethnographic data and supplemented with online
audiovisual materials, Gongs and Pop Songs is the first study to
chronicle the history and variety of talempong styles. It reveals
the continued vitality of older modes in rural communities in the
twenty-first century, while tracing the emergence of newer ones
with radically different aesthetic frames and values. Each
talempong style discussed incorporates into its repertoire
Minangkabau pop or indigenous songs, both of which have strong
associations with the place and people. These contemporary
developments in talempong have taken place against a shifting
political, social, and economic backdrop: the institutionalization
of indigenous arts, a failed regional rebellion, and the pressures
of a free-market economy. Fraser adopts a cognitive approach to
ethnicity, asking how people understand themselves as Minangkabau
through talempong and how different styles of the genre help create
and articulate ethnic sentiments - that is, how they help people
sound Minangkabau.
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