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This collection is a unique exploration of the heritage and legacy
of the Canterbury Sound: a signature style emerging in the 1960s
that draws upon psychedelic music, progressive rock, jazz and pop
to capture the real and imagined interactions between people, place
and music. The volume recounts the stories, and explores the
significance, of the Canterbury Sound as heritage, ongoing legacy
and scene. Originating from the experiences and ethnographic
research of the three editors, all of whom have lived and worked in
Canterbury, the book brings together reflections, stories, and
critical insights from well-known musicians, researchers, DIY
archivists and fans to explore the Canterbury Sound as an
inter-generational phenomenon and a source of cultural identity.
Associated with acts like Caravan, Soft Machine, Gong, Robert Wyatt
and Kevin Ayers, this romanticised scene has a special place in
popular music culture. Chapters examine the emergence of the
Canterbury Sound and the associated scene, including the legacies
of key figures in forming the Canterbury Sound aesthetic, the
documentation of the scene (online and off) and contemporary scenes
within the city, which continues to attract and inspire young
people.
Bulgarian popular music, the meanings it articulates, and the
infrastructures of its creation, operates within a web of
inter-dependencies with changing social and political contexts.
Positioned on the edge of Europe, between the cultural constructs
of the 'East' and 'West', Bulgarian popular music negotiates the
complexities of perceived 'global' values and specificities of the
'local'. This book takes an ethnographic approach to qualitative
methodologies to create a mosaic of perspectives through the
participation of music artists, critics, business figures,
copyright specialists, and young audiences. It employs the metaphor
of the 'crossroads' to describe the realities of the contemporary
Bulgarian popular music field, developed amidst the prolonged
transitions that followed the communist era. In the context of
struggles for social change, popular music has participated in the
creation of rituals and symbols of protest and resistance. At the
same time, the new market environment created opportunities for
popular music to formulate a business approach to producing
standardised content. The Balkans, are a melting pot of music
traditions, but are also framed as pathologically different from
the rest of Europe. This book suggests that an internalised
negative stereotype adds tacit complexities to Bulgarian popular
music, while at the same time, expressive markers of identity, such
as folklore and language, are celebrated.
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