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Istanbul is home to a multimillion dollar transnational music
industry, which every year produces thousands of digital music
recordings, including widely distributed film and television show
soundtracks. Today, this centralized industry is responding to a
growing global demand for Turkish, Kurdish, and other Anatolian
ethnic language productions, and every year, many of its
top-selling records incorporate elaborately orchestrated
arrangements of rural folksongs. What accounts for the continuing
demand for traditional music in local and diasporic markets? How is
tradition produced in twenty-first century digital recording
studios, and is there a "digital aesthetics" to contemporary
recordings of traditional music? In Digital Traditions: Arrangement
and Labor in Istanbul's Recording Studio Culture, author Eliot
Bates answers these questions and more with a case study into the
contemporary practices of recording traditional music in Istanbul.
Bates provides an ethnography of Turkish recording studios, of
arrangers and engineers, studio musicianship and digital audio
workstation kinesthetics. Digital Traditions investigates the
moments when tradition is arranged, and how arrangement is
simultaneously a set of technological capabilities, limitations and
choices: a form of musical practice that desocializes the ensemble
and generates an extended network of social relations, resulting in
aesthetic art objects that come to be associated with a range of
affective and symbolic meanings. Rich with visual analysis and
drawing on Science & Technology Studies theories and methods,
Digital Tradition sets a new standard for the study of recorded
music. Scholars and general readers of ethnomusicology, Middle
Eastern studies, folklore and science and technology studies are
sure to find Digital Traditions an essential addition to their
library.
Istanbul is home to a multimillion dollar transnational music
industry, which every year produces thousands of digital music
recordings, including widely distributed film and television show
soundtracks. Today, this centralized industry is responding to a
growing global demand for Turkish, Kurdish, and other Anatolian
ethnic language productions, and every year, many of its
top-selling records incorporate elaborately orchestrated
arrangements of rural folksongs. What accounts for the continuing
demand for traditional music in local and diasporic markets? How is
tradition produced in twenty-first century digital recording
studios, and is there a "digital aesthetics" to contemporary
recordings of traditional music? In Digital Traditions: Arrangement
and Labor in Istanbul's Recording Studio Culture, author Eliot
Bates answers these questions and more with a case study into the
contemporary practices of recording traditional music in Istanbul.
Bates provides an ethnography of Turkish recording studios, of
arrangers and engineers, studio musicianship and digital audio
workstation kinesthetics. Digital Traditions investigates the
moments when tradition is arranged, and how arrangement is
simultaneously a set of technological capabilities, limitations and
choices: a form of musical practice that desocializes the ensemble
and generates an extended network of social relations, resulting in
aesthetic art objects that come to be associated with a range of
affective and symbolic meanings. Rich with visual analysis and
drawing on Science & Technology Studies theories and methods,
Digital Tradition sets a new standard for the study of recorded
music. Scholars and general readers of ethnomusicology, Middle
Eastern studies, folklore and science and technology studies are
sure to find Digital Traditions an essential addition to their
library.
Who produces sound and music? And in what spaces, localities and
contexts? As the production of sound and music in the 21st Century
converges with multimedia, these questions are critically addressed
in this new edited collection by Samantha Bennett and Eliot Bates.
Critical Approaches to the Production of Music and Sound features
16 brand new articles by leading thinkers from the fields of music,
audio engineering, anthropology and media. Innovative and timely,
this collection represents scholars from around the world,
revisiting established themes such as record production and the
construction of genre with new perspectives, as well as exploring
issues in cultural and virtual production.
** Music in Turkey is one of several case-study volumes that can be
used along with Thinking Musically, the core book in the Global
Music Series. Thinking Musically incorporates music from many
diverse cultures and establishes the framework for exploring the
practice of music around the world. It sets the stage for an array
of case-study volumes, each of which focuses on a single area of
the world. Each case study uses the contemporary musical situation
as a point of departure, covering historical information and
traditions as they relate to the present. **
Music in contemporary Turkey is inextricably linked to the history
of the Republic of Turkey and the complex histories of the Ottoman
Empire and numerous other empires that preceded it. It is also an
ideal avenue for introducing one of the most vibrant multicultural
areas in the Middle East. Turkey is home to a rich variety of
highly localized musical traditions--comprised of regional
repertoires, instruments, performance practices, and dances--bound
together by a strong sense of national identity. The first brief,
stand-alone volume to explore the musical and cultural traditions
of this region, Music in Turkey places the diverse sounds of the
country (and the Middle East at large) in their social contexts.
Author Eliot Bates employs four themes in his survey of Turkish
music:
* The role of music in forming a national consciousness about local
and regional cultures
* How changes in musical meaning pertain to changes in contemporary
Turkish society
* The process of arrangement, where technology is creatively used
to revitalize and modernize traditional music
* How today's Anatolian musical instrument performance and
construction are linked to local, regional, and national identities
The author draws on his extensive regional fieldwork, offering
accounts of local performances, interviews with key performers, and
vivid illustrations.
Music in Turkey is ideal for introductory undergraduate courses in
world music or ethnomusicology and for upper-level courses on
Middle Eastern music and/or culture. Packaged with a 70-minute CD
containing musical examples, the text features numerous listening
activities that actively engage students with the music. The
companion website includes supplementary materials for instructors.
Who produces sound and music? And in what spaces, localities and
contexts? As the production of sound and music in the 21st Century
converges with multimedia, these questions are critically addressed
in this new edited collection by Samantha Bennett and Eliot Bates.
Critical Approaches to the Production of Music and Sound features
16 brand new articles by leading thinkers from the fields of music,
audio engineering, anthropology and media. Innovative and timely,
this collection represents scholars from around the world,
revisiting established themes such as record production and the
construction of genre with new perspectives, as well as exploring
issues in cultural and virtual production.
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