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This ground-breaking book is the first-ever study of the role
played in musical history by song collectors. This is the
first-ever book about song collectors, music's unsung heroes. They
include the Armenian priest who sacrificed his life to preserve the
folk music which the Turks were trying to erase in the 1915
Genocide; the prisoner in a Nazi concentration camp who secretly
noted down the songs of doomed Jewish inmates; the British singer
who went veiled into Afghanistan to learn, record and perform the
music the Taliban wanted to silence. Some collectors have been
fired by political idealism - Bartok championing Hungarian peasant
music, the Lomaxes bringing the blues out of Mississippi
penitentiaries, and transmitting them to the world. Many collectors
have been priests - French Jesuits noting down labyrinthine forms
in eighteenth-century Beijing, English vicars tracking songs in
nineteenth-century Somerset. Others have been wonderfully colourful
oddballs. Today's collectors are striving heroically to preserve
endangered musics, whether rare forms of Balinese gamelan, the
wind-band music of Chinese villages, or the sophisticated polyphony
of Central African Pygmies. With globalisation, urbanisation and
Westernisation causing an irreversible erosion of the world's
musical diversity, Michael Church suggests we may be seeing folk
music's 'end of history'. Old forms are dying as the conditions for
their survival - or replacement - disappear; the death of villages
means the death of village musical culture. This ground-breaking
book is the sequel to the author's award-winning The Other
Classical Musics, and it concludes with an inventory of the musics
now under threat, or already lost for ever.
The Other Classical Musics offers challenging new perspectives on
classical music by presenting the history of fifteen parallel
traditions. Winner of the Royal Philharmonic Society Music Award
for Creative Communication 2015 There is a treasure trove of
underappreciated music out there; this book will convince many to
explore it. The Economist Whatis classical music? This book answers
the question in a manner never before attempted, by presenting the
history of fifteen parallel traditions, of which Western classical
music is just one. Each music is analysed in terms of itsmodes,
scales, and theory; its instruments, forms, and aesthetic goals;
its historical development, golden age, and condition today; and
the conventions governing its performance. The writers are leading
ethnomusicologists, and their approach is based on the belief that
music is best understood in the context of the culture which gave
rise to it. By including Mande and Uzbek-Tajik music - plus North
American jazz - in addition to the better-knownstyles of the Middle
East, the Indian sub-continent, the Far East, and South-East Asia,
this book offers challenging new perspectives on the word
'classical'. It shows the extent to which most classical traditions
are underpinnedby improvisation, and reveals the cognate origins of
seemingly unrelated musics; it reflects the multifarious ways in
which colonialism, migration, and new technology have affected
musical development, and continue to do today. With specialist
language kept to a minimum, it's designed to help both students and
general readers to appreciate musical traditions which may be
unfamiliar to them, and to encounter the reality which lies behind
that lazy adjective'exotic'. MICHAEL CHURCH has spent much of his
career in newspapers as a literary and arts editor; since 2010 he
has been the music and opera critic of The Independent. From 1992
to 2005 he reported on traditional musics all over the world for
the BBC World Service; in 2004, Topic Records released a CD of his
Kazakh field recordings and, in 2007, two further CDs of his
recordings in Georgia and Chechnya. Contributors: Michael Church,
Scott DeVeaux, Ivan Hewett, David W. Hughes, Jonathan Katz, Roderic
Knight, Frank Kouwenhoven, Robert Labaree, Scott Marcus, Terry E.
Miller, Dwight F. Reynolds, Neil Sorrell, Will Sumits, Richard
Widdess, Ameneh Youssefzadeh
The main focus of this new edition remains the practical assessment and management of people presenting with psychiatric symptoms in late life. The core of the book describes the common presentations of depression, confusion, somatic preoccupation, hallucinations and delusions. Case vignettes are used to illustrate the approach to clinical problems. There is special emphasis on the complex interaction of social, psychological and medical factors and the need for close multi-disciplinary teamwork. The new edition has been revised to: update the clinical approach, update patient management under new policies, provide a precise diagnostic system and structure the book in keeping with today's practice.;This book should be of interest to postgraduate students in psychiatry or geriatrics; medical students; clinical psychologists; and nurses and other health professionals.
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