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Dimitris Papageorgiou deposited Repurposing ‘com-provisation’ (script/pre-print of conference paper) in the group
Ethnomusicology on Humanities Commons 6 years agoAs Anne Sauvagnargues suggests, in Gilles Deleuze thought “every[-thing] is defined as an assemblage of movements and affective vibrations.” Interestingly, Sauvagnargues’ proposition aligns neatly with Tim Ingold’s idea of correspondence, where things perdure, “carry on together, and answer to one another,” and where the additive ‘and…and.…[Read more]
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Amadeu Corbera Jaume deposited The long road to industrial musicology: the Minorcan example in the group
Ethnomusicology on Humanities Commons 6 years, 1 month agoOne could call «industrial musicology» the study of the musical life in factories and workshops. Unlike agrarian societies, there are very few works about industrial workers’ musical activity, neither at the Catalan Countries nor Europe. Based on British and Catalan scholars’ few theoretical works, our research Música popular i indust…[Read more]
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Anna Wang started the topic Notes from the 2019 AWMIG Meeting in the discussion
Society for Music Theory Analysis of World Music Interest Group on Humanities Commons 6 years, 1 month agoAt the 2019 meeting of the SMT in Columbus, Ohio, the Analysis of World Music Interest Group hosted a workshop to discuss how music theorists can meaningfully represent diverse global and vernacular musics in our classrooms. The first part of the workshop consisted of pedagogical demonstrations given by Jane Clendinning, Richard Cohn, Daniel…[Read more]
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Emery Stephens deposited Diversifying the Playing Field: Solo Performance of African American Spirituals and Art Songs by Voice Students from All Racial Backgrounds in the group
Ethnomusicology on Humanities Commons 6 years, 3 months agoTo further promote the performance of African American spirituals and art songs, this article offers a different perspective – direct response from collegiate voice students, voice teachers, vocal coaches, and professional singers. In the spring of 2005, “The African American Art Song Survey” was developed and disseminated through the Internet to…[Read more]
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Gavin Holman deposited Brass, coal, banners, marching and music: colliery bands and the Durham Miners’ Gala or “Big Meeting” in the group
Ethnomusicology on Humanities Commons 6 years, 3 months agoOf the 762 brass bands I have records of from County Durham, around 130 were colliery bands (and more of them would have been directly connected to the local colliery, even if not specifically named after the mine or mining company). This article looks briefly at the history of the Durham Miners’ Gala and the colliery bands that performed at it.
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Polly Mortimer deposited Anatomy of a Choir: an ethnographic study of the Choir with No Name, and its contribution to the enhancement of wellbeing and a sense of community among its members. in the group
Ethnomusicology on Humanities Commons 6 years, 3 months agoThis is a ‘study of a choir’; the author joined the choir for three months and participated in every aspect, from rehearsals, dinners, a meeting to a gig. They chatted to the members, sang with them and talked to the choir leader and manager about everything from the ethos of the choir, to whether meat was served often enough at dinner. It was the…[Read more]
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Gavin Holman deposited Brass Band Archive Recordings – a brief guide to recordings of brass bands in libraries, museums and other archives in the group
Ethnomusicology on Humanities Commons 6 years, 4 months agoBrass bands are, of course, musical organisations first and foremost, and the bulk of their heritage is bound up in the hundreds of thousands of concerts, marches, contests and other performances they have provided their audiences with over the years. Very few of these live performances were ever recorded, at least until recent years, and we must…[Read more]
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Gavin Holman deposited Comic Bands – Kazoo and Zobo in the group
Ethnomusicology on Humanities Commons 6 years, 4 months agoDuring the 1890s and early parts of the 20th century a type of band arose using kazoo-type instruments. Zobo instruments, based on kazoo principles, were invented and developed in the USA in the early 1890s, rapidly becoming a new craze for a while. When the instruments spread to the UK the bands that were formed using them were largely “comic”…[Read more]
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Gavin Holman deposited The Brass Band Bibliography (v.9) in the group
Ethnomusicology on Humanities Commons 6 years, 4 months ago(v9 – August 2019) [c. 6,740 entries] A comprehensive list of books, articles, theses and other material covering the brass band movement, its history, instruments and musicology; together with other related topics
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Gavin Holman deposited Damen und Damen – Ladies’ professional travelling brass ensembles of the German Empire 1871-1918 in the group
Ethnomusicology on Humanities Commons 6 years, 4 months agoTravelling musicians and entertainers had been a part of European life for centuries. In the German speaking countries of Europe during the German Empire there arose a large number of “Damen Kapellen”, troupes of musical and variety entertainers consisting largely of women, usually led by a man, and occasionally including males as players. Thi…[Read more]
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Lawrence Davies deposited Review: ‘The History of European Jazz: The Music, Musicians and Audience in Context’ ed. by Francesco Martinelli in the group
Ethnomusicology on Humanities Commons 6 years, 4 months agoReview of ‘The History of European Jazz: The Music, Musicians and Audience in Context’, ed. by Francesco Martinelli (Sheffield: Equinox, 2018), SAMPLES – Online-Publikationen der Gesellschaft für Popularmusikforschung, 17 (June 2019).
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Alessandra Ciucci deposited Performing l-ḥrig: music, sound and undocumented migration across the contemporary Mediterranean (Morocco–Italy) in the group
Ethnomusicology on Humanities Commons 6 years, 6 months agoBased on ethnographic research that is part of a larger project on the role of music and sound among migrant Moroccan men in Italy, this article focuses
on ‘L-ḥərraga’, a song that narrates the voyage and the experience of undocumented migration that ends with the tragic death of a young
Moroccan man crossing the Mediterranean. Through ‘L-ḥər…[Read more] -
Alessandra Ciucci deposited Performing ‘L-ʿalwa’: a sacred and erotic journey in Morocco in the group
Ethnomusicology on Humanities Commons 6 years, 6 months ago‘L-ʿalwa’, a sung poem whose text recounts the pilgrimage to a saint’s shrine in Morocco, is celebrated for its ability to convey images and emotions stirred up by the sacred journey. As part of the repertory of ʿaita—a genre of sung poetry from the Moroccan plains and plateaus traditionally performed by professional female singer-danc…[Read more]
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Alessandra Ciucci deposited EMBODYING THE COUNTRYSIDE IN AIṬA ḤAṢBAWIYA (MOROCCO) in the group
Ethnomusicology on Humanities Commons 6 years, 6 months agoʿAiṭa–a genre of sung poetry from the Moroccan Atlantic Plains and its adjacent territories—is regarded as the quintessential expression of the identity of the region. If it is possible to analyse the poetic language of ʿaiṭa in order to understand its significance among these populations, it is also critical to examine how the affective power of…[Read more]
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Alessandra Ciucci deposited The Study of Women and Music in Morocco in the group
Ethnomusicology on Humanities Commons 6 years, 6 months agoPanorama of scholarly work on women and music in Morocco
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Alessandra Ciucci deposited “The Text Must Remain the Same”: History, Collective Memory, and Sung Poetry in Morocco in the group
Ethnomusicology on Humanities Commons 6 years, 6 months agoThe article explores why a particular group of Moroccan musicians conceives of different performances of a sung poem titled “Kharbusha” as unchanging despite variables arising from the dynamics of performance practices. To this end, I explore the seeming discrepancy between discourses about “Kharbusha” and its performance, and what this discrep…[Read more]
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Alessandra Ciucci deposited Una panoramica delle musiciste professioniste in Marocco in the group
Ethnomusicology on Humanities Commons 6 years, 6 months agoThe article examines Moroccan professional female singer-dancers (shikhat) in relation to other professional female performers . An analysis of the role that women have as entertainers, and in particular of their behavior in the course of performance, will show how they affect the status of each class of performers. Sketching a panorama of the…[Read more]
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