Welcome to The International Association for the Study of Popular Music UK and Ireland Branch

British Pop Archive

Posted: February 11th, 2024 | Filed under: Calls for Papers | Comments Off on British Pop Archive

Call for Authors, First Round

The British Pop Archive (BPA) is a dynamic series of short books published by Manchester University Press. Drawing on a rich variety of sources including interviews, memoirs, recordings, images, press cuttings and other archival materials, the books will reflect and expand the Manchester-based British Pop Archive, which recently launched to much acclaim.

We are seeking manuscripts of 50,000 – 70,000 words geared toward general readers as well as popular music specialists.  We are keen to hear from both new and experienced authors who wish to share untold stories from music, popular (and unpopular) culture and counterculture, whilst entertaining and informing the reader.  We seek authors willing to bring the archivist’s joy of uncovering long-hidden secrets and delving into dusty corners to an audience of retro culture vultures, music buffs and curious souls.

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Music4Change: Sustainable Cities and Cultures of Music

Posted: February 7th, 2024 | Filed under: Calls for Papers | Comments Off on Music4Change: Sustainable Cities and Cultures of Music

Date: 6-8 November, 2024
Location: University of Groningen, The Netherlands

Music4Change invites papers, panels, and workshops for the 2024 International Research School on the theme of Sustainable Cities and Cultures of Music to be held on November 6-8 at the University of Groningen. During these three days we will explore new ways of researching cities in relation to sustainability within the realm of music in a variety of formats, including through workshops, sound walks, interactive performances, and papers.

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Special issue of Cultural Trends

Posted: February 5th, 2024 | Filed under: Calls for Papers | Comments Off on Special issue of Cultural Trends

Do Give Up Your Day Job: Basic Income for artists, and other stories.

Drawing on the growing popularity of Universal Basic Income (UBI), a basic income for artists (BIA) has been posited as a solution to the crisis of declining income and increased precarity amongst artists. As with UBI, the experience of quasi-unconditional cash transfers during the pandemic gave impetus to those who saw BIA as a viable way to provide income directly to precarious artists, minimising the onerous and costly bureaucratic tasks of grant bidding and acquittal. A large-scale BIA trial in Ireland, including 2,000 artists receiving €325 a week for 3 years, offers a potential model whose evaluation is in progress.

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Preface, Prelude, Prologue

Posted: February 3rd, 2024 | Filed under: Calls for Papers | Comments Off on Preface, Prelude, Prologue

5th June 2024
Venue: Screen 2, Depot Cinema, Lewes
Next to Lewes railway station at Pinwell Road, Lewes, East Sussex BN7 2JS
Please see this link for further information: https://lewesdepot.org/visit/travel

Submission deadline: 3rd March 2024

Can you think of an opening moment in a narrative work that engages you, sparks your curiosity, and establishes the themes and politics of the whole piece? In Cinematic Overtures: How To Read Opening Scenes, Annette Insdorf tells us “a great movie tends to provide in the first few minutes the keys by which to unlock the rest of the film” thus enabling our “sophisticated appreciation”. It might “mislead” us in some way or act as “a stylized prologue that is not really part of the action but sets a tone or introduces a theme” (2017: ix-5).

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Metadata: Popular Music and its Metamorphoses

Posted: January 24th, 2024 | Filed under: Calls for Papers, IASPM Conferences | Comments Off on Metadata: Popular Music and its Metamorphoses

The German-speaking branch of the International Association for the Study of Popular Music is pleased to announce its biennial conference, which will take place at the University of Zurich from 07-09 November 2024.

In recent years, the term metadata has evolved from a technical IT term to a commonplace and buzzword referring to fundamental cultural semantics and technological dynamics of the present – also and particularly regarding popular music. In the context of digital systems, machine learning (AI), ubiquitous internet availability in the global North, streaming possibilities, etc., “data about data” and the labelling of other data are of considerable importance for the infrastructures of popular music. At the same time, they also affect the production side because genre boundaries and other conventions are shifting – and act as a heuristic starting point for attempts to intellectually explore and criticise respective processes. Streaming services and their music recommendation algorithms are a prime example for the current significance of metadata. Musicologists and scholars of cultural studies have recently increasingly studied such digital systems and their effects. Both ethnographically and using quantitative methods, substantial insights have been gained into the technical (infra)structures, ideologies, and redistribution effects in the environment of platform capitalism – although many (research) questions remain unanswered.

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Creative Music Practice Across Platforms

Posted: January 17th, 2024 | Filed under: Calls for Papers | Comments Off on Creative Music Practice Across Platforms

Special issue of Popular Music on “Creative Music Practice Across Platforms” (spring 2025)

Over the last two decades, web-based communication has become increasingly dependent on a relatively small number of digital platforms, which can now be understood as the sociotechnical nucleus of today’s Internet (Dolata 2021). Platforms occupy a powerful position in modern media cultures, exerting decisive influence on the exchange of information, processes of communication, and the organization of work and markets, as well as creating digital spaces for social action (Dolata/Schrape 2023). Functional rules, defined by the tech companies behind the platforms, are expressed in the platforms’ interfaces and algorithmic logics (van Dijck/Poell/de Waal 2018). These functional rules do not determine the behavior of creative workers active on platforms, but they do substantially influence it – including in the field of popular music.

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Popular Music and Musical Notation

Posted: January 8th, 2024 | Filed under: Calls for Papers | Comments Off on Popular Music and Musical Notation

Call for Submissions for a Special Issue of Die Tonkunst: “Popular Music and Musical Notation
edited by Janine Droese and Knut Holtsträter

Popular music is – within and outside of the academic discourse – often associated with immediacy and spontaneous creativity. This might be one reason why the role of musical notation in the production and distribution of popular music has received very little scholarly attention yet. Where the production and planning processes of popular music as well as its distribution are studied, the focus is mainly on analogue and digital audio media.

However, it can be assumed that nearly all genres of popular music – understood here in a very broad sense, including video game music, film music, jazz, “Schlager”, Broadway and Hollywood musical etc. – make use of musical notation. It plays an integral part in the production processes (composing and arranging, rehearsing and performing as well as recording) and sometimes even in distribution. It serves as a tool for self-documentation, for creativity and self-assertion of composers as well as for coordination of groups of performers, among others. A closer look at how musical notation is embedded in the field of popular music not only blurs the boundaries between the spheres of Western art music and popular music; as has been shown by some explorative scholarly studies, we can expect to find musical notation and with it traces of cultural practices that rely on the writing of music even in areas where it might be not expected at all, as, e.g., notated free jazz and music manuscripts in the high-tech rock studio. In recent years, more and more estates of twentieth-century popular music artists have been made accessible for scholarly research by archives and libraries. This makes it easier to evaluate the role of music manuscripts for the field of popular music, and to gain more insight into the ways and contexts in which these manuscripts were produced and used.

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EUPOP 2024: Borders

Posted: January 8th, 2024 | Filed under: Calls for Papers | Comments Off on EUPOP 2024: Borders

Estonian Academy of Music and Theatre, Tallinn, Estonia, July 1st – 3rd, 2024.
Deadline: 15th March, 2024

Individual paper and panel contributions are welcomed for the tenth annual international conference of the European Popular Culture Association (EPCA), to be held at Estonian Academy of Music and Theatre, Tallinn, Estonia, July 1st – 3rd, 2024.

With the overarching theme of Borders, EUPOP 2025 will explore European popular culture in all its various forms. This includes, but is by no means limited to, the following topics: European Film (past and present), Television, Music, Costume and Performance, Celebrity, The Body, Fashion, New Media, Popular Literature and Graphic Novels, Queer Studies, Sport, Curation, Digital Culture, the idea of European identity and its relation to popular culture. A special emphasis, this year, will be on topics such as popular culture borders, politics, forms of propaganda and influencing, and methodological framings within cross-disciplinary thinking.

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Progressive Rock: Beyond Time, Genre, Geography…

Posted: December 21st, 2023 | Filed under: Calls for Papers | Comments Off on Progressive Rock: Beyond Time, Genre, Geography…

The 6th Biennial International Conference of the Progect Network for Studies of Progressive Rock
5-7 SEPTEMBER 2024, The Krzysztof Penderecki Academy of Music in Krakow (POLAND)

The central idea for the Conference would be to combine creatively the two temporal dimensions in which progressive rock can be interpreted today: the past – from its genesis and original definitions through an analysis of the PROG classics to an attempt to read it anew; and the future – from meta-genre fusions to a critical post-progressive current. Hence, we suggest several subjects to be chosen by the participants and specific scopes to be included.

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Song, Stage and Screen 2024

Posted: December 21st, 2023 | Filed under: Calls for Papers | Comments Off on Song, Stage and Screen 2024

Renewing/Rethinking/Reviving
June 26-29, 2024
Hosted by The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts

Song, Stage and Screen is back!

This call for participation heralds Song, Stage and Screen’s first return to an in-person gathering since 2019. Song, Stage and Screen XVII will convene at the New York Public Library for the Performing Arts in New York City from June 26-29, 2024. This conference will be in-person, free and open to the public. While the pandemic forced the global musical theatre industry to restart itself since our last meeting, issues surrounding reboots, reckonings, and revivals have long beset both the industry and the study of musicals. What resulting implications for musical theatre research have arisen? We encourage submissions that consider how the terms “renewing,” “rethinking,” or “reviving” apply broadly to any aspect of the musical theatre on the page, stage or screen.

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