Posted: April 22nd, 2020 | Filed under: Calls for Papers | Comments Off on 21st Century Music Practice Research Network – Session 2
Seven Practice-Research Online Symposia – Summer 2020
Session 2: Restrictions and Affordances
This is a call for audio or audio-visual work which explores this practice-research theme in some way. The work will be presented online through YouTube and the http://C21MP.org website and additionally promoted through the IASPM UK & Ireland online conference hosted by the University of West London this summer. Discussion of the pieces (and/or practice-based responses) will also be presented through the website. The work can be in any style (from the highly commercial to the highly experimental) and be any combination of vocal, acoustic, electrical and electronic. It has, of course, to illuminate the theme and can include:
Read the rest of this entry »
Posted: April 20th, 2020 | Filed under: Calls for Papers | Comments Off on Popular Music and Society Special Issue: Jazz Diasporas
Guest Editors: Bruce Johnson and Adam Havas
Submissions are invited for a special issue of Popular Music and Society on jazz diasporas. This special issue is about how jazz circulated beyond its accepted sites of origin. This can be both international and intranational; that is, jazz outside the United States, but also jazz outside New Orleans. The latter has received extensive coverage in jazz historiography through geographically based stylistic typologies: Chicago, New York, Kansas City, West Coast. While there is also a growing literature on the international diaspora, both are dominated by essentialist metropolitan and national taxonomies. These approaches elide the dynamics of micro-localized scenes, how and why they are formed, what sort of networks they emerge from and develop. So, by way of example, more might be learned about the circulation of jazz by the study of international port cities and shipping routes than by generalisations based on an individual nation, or by the study of sub-urban scenes than under the rubric of a large city. To understand jazz, one must understand its diasporic reinventions.
Read the rest of this entry »
Posted: April 20th, 2020 | Filed under: Calls for Papers | Comments Off on Sound Stage Screen (SSS)
We are pleased to announce the launch of Sound Stage Screen (SSS), a new biannual peer-reviewed journal devoted to historical and theoretical research into the relations between sound, performance, and media. SSS will address a wide range of phenomena, practices, and objects pertaining to sound and music in light of the interconnections between performing traditions and media archaeologies: from opera to musical multimedia, and from cinema to interactive audio-visual platforms.
Read the rest of this entry »
Posted: April 10th, 2020 | Filed under: Calls for Papers | Comments Off on 21st Century Music Practice Research Network
Seven Practice-Research Online Symposia – Summer 2020
Session 1: Deductive and Inductive Working Methods
This is a call for audio or audio-visual work which explores this practice-research theme in some way. The work will be presented online through YouTube and the C21MP.org website and additionally promoted through the IASPM UK & Ireland online conference hosted by the University of West London this summer. Discussion of the pieces (and/or practice-based responses) will also be presented through the C21MP.org website. The work can be in any style (from the highly commercial to the highly experimental) and be any combination of vocal, acoustic, electrical and electronic. It has, of course, to illuminate the theme and can include:
- Performance
- Composition
- Studio Recording
- Sound to Picture work
- Pieces for Radio
- Sound Art
Read the rest of this entry »
Posted: April 3rd, 2020 | Filed under: Calls for Papers | Comments Off on Independent Music Labels: Histories, Practices and Values
03-04.12.2020 | Lisbon | NOVA FCSH
Within the field of popular music studies, little attention has been given to the impacts of independent music labels outside the Anglo-Saxon context, particularly in the production, dissemination and consumption of music in semi-peripheral countries such as Portugal. On the other hand, when the scope of the reflection goes beyond the Anglo-Saxon context the study of major record companies has been privileged over small structures of local / national scope which operate independently from these large companies and/or media groups with a transnational reach. Starting from broader discussions about the relationship between the local and the global in music production, this colloquium proposes a discussion on the impact of independent music labels with a particular focus on the Portuguese context and/or in contexts that are similarly located outside the main production centers. We will take as a starting point some recognized (yet open to scrutiny) assumptions about independent labels in the field of music production: the dissemination and making available of local musics and artists in opposition to the hegemony of global (mostly Anglo-Saxon) artists and genres released by multinationals; the valuing of aesthetic and artistic dimensions in music making at the expense of its commercial potential; the forms of organization and work that are innovative and adaptable to the changing contexts in the record sector, particularly in the new millennium. This is an inter and multidisciplinary colloquium accepting proposals in disciplines such as musicology, ethnomusicology, sociology, anthropology and history, among others. We also hope to establish a dialogue between the academy and the record sector with the presence and participation of independent label managers.
Read the rest of this entry »
Posted: March 26th, 2020 | Filed under: Calls for Papers | Comments Off on Special issue on Contemporary Issues in Live Music
Call for papers from Arts and the Market
Guest editors:
Dr Chris Anderton, Solent University, Southampton, UK
Dr Sergio Pisfil, Universidad Peruana de Ciencias Aplicadas, Lima, Peru
Arts and the Market is pleased to announce a Special Issue focused on the intersection of live music with contemporary social and cultural issues.
The past ten years have seen significant global growth in the live music sector, and a burgeoning interest in academia, exploring aspects of live music history, business, technology, culture, reception and space. Recent book-length publications include a three-part series by Simon Frith et al., with monographs in preparation/press from Fabian Holt and Steve Waksman, and forthcoming edited book collections from Angela Jones & Rebecca Jane Bennett, Ewa Mazierska et al. and guest editors Chris Anderton & Sergio Pisfil. The available literature has most strongly focused on music festivals (such as Robinson 2015; McKay 2015; Arnold 2018; Anderton 2019), but the broader field of live music studies is rapidly expanding with a particular interest in areas such as economics, work practices, spatiality and gender.
Read the rest of this entry »
Posted: March 13th, 2020 | Filed under: Calls for Papers | Comments Off on Call for Papers: Journal of Popular Music Education
ISSN 2397-6721 | Online ISSN 2397-673X
3 issues per volume | First published in 2017
Call for papers for special two-part issue titled Women in Popular Music: Their Musical Education and Pedagogical Inspirations, in Two Parts: (1) Women in WoPop (World Popular Music) and (2) Women in Popular Music across the Anglosphere
Guest Editor: Patricia Shehan Campbell
The aim of this two-part issue is to honor the voices of women in popular music across generations and cultures, their musical journeys from nascent to fully fledged or professional musicians, their ways of learning their craft, and their contributions in inspiring, influencing, and imparting to others the skills for engaging in popular music of various forms.
Read the rest of this entry »
Posted: March 10th, 2020 | Filed under: Calls for Papers | Comments Off on “No one listens to Springsteen anymore. He’s history!” (Blinded by the Light): Pop-rock Music and 2000s Cinema
Université Sorbonne Nouvelle, Paris CREW, EA 4399
Organisers : Clémentine Tholas and Catherine Girodet
Keynote Speaker: Mark Duffett (University of Chester, UK)
Location: Université Sorbonne-Nouvelle, Maison de la Recherche (Paris, France)
Date : September 18, 2020
Scientific committee : Christophe Chambost (Université Bordeaux Montaigne, France), Catherine Girodet (EMMA, Université Paul Valéry / Université Paris Est Créteil, France), Elsa Grassy (Université de Strasbourg, France), John Mullen (Université de Rouen, France), Karen Randell (Nottingham Trent University, UK), David Roche (Université Paul Valéry), Antoine Servel (Université Paris Est Créteil, France), Clémentine Tholas (Sorbonne Nouvelle, France).
Read the rest of this entry »
Posted: March 10th, 2020 | Filed under: Calls for Papers | Comments Off on Urban Nostalgia: The Musical City in the 19th and 20th Centuries
EHESS, Paris, 105 boulevard Raspail, Salle 13
July 3, 2020
Call for papers – deadline 6 April
https://www.ehess.fr/en/node/16865
The aim of this workshop is to explore space through music, approaching the history of the city via the notion of nostalgia. Often described as a form of homesickness, nostalgia is, by definition, the feeling that makes us wish to repossess or reoccupy a space. Such spaces appear to us as both near and distant, tangible and remote, and it seems that attempts at reclaiming them are frequently musical in nature. We know, for instance, that particular compositions have played important roles in helping people to navigate or mitigate a sense of displacement. In these circumstances, affective experiences may be bound up with trauma or joy, as is the case of song during wartime or musical imaginaries among migrants. Under other conditions, we might identify a ‘second-hand nostalgia’ in the guise of a musically-inflected tourism that seeks to reactivate (for pleasure and/or profit) the historical aura of an urban site. What are we to make of the abundance of personal, inter-personal, and propositional episodes that posit music as some kind of a bridge to the urban past?
Read the rest of this entry »
Posted: March 6th, 2020 | Filed under: Calls for Papers | Comments Off on The production of urban ambiances for tourist consumption in the contemporary city
Call for chapters for an edited volume to be submitted to Routledge’s Ambiences and Atmospheres Series or Routledge Advances in Tourism and Anthropology Series
Editors:
Iñigo Sánchez (Universidade Nova de Lisboa)
Daniel Malet Calvo (ISCTE, University Institute of Lisbon)
Daniel Paiva (Universidade Nova de Lisboa)
This book seeks to analyze the impact of tourism on the urban environment, focusing on the concept of “ambiance” as a tool to explore the physical regeneration and sensory transformation of contemporary touristic places.
Read the rest of this entry »