Posted: March 13th, 2018 | Filed under: Calls for Papers | Comments Off on There’s a song to be sung: critical reflections on the music and influence of Johnny Clegg
Call for chapters
Proposal submission: 30 April 2018
Full chapters due: 31 January 2019
Introduction
As Johnny Clegg closes a chapter on his music career with his ‘The final journey’ concert tour (2017-2018), it is an appropriate and long overdue moment to reflect analytically on his musical career.
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Posted: March 13th, 2018 | Filed under: Calls for Papers | Comments Off on Blackpool in the moving image and popular music
Call for Chapter Proposals
We would like to invite contributions for an upcoming edited collection exploring the historical and contemporary presence of Blackpool in popular music and the moving image.
“Whilst something of a ‘late developer’ as a tourist location, Blackpool’s geographical proximity to the densely populated industrial centres of Northern England coupled with the nineteenth century growth of the railway network dovetailing with increased working-class spending power led to Blackpool becoming the world’s first – and largest – working-class seaside resort. By the end of the nineteenth century, with its three piers, a tower, as well as the country’s first electric tramway amongst other initiatives, Blackpool was hosting four million visitors a year and is pre-eminence amongst British seaside resorts catering for a working-class demographic was firmly established.
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Posted: March 8th, 2018 | Filed under: Calls for Papers | Comments Off on Special Issue of Rock Music Studies: The Beach Boys
Guest-edited by Erica K. Argyropoulos, Northeastern State University
“…The Beach Boys weren’t just a fun 1960s surf band…Once you’ve absorbed [Pet Sounds], you find yourself going back through songs like “Don’t Worry Baby,” “The Warmth of the Sun,” and “I Get Around,” finding a deeper brilliance where you once only heard pop craftsmanship.” – Mark Richardson, Executive Editor, Pitchfork
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Posted: March 7th, 2018 | Filed under: Calls for Papers | Comments Off on “Groove the City” – Urban Music Policies between Informal Networks and Institutional Governance
International symposium of the Urban Music Studies Scholars Network in collaboration with the Institute of Sociology and Cultural Organization, Leuphana University of Lüneburg, Germany
Date: November 23, 24 and 25, 2018
Place: Leuphana University of Lüneburg
Contact: Leuphana Institute of Sociology and Cultural Organization ISCO
[email protected]
www.urbanmusicstudies.org
www.leuphana.de/en/institutes/isco.html
With their social, material and cultural resources, cities have been and still are a precondition for the emergence and flourishing of music scenes; they are central turning points of the production, distribution and consumption of acoustic capital. The close connection between music and the city has been illustrated by genre terms such as Viennese Waltz, New Orleans Jazz, Chicago Blues and Liverpool Sound or trademarks such as London Symphony, Salzburg Festival or Hamburg State Opera. They point out to municipalities where an orchestra, a school or a group is situated, the town where particular events take place, or specific urban conditions from which specific musical genres originate. The relationship between the two, city and music, is dynamic and reciprocal. Music is a central part of urban culture; it forms communities and acts as a symbolic resource, contributing to the self-awareness of its inhabitants as being “urban” and in some cases even to the cultural identity of the city itself. And the “urban” is a central part of music; music mines and scoops urban particularities, and musical compositions are shaped by the urban settings they have been created in.
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Posted: March 7th, 2018 | Filed under: Calls for Papers | Comments Off on Jazz and Everyday Aesthetics
A Special Issue of the Jazz Research Journal
Guest Editors: Nicholas Gebhardt (Birmingham City University, UK) and Roger Fagge (University of Warwick, UK)
This issue addresses questions and issues in jazz studies and everyday aesthetics through a broad lens that embraces a variety of experiences and a wide range of approaches and methodologies. Submissions on any treatment of jazz and everyday aesthetics are welcome, but papers addressing the following themes are especially encouraged:
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Posted: March 1st, 2018 | Filed under: Calls for Papers | Comments Off on AES UK Mastering Section Conference 2018 (AES:MSC’18)
22 – 23 September 2018
University of Westminster, Regent St, London, UK & locations nearby
Keynotes to be confirmed shortly
Full event details can be found at the conference website:
http://www.aesmasteringsection.co.uk
Sponsors to be confirmed
Call for Papers & Engineering Briefs
The AES UK Mastering Section Conference welcomes academics, mastering engineers, producers, artists, industry professionals, technology developers and equipment manufacturers to come together and submit abstracts, engineering briefs or workshop proposals for consideration on a wide range of topics including:
- Mastering past, present & future
- Mastering technology & practice
- Innovation in audio relating to mastering & post-production
- Business matters relating to mastering & post-production
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Posted: February 23rd, 2018 | Filed under: Calls for Papers | Comments Off on Ageing with EDM
Special edition of Dancecult: Journal of Electronic Dance Music Culture: http://dj.dancecult.net`
Guest Editor: David Madden, Concordia University
Ageing with EDM aims to contribute to the emerging field of ageing and music studies by advancing the work of EDM theorists and/or practitioners. This scholarship is related to a growing group of researchers undertaking historical cultural studies of popular music, musical heritage, gender, memory and ageing.
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Posted: February 20th, 2018 | Filed under: Calls for Papers | Comments Off on Of Sacred Crossroads: Cultural Studies and the Sacred
A special issue of Open Cultural Studies
The seventh International Association for Cultural Studies Crossroads conference held at the University of the West Indies (Jamaica) was themed “Of Sacred Crossroads”. The conference call for papers asked for a consideration of issues surrounding the dialogue between humanity and spirituality. In the face of increasing materialism and consumerism, as well as the prevailing emphasis on science and technology in contemporary society, participants contemplated the politics of the intersection between Cultural Studies and the sacred, while celebrating the intangible heritage of humankind–that found in religion, art, dance, song, oratory, healing, re-creation, performance, ritual, belief systems, ethics, globalization and communication, among others.
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Posted: February 17th, 2018 | Filed under: Calls for Papers | Comments Off on Popular Music and Society: Special Issue on Woodstock University
Guest-edited by Oliver Lovesey
Popular Music and Society invites article proposals for a special issue of Popular Music and Society that examines the idea of Woodstock and related festivals (such as Altamont and the Isle of Wight) and the question of what Woodstock has taught or how it has influenced us. It will address Woodstock on its fiftieth anniversary as a significant paradigm shift in cultural, intellectual, and musicological history.
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Posted: February 17th, 2018 | Filed under: Calls for Papers | Comments Off on Perspectives on Music Production: Gender in Music Production
Call for Contributions
The music production industry has, for many years, been viewed as male dominated. Despite many examples of diversification and acknowledgement of the issues (such as the Audio Engineering Society’s ‘He For She’ campaign), gender representation within music production is considered limited. The editors welcome abstracts for chapters in a forthcoming Routledge edited volume entitled Gender in Music Production. The scope for contributions are listed below.
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