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How Music Lives A Musicultural Approach
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Culture A classic definition Culture: “that complex whole which includes knowledge, belief, art, law, morals, custom, and any other capabilities and habits acquired by man [humankind] as a member of society” (Edward Tylor, 1871) The guy who wrote it
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Sound Music Culture What it sounds like: A particular sequence of notes and rhythms A Warao shaman’s song with a particular melodic direction (up or down) A particular vocal quality of singing (e.g., Chinese opera--Listen: CD 1-5) What it means: The song “Mary Had a Little Lamb” A song with power to cure vs. one with power to cause illness An aesthetic of beauty to fans of Chinese opera, but maybe not to others
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Identity The Basics Questions: Who am I? Who are we? Who is s/he? Who are they? Mongolian khoomii (CD 1-6) Rabbit Dance Song (CD 1-8 [start], CD 1-9 [cont.]) Eagle and Hawk (band) – “Dance” (CD 1-10)
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Society A group of persons regarded as forming a single community of related, interdependent individuals Usually an “imagined community” (Anderson) Defined by social institutions—examples? Balinese sekehe gong (gamelan club) as a social institution (pp. 16-17) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zPIZObNdJb0 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zPIZObNdJb0 Listen: CD 2-12
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Culture (again, but different) Defining a specific culture, vs. defining “culture” as a broader concept “A culture is defined mainly by a collective worldview shared by its members.” (p. 17) Society = social institutions, social organization Culture = ideas, beliefs, and practices that underscore social organization Read: society vs. culture example re: Balinese gamelan beleganjur (pp. 17-18) Listen: CD 2-14
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Other Dimensions of Music/Identity Nation and nation-state Diaspora Other types of transnational communities (worker communities, virtual communities, etc.) The individual (multidimensional identities) Tito Puente (CD 4-7)—Cuban? Puerto Rican? New Yorker? Jazz, salsa, Latin jazz, “Cuban music”? Religion and spirituality Dance Ritual (CD 1-12 Zaar—Egyptian/Sudanese healing ritual)
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Music, Commodity, and Patronage Who owns music and how? Who has the write to sell it, buy it, disseminate it, trade it (commodification)? Ex. Alan Maralung “Ibis” (CD 1-13) Aboriginal Australian songman Didgeridoo https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JEgXAu30yuY&list=RDGf0RrQ62 jw8&index=7 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JEgXAu30yuY&list=RDGf0RrQ62 jw8&index=7 Who “owns” this performance? Music patronage Who supports musicians? Pays them? How and why?
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Transmission, Creation Processes Music transmission — How music moves between individuals and communities, locally and/or globally Different models of production and reception of music: notation or not, formal teaching or not, specialized or not? Music creation processes Composition—prior to performance Interpretation—making an existing composition “one’s own” (performers and listeners) Improvisation—in moment of performance arranging—transforming existing work
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Music in the Process of Tradition Tradition: “a process of creative transformation whose most remarkable feature is the continuity it nurtures and sustains Paul Pena: Genghis Blues (film) and “Kargyraa Moan” (CD 1-18)
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