Ethnomusicology Today

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Ethnomusicology Today is a podcast series produced by the Society for Ethnomusicology, an organization committed to the research, study, and performance of music in all historical periods and cultural contexts. Ethnomusicology Today features stories and interviews aimed at engaging a broad audience…

Society for Ethnomusicology


    • Oct 22, 2021 LATEST EPISODE
    • infrequent NEW EPISODES
    • 25m AVG DURATION
    • 25 EPISODES


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    Latest episodes from Ethnomusicology Today

    2021 Pre-Conference Symposium - Celebrating the Musical Legacy of HBCUs

    Play Episode Listen Later Oct 22, 2021 30:44


    On October 27, the Society for Ethnomusicology will open its 2021 Virtual Annual Meeting with a pre-conference symposium Celebrating Historically Black Colleges and Universities' (HBCUs) Musical Legacy: An Exploration of Relationships Between HBCUs and the Society for Ethnomusicology. In this episode we talk with pre-conference co-chairs, Loneka Battiste and Fredara Hadley, about musical life at HBCUs, the work of members of the Gertrude Robinson Network, and supporting sustained conversations among HBCUs and the Society for Ethnomusicology.

    Episode 12 - Collective Sound-making in Argentina with Eduardo Herrera and Michael O'Brien

    Play Episode Listen Later Aug 22, 2021 40:26


    In this episode, Eduardo Herrera and Michael O'Brien discuss their research into collective music making in Argentina. Grounded in a discussion of Argentina's 2018 “Hit of the Summer,” this episodes examines the possibilities for political action and issues of toxic masculinity within participatory musicking practices of Argentinian soccer chants and neighborhood-based Murga ensembles.

    Episode 11 - Prefiguring and Indigenous Identity in Nigerian Film Music with Emaeyak Sylvanus

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 11, 2021 41:47


    In this episode we talk with Emaeyak Sylvanus about his article, “Prefiguring as an Indigenous Narrative Tool in Nigerian Cinema: An Ethnomusicological Reading,” which was published in the Summer 2019 issue of the journal Ethnomusicology. A pioneering researcher on Nollywood film music, Emaeyak explores localized musical concepts that dominate Nigerian film narratives. Grounded in his understanding of a narrative technique he terms “prefiguring,” Emaeyak discusses the 2014 film “Ekaette Goes to School” as a case study for exploring how indigenous meanings are negotiated within the global cinema landscape from which the contemporary Nigerian film industry has emerged. Emaeyak Sylvanus is a senior lecturer in the Department of Music at the University of Nigeria, Nsukka. A pioneering scholar on Nollywood film music, his research has appeared in journals across multiple disciplines, including music, cinema, and communication studies. His recent article, “The Relevance of Music to African Commuting Practices: The Nigerian Experience,” is available in the April 2020 issue of the journal, Contemporary Music Review.

    SEM 2019: Latin American Brass Bands with Javier León and Ed Wolf

    Play Episode Listen Later Oct 30, 2019 25:19


    In this episode we talk with Javier León and Ed Wolf about the upcoming SEM 2019 pre-conference symposium: “Heritage and the Politics of Inclusion in Latin American Brass Bands.” This November, the Society for Ethnomusicology will hold its 64th Annual Meeting in Bloomington, Indiana. On November 6, the day before the start of the annual conference, the society will present two pre-conference symposia: one focused on Film as Ethnography and the other on Latin American Brass Bands.

    2019 Pre-Conference Symposium - Latin American Brass Bands

    Play Episode Listen Later Oct 30, 2019 25:20


    In this episode we talk with Javier León and Ed Wolf about the upcoming SEM 2019 pre-conference symposium: “Heritage and the Politics of Inclusion in Latin American Brass Bands.” This November, the Society for Ethnomusicology will hold its 64th Annual Meeting in Bloomington, Indiana. On November 6, the day before the start of the annual conference, the society will present two pre-conference symposia: one focused on Film as Ethnography and the other on Latin American Brass Bands.

    Musical Participation and Global Health in the Gambia with Bonnie McConnell

    Play Episode Listen Later Jul 5, 2019 33:46


    In this episode, we discuss with Bonnie McConnell how community-oriented and participatory-based musical performances impact global health initiatives. By investigating the relationships between kanyelang musicians, government officials, health workers, and local communities, Bonnie discusses the value of musical performance and participation in local health education and effective global health strategies.

    Episode 10 - Musical Participation and Global Health in the Gambia with Bonnie McConnell

    Play Episode Listen Later Jul 5, 2019 33:46


    In this episode, we discuss with Bonnie McConnell how community-oriented and participatory-based musical performances impact global health initiatives. By investigating the relationships between kanyelang musicians, government officials, health workers, and local communities, Bonnie discusses the value of musical performance and participation in local health education and effective global health strategies.

    Performative Ecology in Micronesia with Brian Diettrich

    Play Episode Listen Later Feb 8, 2019 21:52


    In this episode, we discuss performative ecology with Brian Dietrich, whose article, “’Summoning Breadfruit’ and ‘Opening Seas:' Toward a Performative Ecology in Oceania” was published in the Winter 2018 issue of the journal, Ethnomusicology. Diettrich explores the concept of performative ecology in his discussion of ótoomey (summoning breadfruit) and ocean wayfinding and voyaging songs in the islands of Chuuk. Through his study of both historical and present-day musical performances in Chuuk, Diettrich explains how knowledge about social, spiritual, and environmental connectivity is bound up in musical performances. Brian Diettrich is a Senior Lecturer in Ethnomusicology at Victoria University of Wellington.

    Episode 9 - Performative Ecology in Micronesia with Brian Diettrich

    Play Episode Listen Later Feb 8, 2019 21:52


    In this episode, we discuss performative ecology with Brian Dietrich, whose article, “'Summoning Breadfruit' and ‘Opening Seas:' Toward a Performative Ecology in Oceania” was published in the Winter 2018 issue of the journal, Ethnomusicology. Diettrich explores the concept of performative ecology in his discussion of ótoomey (summoning breadfruit) and ocean wayfinding and voyaging songs in the islands of Chuuk. Through his study of both historical and present-day musical performances in Chuuk, Diettrich explains how knowledge about social, spiritual, and environmental connectivity is bound up in musical performances. Brian Diettrich is a Senior Lecturer in Ethnomusicology at Victoria University of Wellington. His research and scholarship is based on the music cultures of the Federated States of Micronesia and Micronesian migrant communities residing in Hawaii. Brian's article “'Summoning Breadfruit' and ‘Opening Seas': Toward a Performative Ecology in Oceania,” was published in the Winter 2018 issue of the journal, Ethnomusicology. Brian would like to express gratitude for the generosity of knowledge shared by his collaborators in Chuuk, especially Rewi, John Sandy, Elias Sandy, Joakim Peter, and many others.

    Embodying Air Guitar with Sydney Hutchinson and Byrd McDaniel

    Play Episode Listen Later Aug 29, 2018 39:37


    Sydney Hutchinson and Byrd McDaniel discuss race, gender, and embodiment in air guitar performances.

    Episode 8 - Embodying Air Guitar with Sydney Hutchinson and Byrd McDaniel

    Play Episode Listen Later Aug 29, 2018 39:36


    In this episode we talk with two scholars, Sydney Hutchinson and Byrd McDaniel, whose respective articles on competitive air guitar were recently published in the journal Ethnomusicology. Hutchinson, whose article, “Asian Fury: A Tale of Race, Rock, and Air Guitar” was published in the Fall 2016 issue of Ethnomusicology, explores themes of race, gender, and embodiment as it relates to individuals involved in elite air guitar competitions, specifically focusing on the way Asian American and female competitors have used air guitar as a platform for social and cultural critique. McDaniel, whose article “Out of Thin Air: Configurability, Choreography, and the Air Guitar World Championships” was published in the Fall 2017 issue of Ethnomusicology, examines how embodiment, media manipulation, and aesthetics function within the world of national and international air guitar competitions. We also interviewed Fatima Hoang, a competitive air guitarist, who in 2005 won the U.S. Air Guitar Championships under his stage name, the Rockness Monster.

    Episode 7 - Japanese Chindon-ya and Anti-Nuclear Power Protests with Marié Abe

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 28, 2017 22:08


    In this episode we talk with Marié Abe, whose article "Sounding Against Nuclear Power in Post-3.11 Japan: Resonances of Silence and Chindon-ya," was published in the Spring/Summer 2016 issue of the journal, Ethnomusicology. Abe explores the Japanese musical advertisement practice chindon-ya and how it has become politicized as the sounds of anti-nuclear street protests after the 3.11 nuclear disaster. Abe examines the tensions between chindon-ya's role in street protests and the socially mandated practice of the silence of jishuku.

    Japanese Chindon-ya and Anti-Nuclear Power Protests with Marié Abe

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 27, 2017 21:02


    In this episode we talk with Marié Abe, whose article “Sounding Against Nuclear Power in Post-3.11 Japan: Resonances of Silence and Chindon-ya” was recently published in the journal, Ethnomusicology. Abe explores the Japanese musical advertisement practice chindon-ya and how it has become politicized as the sounds of anti-nuclear street protests after the 3.11 nuclear disaster. Abe examines the tensions between chindon-ya’s role in street protests and the socially mandated practice of the silence of jishuku. Marié Abe is assistant professor of music at Boston University.

    Listening with the Body with Juan Diego Diaz Meneses

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 7, 2017 25:35


    In this episode we talk with Juan Diego Diaz Meneses regarding his article “Listening with the Body: an Aesthetics of Spirit Possession Outside the Terreiro.” In his investigation of the aesthetics of spiritual possession, Juan Diego compares the ritualistic practices of Candomblé and the musical performances of Orkestra Rumpilezz to highlight the similarities and differences between spiritual possessions in the context of Afro-Bahian music.

    Episode 6 - Listening with the Body with Juan Diego Diaz

    Play Episode Listen Later Feb 28, 2017 25:35


    In this episode we discuss the aesthetics of spiritual possession with Juan Diego Diaz, whose article "Listening with the Body: An Aesthetics of Spirit Possession Outside the Terreiro," was published in the Winter 2016 issue of the journal, Ethnomusicology. In his investigation of the aesthetics of spiritual possession, Juan Diego compares the ritualistic practices of Candomblé and the musical performances of Orkestra Rumpilezz to highlight the similarities and differences between spiritual possessions in the context of Afro-Bahian music.

    Global Tabla Industry with Allen Roda

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 22, 2016 16:31


    In this episode we talk with Allen Roda, whose article “Ecology of the Global Tabla Industry” was recently published in the journal, Ethnomusicology. Roda examines the global tabla industry as a complex ecosystem involving many contributors, including instruments, the artisans who make them, and the musicians who play them. Roda explores the material culture of the tabla and the complex craftsmanship that goes into manufacturing it. Allen Roda is an adjunct lecturer at New York University and works in the Department of Musical Instruments at the Metropolitan Museum of Art.

    Episode 5 - Global Tabla Industry with Allen Roda

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 30, 2016 16:31


    In this episode we discuss the complex ecosystem of the global tabla industry with Allen Roda, whose article "Ecology of the Global Tabla Industry," was published in the Spring/Summer 2015 issue of the journal, Ethnomusicology. Roda examines the global tabla industry as a complex ecosystem involving many contributors, including instruments, the artisans who make them, and the musicians who play them. Roda explores the material culture of the tabla and the complex craftsmanship that goes into manufacturing it. Allen Roda is an adjunct lecturer at New York University and works in the Department of Musical Instruments at the Metropolitan Museum of Art.

    Bollywood Dance Economies with Anna Morcom

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 25, 2016 20:12


    In this episode we talk with Anna Morcom, whose article “Terrains of Bollywood: (Neoliberal) Capitalism and the Transformation of Cultural Economies” was recently published in the journal, Ethnomusicology. Morcom explores changes in post-1990’s Indian dance culture. She contrasts the Bollywood dance craze in the middle classes with the rise of less culturally-accepted dance bars, bars in which dancers were showered with money to perform seductively. As a consequence of neoliberal capitalist ideals and the class disparity between those who worked in and frequented dance bars with those who opposed them, these bars have faced numerous legal challenges despite their significant contribution to the Indian dance economy. Anna Morcom is a Senior Lecturer at Royal Holloway, University of London.

    Episode 4 - Bollywood Dance Economies with Anna Morcom

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 25, 2016 20:12


    In this episode, we discuss post-1990's Indian dance culture with Anna Morcom, whose article “Terrains of Bollywood: (Neoliberal) Capitalism and the Transformation of Cultural Economies” was published in the Spring/Summer 2015 issue of the journal Ethnomusicology.

    Copyright and Indian Film Music with Gregory Booth

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 22, 2015 27:09


    In this episode we talk with Gregory Booth, whose article “Copyright Law and the Changing Economic Value of Popular Music in India” was recently published in the journal, Ethnomusicology. In his investigation of intellectual property rights within the context of the Indian popular music industry, Gregory traces the influence of copyright laws and new technologies on the social and economic value of popular music. Gregory Booth is an Associate Professor of Ethnomusicology at the University of Auckland, New Zealand..

    Episode 3 - Copyright and Indian Popular Music with Gregory Booth

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 21, 2015 27:08


    In this episode, we discuss intellectual property rights within the context of the Indian popular music industry with Gregory Booth, whose article "Copyright Law and the Changing Economic Value of Popular Music in India" was published in the Spring/Summer 2015 issue of the journal Ethnomusicology.

    Swedish Klezmer and Jewish Identity with David Kaminsky

    Play Episode Listen Later Oct 26, 2015 12:59


    In this episode we talk with David Kaminsky, whose article “Just Exotic Enough,” was recently published in the journal, Ethnomusicology. David interrogates the discourse of two Swedish, non-Jewish chamber klezmer bands, drawing out the complexities of heritage, identity, and cultural ownership. As a musical tradition cultivated by Jews in the east European diaspora, but now widely played by both Jewish and non-Jewish musicians throughout America, Europe, and elsewhere, klezmer has specific interest for David, who self-identifies as an American Jewish scholar. David Kaminsky is an assistant professor of Ethnomusicology at the University of California, Merced.

    Episode 2 - Swedish Klezmer and Jewish Identity with David Kaminsky

    Play Episode Listen Later Oct 24, 2015 12:59


    In this episode, we discuss Swedish chamber klezmer bands with David Kaminsky, whose article “Just Exotic Enough: Swedish Chamber Klezmer as Postnational World Music and Mid-East Proxy” was published in the Spring/Summer 2014 issue of the journal Ethnomusicology.

    Tribute Bands and Historical Consciousness with John Paul Meyers

    Play Episode Listen Later Sep 16, 2015 20:09


    In this episode, we discuss the rock-and-roll tribute band phenomenon with John Paul Meyers, whose article “Still Like That Old Time Rock and Roll,” was published in the Winter 2015 issue of the journal, Ethnomusicology. Meyers explains tribute bands as a case study for exploring the active role historical consciousness plays in shaping listeners’ engagement with popular music. By reviving the sounds—and sights—of a previous generation, tribute band concerts serve to establish historical narratives within popular music culture. John Paul Meyers is a visiting assistant professor of African-American Studies at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign.

    Episode 1 - Tribute Bands and Historical Consciousness with John Paul Meyers

    Play Episode Listen Later Sep 16, 2015 20:09


    In this episode, we discuss the rock-and-roll tribute band phenomenon with John Paul Meyers, whose article “Still Like That Old Time Rock and Roll: Tribute Bands and Historical Consciousness in Popular Music” was published in the Winter 2015 issue of the journal Ethnomusicology.

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