scholarly journals ¿Popular Music Studies en la investigación sobre flamenco? De los (des) encuentros epistemológicos al análisis musical en la canción grabada y la transfonografía

2021 ◽  
pp. 207-225
Author(s):  
Diego García-Peinazo

Este artículo examina las relaciones entre el flamenco y los estudios sobre músicas populares urbanas desde una dimensión teórica y metodológica. En una primera parte, se presentan algunos de los encuentros epistemológicos entre los denominados Popular Music Studies y los estudios sobre flamenco, focalizando en líneas temáticas de investigación de los primeros. Tras ello, se reflexiona sobre el estado de la cuestión de las aproximaciones analíticas al flamenco, para posteriormente profundizar en las potenciales aplicaciones a estos repertorios de modelos emergentes de análisis musical en el ámbito de estudio de las músicas populares urbanas, centradas tanto en la noción de canción grabada como en la intertextualidad y la transfonografía. Tomando en consideración a la fuente fonográfica como foco de estudio, este trabajo demuestra cómo estos enfoques permiten conectar procesos musicales y procesos culturales, los sonidos y la articulación de significados, a fin de tender puentes para el entendimiento de prácticas y discursos flamencos desde el análisis musicológico.

Popular Music ◽  
1999 ◽  
Vol 18 (2) ◽  
pp. 193-207 ◽  
Author(s):  
Martin Cloonan

Recent years have seen two noticeable trends in Popular Music Studies. These have been on the one hand a series of works which have tried to document the ‘local’ music scene and, on the other, accounts of processes of globalisation. While not uninterested in the intermediate Nation-State level, both trends have tended to regard it as an area of increasingly less importance. To state the matter more boldly, both trends have underplayed the continually important role of the Nation-State.


2013 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Collin Jerome

Gender has been an important area of research in the field of popular music studies. Numerous scholars have found that contemporary popular music functions as a locus of diverse constructions and expressions of gender. While most studies focus on content analyses of popular music, there is still a need for more research on audience’s perception of popular music’s messages. This study examined adult Malay listeners’ perceptions of gender messages in contemporary Malay songs. A total of 16 contemporary Malay songs were analysed using Fairclough’s (1992) method of text analysis. The content of the songs that conveyed messages about gender were the basis for analysis. The results showed that the messages revolve mainly around socially constructed gender roles and expectations in romantic relationships. Gender stereotypes are also used in the songs to reinforce men’s and women’s roles in romantic relationships. The results also showed that, while listeners acknowledge the songs’ messages about gender, their own perceptions of gender and what it means to be a gendered being in today’s world are neither represented nor discussed fully in the songs analysed. It is hoped the findings from this, particularly the mismatch between projected and perceived notions of gender, contribute to the field of popular Malay music studies in particular, and popular music studies in general where gender messages in popular songs and their influence on listeners’ perceptions of their own gender is concerned.


2021 ◽  
Vol 15 (4) ◽  
pp. 447-451
Author(s):  
Matthew K. Carter

In a recent virtual talk at the Hitchcock Institute for Studies in American Music, music theorist Philip Ewell considered how music educators and researchers might begin to “undo the exclusionist framework of our contemporary music academy.” Ewell's enterprise resonated with me not only as one who teaches undergraduate courses in music theory, history, performance, and ear training, but also as an instructor in a recently adopted Popular Music Studies program at the City College of New York (CCNY). The CCNY music department's shift in focus from a mostly white, mostly male, classical-based curriculum towards a more diverse and polystylistic repertory of popular music chips away at the exclusionist framework to which Ewell refers.


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