cfp: European Music Analysis and the Politics of Identity

A kind reminder of this fast approaching deadline October 1. The special issue is accepting peer-reviewed articles as well as shorter colloquy contributions. If you are considering submitting a piece, do not hesitate to contact the editors with any questions.

European Music Analysis and the Politics of Identity – Special Issue of Danish Musicology Online

In the wake of the North American scholar Philip Ewell’s critique of music theory’s white racial frame, questions of race, gender, class, and more have been amplified and gained new momentum in the areas of music theory and music analysis. But how, to what extent, and under what circumstances are such debates on the identity politics of music theory pertinent in Europe? Time is ripe for a fruitful scholarly discussion of these issues in music analysis, music theory, and related fields of music studies within a European context!

The guest editors of the special issue are Thomas Jul Kirkegaard-Larsen and Mikkel Vad.

Please read the full call for papers here: http://www.danishmusicologyonline.dk/downloads/call_for_papers/dmo_call_for_papers_special_issue_2022.pdf

IASPM-Canada’s POPULAR MUSIC FUTURES | Virtual Speaker Series

IASPM-Canada proudly announces its new, online speaker series. Each month, a wide range of speakers will engage with emerging research in the field of popular music studies. This year the series runs on the first Monday of each month, starting in October.

RSVPing to this event provides you with a one-time registration for all of our upcoming events. Full line up will be announced shortly.

Continue reading

Popular Music Books in Process Series

The series returns, with a new day and time for events, Mondays at 5pm ET. As always, we’re a collaboration between the Pop Conference, IASPM-US, and Journal of Popular Music Studies, with series programming co-organized by Kimberly Mack (University of Toledo), Eric Weisbard (University of Alabama), and Carl Wilson (Slate). Our previous sessions, from 2020-2021, can be found on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLiArt-iq8lLPQ79blC6xqHRMbq70v0Yrd. We encourage you to tell people about the series: they can email Eric.Weisbard@gmail.com to be added to the weekly mailing list.

Continue reading

cfp: 2022 Pop Conference

2022 Pop Conference Call for Presentations

When I Think of Home: Race and Borders in Popular Music”

April 21-23, 2022

Many of us have been home, listening to music. Stuck there during the global pandemic, we have explored what home sounds like and what home means materially, culturally, and in ways that are utterly personal. As a place of security that feels less a given than before; as a right that many do not enjoy; as a nexus of struggle in a time of gentrification, economic transformation, conflict over indigenous homelands. For some home is a place it can be necessary to leave, and for others it is one, as Stephanie Mills made clear, it sure would be nice to get back to.

Continue reading

2021/2022 Ethnomusicology Group of Barcelona’s Season Opening – “RELATIONSHIPS BETWEEN MUSIC AND NARRATIVE IN BATMAN FILMS”

The first colloquium of the 2021/2022 season, entitled “RELATIONSHIPS BETWEEN MUSIC AND NARRATIVE IN BATMAN FILMS”, will take place on Thursday, September 30th, and will be conducted by researcher and professor Santos Martínez Trabal (UAB). You will find all the information about it on our Website and Facebook (check the links below).

Where: Museu Etnològic i de les Cultures del Món

Room: Sala de Actos-Seu Montcada

(Visita la Seu Montcada | MUSEU ETNOLÒGIC I DE CULTURES DEL MÓN)

When: 19-21 p.m (Spanish local time).

Language: Spanish

Online session transmitted via Facebook Live:

https://www.facebook.com/1005328019661781/live/

Breaking and the Olympics Speaker Series

This 2021-22 online speaker series will bring together Hip Hop researchers and dance practitioners to exchange ideas, share research in its developmental stages, and broaden our collective knowledge. The talks are free and open to anyone to attend, ask questions and develop the conversation. 

The full program is available here: https://tinyurl.com/BATOPRGRM 

JOIN US ON THE FIRST WEDNESDAY OF EVERY MONTH
10AM-11:15AM EDT (TORONTO TIME ZONE) 

REGISTER FOR THE ZOOM LINK HERE:                     ttps://tinyurl.com/BATOSSRegister 

Hosted by Mary Fogarty (York University) & Jason Ng (University College Cork)
For any inquiries please email: breakinginolympics@gmail.com 

cfp: Festival Activism

Call for Proposals: Festival Activism
Edited by David McDonald and Jeremy Reed

For decades festivals have provided important sites of inquiry for folklorists and ethnomusicologists alike. While theoretically and methodologically diverse, this literature has traditionally focused on the communitas of festival experience and the flow of everyday social life beyond the festival’s liminal boundaries. Attending to the activist turn in ethnographic research, we wish to explore the idea of festivals as strategic forms of social action. Specifically, how can a critical ethnographic study of festivals reveal the ways in which performers, participants, and organizers encounter and challenge the myriad forms of violence that frame the contemporary world? How do festivals constitute sites of activism and forms of social and political intervention?

Co-Editors David A. McDonald and Jeremy Reed of Indiana University are seeking chapter proposals that explore existing and emerging debates on the dynamics of festivals and activism. This volume understands festivals as an interspace between disciplines such as folklore, ethnomusicology, performance studies, cultural studies, media studies, and others. At the same time, an attentive and critically ethnographic approach to festivals can offer utility to professional fields beyond the social sciences, such as arts administration and public affairs. We welcome original research that explores the significance of festivals as tools of social and political intervention. And further, we encourage chapter proposals that integrate festival research into contemporary conversations on applied, activist, and public facing work in the humanities.  

We envision this volume published as part of IU Press’ “Activist Encounters in Folklore and Ethnomusicology” book series. If interested in participating, please send a 250 word abstract to David McDonald davmcdon@indiana.edu and Jeremy Reed reedjer@indiana.edu by November 20, 2021. Finished chapter drafts will be expected by May 1, 2022 with final revisions expected in Fall 2022. 

cfp: Perfect Beat

Special Edition: Metal and Hardcore in Aotearoa and the Pacific Islands

Perfect Beat: The Asia-Pacific Journal of Research into Contemporary Music and Popular Culture 

This call for proposals is for a special edition of Perfect Beat, focused on heavy metal and hardcore music, scenes, practices, and cultures in Aotearoa/New Zealand and the Pacific Islands. Metal and hardcore have a long and nuanced history in Aotearoa, where scenes have interfaced with localised aesthetics and histories, and responded to urbanisation, deindustrialisation, and globalisation in complex and multi-faceted ways. Moreover, metal and hardcore’s relationship to Māoritanga is similarly significant, despite only recently coming into greater international focus with the success of Alien Weaponry’s use of Te Reo Māori. Heavy metal and hardcore’s history in the Pacific Islands is deserving of further attention, particularly given the growth of bands such as Kūka’ilimoku in Hawai’i, the recent staging of Metal United World Wide in Papua New Guinea, and the established history of metal in the Solomon Islands.

Continue reading

2021/2022 Ethnomusicology Group of Barcelona’s Season Opening

Dear colleagues,

We are pleased to announce the inauguration of the Colloquia Season 2021/2022 of the Ethnomusicology Group of Barcelona. As you probably already know, it is a monthly appointment counting on the collaboration of researchers who carry out their work in the fields of ethnomusicology and the anthropology of music. We strongly encourage you to send us your proposals to participate in any of the future sessions. In addition, thinking of all those who cannot travel to attend the colloquia in person, this season the broadcast through Facebook Live will be maintained, together with the sessions in face-to-face format.

The first colloquium of the 2021/2022 season, entitled “RELATIONSHIPS BETWEEN MUSIC AND NARRATIVE IN BATMAN FILMS”, will take place on Thursday, September 30, and will be conducted by researcher and professor Santos Martínez Trabal (UAB). You will find all the information about it in our Website and Facebook (check the links below).

Continue reading