Music and the cultural production of scale

Publication Type:

Book

Authors:

Dodds, Phil,

Source:

Palgrave Macmillan, an imprint of Springer Nature Switzerland,, Cham, Switzerland, p.viii, 108 pages ; (2023)

Call Number:

ML3916

Other Number:

9783031362828

Keywords:

Aspect social., fast, Music, Musique, Social aspects, Social aspects.

Notes:

Includes blibliographical references and index.Open access."This open access book shows how geographical scales are made through music. Scales are sets of spatial frames, abstractions or categories that denote the size, proportion, level, extent or hierarchical relations of phenomena. They are neither natural nor neutral but actively produced, with real political effects. But what role do cultural practices play in the production of scale? Phil Dodds addresses this question by focusing on music, arguing that music scholarship has both most to gain from and most to offer to a fuller conceptualisation of how geographical scale is culturally produced. Dodds suggests that music scholars should treat scales as open questions, and as phenomena potentially made through musical practices, rather than as stable categories for framing other arguments about, say, ‘local’ or ‘global’ music. He analyses how the meaning of ‘the local’ is affected by the aesthetics of popular music, and how the relationship between the particular and the general is fused through common musical conventions. Music and the Cultural Production of Scale explores diverse musical examples – including Janelle Monáe’s concept albums, key tracks in the grime genre, protest songs at environmental and anti-fascist demonstrations, and nineteenth-century colonial hymn-singing – to demonstrate how we already live in a world whose scales are made by music. The book also shows that music has the potential to produce a world scaled otherwise." --1. Introduction -- 2. Musical Metropolis: Janelle Monáe's scalar agility -- 3. A postcode-scale genre: Grime's scale as 'level of resolution' -- 4. Musical scale-jumping: 'What a Wonderful World' from Lysekil to Lviv -- 5. The cultural production of scalability: Music, colonialism and the Moravian missionary project -- 6. From the particulars to the general: a small-scale conclusion.