ABSTRACT

Global Pop examines the rise of "world musics" and "world beat", and some of the musicians associated with these recent genres such as Peter Gabriel, Ladysmith Black Mambazo, and Johnny Clegg. Drawing on a wide range of sources - academic, popular, cyber, interviews, and the music itself - Global Pop charts an accessible path through many of the issues and contradictions surrounding the contemporary movement of people and musics worldwide. Global Pop examines the range of discourses employed in and around world music, demonstrating how the central concept of authenticity is wielded by musicians, fans, and other listeners, and looks at some of these musics in detail, examining ways they are caught up in forms of domination and resistance. The book also explores how some cross-cultural collaborations may fashion new musics and identities through innovative combinations of sounds and styles.

chapter 1|37 pages

Popular Musics and Globalization

chapter 2|30 pages

“Nothin' but the Same Old Story”

Old Hegemonies, New Musics

chapter 3|29 pages

Strategies of Resistance

chapter 4|25 pages

A Music of One's Own

chapter 5|21 pages

Strategic Inauthenticity

chapter 6|26 pages

Anglo-Asian Self-Fashioning

chapter 7|24 pages

Toward a More Perfect Union

Cross-Cultural Collaborations

chapter 8|10 pages

Conclusions

We Are the World, and the World Is Us