ABSTRACT

This volume brings together a group of analytical chapters exploring traditional genres and styles of world music, capturing a vibrant and expanding field of research. These contributors, drawn from the forefront of researchers in world music analysis, seek to break down barriers and build bridges between scholarly disciplines, musical repertoires, and cultural traditions. Covering a wide range of genres, styles, and performers, the chapters bring to bear a variety of methodologies, including indigenous theoretical perspectives, Western music theory, and interdisciplinary techniques rooted in the cognitive and computational sciences.

With contributors addressing music traditions from Africa, Asia, Europe, and the Americas, this volume captures the many current directions in the analysis of world music, offering a state of the fi eld and demonstrating the expansion of possibilities created by this area of research.

chapter 3|23 pages

Moving to the music

Quantity of motion as a tool to study North Indian raga performance

chapter 4|20 pages

From dusk till dawn

An analysis of Cretan music festivities

chapter 7|18 pages

Tapping to recordings of Bulgarian music

A cross-cultural study of meter and tempo

chapter 8|16 pages

Tempo, meter, and form

An analysis of “Dansa” from Mali

chapter 9|37 pages

Mapping timbral surfaces in Alpine yodeling

New directions in the analysis of tone color for unaccompanied vocal music

chapter 11|25 pages

“Da mihi manum”

An Irish arcanum

chapter 12|22 pages

Toward a theory of ika

The rhythmic identity of melody in late eighteenth-century Turkish art music

chapter 13|23 pages

Applying the generative theory of tonal music to world music idioms

An analytical approach to the polyphonic singing of Epirus