ABSTRACT

Presence Through Sound narrates and analyses, through a range of case studies on selected musics of China, Japan, Korea, Taiwan, and Tibet, some of the many ways in which music and ‘place’ intersect and are interwoven with meaning in East Asia. It explores how place is significant to the many contexts in which music is made and experienced, especially in contemporary forms of longstanding traditions but also in other landscapes such as popular music and in the design of performance spaces. It shows how music creates and challenges borders, giving significance to geographical and cartographic spaces at local, national, and international levels, and illustrates how music is used to interpret relationships with ecology and environment, spirituality and community, and state and nation.

The volume brings together scholars from Australia, China, Denmark, Japan, Korea, Taiwan, and the UK, each of whom explores a specific genre or topic in depth. Each nuanced account finds distinct and at times different aspects to be significant but, in demonstrating the ability of music to mediate the construction of place and by showing how those who create and consume music use it to inhabit the intimate, and to project themselves out into their surroundings, each points to interconnections across the region and beyond with respect to perception, conception, expression, and interpretation.

In Presence Through Sound, ethnomusicology meets anthropology, literature, linguistics, area studies, and – particularly pertinent to East Asia in the twenty-first century – local musicologies. The volume serves a broad academic readership and provides an essential resource for all those interested in East Asia.

chapter |11 pages

Introduction

Reflections on the Significance of Place for East Asian Music

chapter 2|16 pages

From the Heart of the Lake Booms a Mountain Song

Sense of Place in the Song-Cycles of Coastal China

chapter 3|15 pages

Bringing the Past to Life

Creating and Contesting Place in Kunqu Singing Practices

chapter 4|14 pages

Beijing in the Contemporary Pipa World

chapter 5|15 pages

The Alphabetical Order of Things

The Language of Place and the Place of Language in Tibetan Song 1

chapter 6|15 pages

Lingering Across the Ocean, Rooted on the Island

Indigenous Music and the Notions of Mountain and Sea as Taiwanese Identifiers

chapter 8|14 pages

Place as Brand

The Role of Place in the Construction of Con­temporary Traditional Music in South Korea

chapter 9|16 pages

The Sonic Habitus of Silk and Wood

Kugak’s Twenty-First-Century Terrain

chapter 10|14 pages

Not a Habitus for the Have-Nots

The Walker Hill Shows, 1962–2012

chapter 11|15 pages

Gagaku and the Kasuga Wakamiya Onmatsuri Festival of Nara

From the Sound of Authority to the Sound of Local Identity

chapter 12|15 pages

Biwa’s Place in Modern Times

chapter 13|15 pages

Place and Locality in Fuke Style Shakuhachi

The Case of Nezasa-ha Kinpū Ryū