ABSTRACT

This collection considers music within the spheres of production and consumption and pulls together an interdisciplinary collection of music studies from around the world, ranging from an ethnomusicological analysis of the condition of Tibetan music and its role within the Chinese state, the changing reception of anti-apartheid music by white musicians in South Africa according to new configurations of society and its memory of recent history, a lyrical exploration of jazz as a signifier of crime and other nefarious activities within film history, an analysis of how music charts and maps the social network and gender roles in Jamaica and a landmark commentary on how music is framed by David Hemsondalgh. As opposed to other studies which explore music just in terms of its reception or its composition and distribution, this collection should make necessary reading for anybody interested in the wider nexus of music’s existence and how it waxes and wanes with ideology, politics, gender, business and much more besides.

chapter 1|2 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|29 pages

Revelations of cultural consumer lovemaps in Jamaican dancehall lyrics

An ethnomusicological ethnography

chapter 3|27 pages

Getting heard in Tibet 1

Music, media and markets

chapter 4|19 pages

Developing a retro brand community

Re-releasing and marketing anti-apartheid protest music in post-apartheid South Africa

chapter 5|21 pages

Music meanings in movies

The case of the crime-plus-jazz genre