ABSTRACT

This book offers the first in-depth study of experimental and popular music scenes in Beirut, looking at musicians working towards a new understanding of musical creativity and music culture in a country that is dominated by mass-mediated pop music, and propaganda. Burkhalter studies the generation of musicians born at the beginning of the Civil War in the Lebanese capital, an urban and cosmopolitan center with a long tradition of cultural activities and exchanges with the Arab world, Europe, the US, and the former Soviet Union. These Lebanese rappers, rockers, death-metal, jazz, and electro-acoustic musicians and free improvisers choose local and transnational forms to express their connection to the broader musical, cultural, social, and political environment. Burkhalter explores how these musicians organize their own small concerts for ‘insider’ audiences, set up music labels, and network with like-minded musicians in Europe, the US, and the Arab world. Several key tracks are analyzed with methods from ethnomusicology, and popular music studies, and contextualized through interviews with the musicians. Discussing key references from belly dance culture (1960s), psychedelic rock in Beirut (1970s), the noises of the Lebanese Civil war (1975-1990), and transnational Pop-Avant-Gardes and World Music 2.0 networks, this book contributes to the study of localization and globalization processes in music in an increasingly digitalized and transnational world. At the core, this music from Beirut challenges "ethnocentric" perceptions of "locality" in music. It attacks both "Orientalist" readings of the Arab world, the Middle East, and Lebanon, and the focus on musical "difference" in Euro-American music and culture markets. On theoretical grounds, this music is a small, but passionate attempt to re-shape the world into a place where "modernity" is not "euro-modernity" or "euro-american modernity," but where possible new configurations of modernity exist next to each other.

chapter |7 pages

Introduction

part I|22 pages

Theory and Methodology

chapter 1|3 pages

Globalization and Digitalization in Music

chapter 2|12 pages

Theoretical Frame

chapter 3|5 pages

Methodological Approach

part II|54 pages

Ethnography

chapter 4|7 pages

Experimental Music

chapter 5|6 pages

Metal Music and Classic Rock

chapter 6|4 pages

Urban Music

chapter 7|7 pages

Rap

chapter 8|3 pages

Transnational Networks (Human Hubs)

chapter 9|12 pages

Music as a Media Product

chapter 10|11 pages

Musicians as Actors

part III|58 pages

Analysis

chapter 11|11 pages

Zeid Hamdan

“Aranis” (Remixed)

chapter 12|10 pages

Garo Gdanian

“Remains of a Bloodbath”

chapter 13|7 pages

Mazen Kerbaj

“BLBLB FLBLB,” “ZRRRT,” “PIIIIIIIIIIII””, “Taga Of Daga”

chapter 14|9 pages

Raed Yassin

“Civil War Tapes”

chapter 15|9 pages

Charbel Haber

“Track 5”

chapter 16|10 pages

Rayess Bek

“Schizophrenia”

part IV|49 pages

History

chapter 17|3 pages

Ground Setting

the Urbanization and Europeanization of Music in the Arab World

chapter 18|2 pages

Modern Music from Cairo

Old Music from Aleppo

chapter 21|7 pages

Nasserism Versus Tourism (1952–1967)

chapter 24|6 pages

Pan-Arabic Pop and the 2006 War

part V|51 pages

Meaning

chapter 25|8 pages

Historical Perspectives

chapter 26|14 pages

Sociopolitical Perspectives

chapter 27|7 pages

Geopolitical Perspectives

chapter 28|6 pages

Psychological Perspectives

chapter 29|8 pages

Aesthetical Perspectives

chapter 30|6 pages

Euro-American Perspectives

chapter |14 pages

Conclusion