ABSTRACT

Studying the role of music within religious congregations has become an increasingly complex exercise. The significant variations in musical style and content between different congregations require an interdisciplinary methodology that enables an accurate analysis, while also allowing for nuance in interpretation. This book is the first to help scholars think through the complexities of interdisciplinary research on congregational music-making by critically examining the theories and methods used by leading scholars in the field.

An international and interdisciplinary panel of contributors introduces readers to a variety of research methodologies within the emerging field of congregational music studies. Utilizing insights from fields such as communications studies, ethnomusicology, history, liturgical studies, popular music studies, religious studies, and theology, it examines and models methodologies and theoretical perspectives that are grounded in each of these disciplines. In addition, this volume presents several “key issues” to ground these interpretive frameworks in the context of congregational music studies. These include topics like diaspora, ethics, gender, and migration.

This book is a new milestone in the study of music amongst congregations, detailing the very latest in best academic practice. As such, it will be of great use to scholars of religious studies, music, and theology, as well as anyone engaging in ethnomusicological studies more generally.

chapter |8 pages

Introduction

Interdisciplinarity and epistemic diversity in congregational music studies

part I|112 pages

Methodological Perspectives

chapter 1|14 pages

In case you don’t have a case

Reflections on methods for studying congregational song in liturgical history

chapter 2|14 pages

Worshipping “With Everything”

Musical analysis and congregational worship

chapter 3|25 pages

Mediating religious experience?

Congregational music and the digital music interface

chapter 6|18 pages

Music Theology as the mouthpiece of science

Proving it through congregational music studies

part II|145 pages

Key Issues

chapter 7|17 pages

Political economy and capital in congregational music studies

Commodities, worshipers, and worship

chapter 8|16 pages

Congregation and chorality

Fluidity and distinction in the voicing of religious community

chapter 9|18 pages

“We just don’t have it”

Addressing whiteness in congregational voicing

chapter 10|19 pages

Researching Black congregational music from a migratory point of view

Methods, challenges, and strategies

chapter 11|16 pages

Studying Byzantine Ukrainian congregational music in Canada

Considering community and diaspora

chapter 12|21 pages

Congregational singing and practices of gender in Christian worship

Exploring intersections

chapter 13|16 pages

Searching for a metaphor

What is the role of the Shaliach/Shalichat Tzibur (leader of prayer)?

chapter 14|20 pages

Ecclesioscapes

Interpreting gatherings around Christian music in and outside the church through the Dutch case of the “Sing Along Matthäuspassion”