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Book

Music and Irish Identity

Book

Music and Irish Identity

DOI link for Music and Irish Identity

Music and Irish Identity book

Celtic Tiger Blues

Music and Irish Identity

DOI link for Music and Irish Identity

Music and Irish Identity book

Celtic Tiger Blues
ByGerry Smyth
Edition 1st Edition
First Published 2016
eBook Published 30 December 2016
Pub. Location London
Imprint Routledge
DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315596631
Pages 188
eBook ISBN 9781315596631
Subjects Arts
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Smyth, G. (2016). Music and Irish Identity: Celtic Tiger Blues (1st ed.). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315596631

ABSTRACT

Music and Irish Identity represents the latest stage in a life-long project for Gerry Smyth, focusing here on the ways in which music engages with particular aspects of Irish identity. The nature of popular music and the Irish identity it supposedly articulates have both undergone profound change in recent years: the first as a result of technological and wider industrial changes in the organisation and dissemination of music as seen, for example, with digital platforms such as YouTube, Spotify and iTunes. A second factor has been Ireland’s spectacular fall from economic grace after the demise of the "Celtic Tiger", and the ensuing crisis of national identity. Smyth argues that if, as the stereotypical association would have it, the Irish have always been a musical race, then that association needs re-examination in the light of developments in relation to both cultural practice and political identity. This book contributes to that process through a series of related case studies that are both scholarly and accessible. Some of the principal ideas broached in the text include the (re-)establishment of music as a key object of Irish cultural studies; the theoretical limitations of traditional musicology; the development of new methodologies specifically designed to address the demands of Irish music in all its aspects; and the impact of economic austerity on musical negotiations of Irish identity. The book will be of seminal importance to all those interested in popular music, cultural studies and the wider fate of Ireland in the twenty-first century.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

chapter |7 pages

Introduction: Reflections on music and Irish identity

chapter |4 pages

Prolegomena: A musical day

chapter 1|16 pages

Nationalism and gender in the music of Augusta Holmès: Notes from an unwritten biography

chapter 2|17 pages

‘I have left my book’: Setting Joyce’s Chamber Music lyrics to music

chapter 3|17 pages

Thinking in circles: Music and cyclical form in Joyce’s Chamber Music

chapter 4|12 pages

The representation of Dublin in story and song

chapter 5|15 pages

Musical stereotyping and Irish identity: The case of the Pogues

chapter 6|12 pages

‘The orchestra of memory’: Music, sound and silence in Dermot Healy’s A Goat’s Song

chapter 7|16 pages

‘Join us’: Musical style and identity in Bernard MacLaverty’s ‘My Dear Palestrina’

chapter 8|16 pages

Singing the fisherman’s blues: Mike Scott and the grain of the Irish voice

chapter 9|16 pages

‘About nothing, about everything’: Listening in / to Tim

chapter 10|11 pages

Celtic Tiger blues: Sing when you’re winning

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