Inicio > Artes > Música > Música: estilos y géneros > Música del mundo > Music, Modernity and Locality in Prewar Japan
Music, Modernity and Locality in Prewar Japan

Music, Modernity and Locality in Prewar Japan

 

101,24 €
IVA incluido
Disponible
Editorial:
Taylor & Francis Ltd
Año de edición:
2016
Materia
Música del mundo
ISBN:
9781138249875
101,24 €
IVA incluido
Disponible

Selecciona una librería:

  • Librería Samer Atenea
  • Librería Aciertas (Toledo)
  • Kálamo Books
  • Librería Perelló (Valencia)
  • Librería Elías (Asturias)
  • Donde los libros
  • Librería Kolima (Madrid)
  • Librería Proteo (Málaga)

This anthology addresses the modern musical culture of interwar Osaka and its surrounding Hanshin region. Modernity as experienced in this locale, with its particular historical, geographic and demographic character, and its established traditions of music and performance, gave rise to configurations of the new, the traditional and the hybrid that were distinct from their Tokyo counterparts. The Taisho and early Showa periods, from 1912 to the early 1940s, saw profound changes in Japanese musical life. Consumption of both traditional Japanese and Western music was transformed as public concert performances, music journalism, and music marketing permeated daily life. The new bourgeoisie saw Western music, particularly the piano and its repertoire, as the symbol of a desirable and increasingly affordable modernity. Orchestras and opera troupes were established, which in turn created a need for professional conductors, and both jazz and a range of hybrid popular music styles became viable bases for musical livelihood. Recording technology proliferated; by the early 1930s, record players and SP discs were no longer luxury commodities, radio broadcasts reached all levels of society, and ’talkies’ with music soundtracks were avidly consumed. With the perceived need for music that suited ’modern life’, the seeds for the pre-eminent position of Euro-American music in post-Second-World war Japan were sown. At the same time many indigenous musical genres continued to thrive, but were hardly immune to the effects of modernization; in exploring new musical media and techniques drawn from Western music, performer-composers initiated profound changes in composition and performance practice within traditional genres. This volume is the first to draw together research on the interwar musical culture of the Osaka region and addresses comprehensively both Western and non-Western musical practices and genres, questions the common perception of their being wholly separate domains

Artículos relacionados

  • Vitality and Change in Warlpiri Songs
    Georgia Curran
    Warlpiri songs hold together the ceremonies that structure and bind social relationships, and encode detailed information about Warlpiri country, cosmology and kinship. Today, only a small group of the oldest generations has full knowledge of ceremonial songs and their associated meanings, and there is widespread concern about the transmission of these songs to future generatio...
    Disponible

    72,85 €

  • Yuupurnju
    Henry Cooke Anderson Jakamarra
    Yuupurnju: A Warlpiri song cycle documents a ceremonial song cycle situated within the traditional kurdiji 'shield' ceremony, as sung by Warlpiri Elder Henry Cooke Anderson Jakamarra at Lajamanu, Northern Territory, in 2013.The song cycle relates to a women’s Jukurrpa Dreaming narrative, and tells the story of a group of ancestral women on a journey across the country. Jakamarr...
    Disponible

    31,65 €

  • Music and Society in Early Modern England
    Christopher Marsh
    ...
    Disponible

    79,49 €

  • Music and Victorian Liberalism
    Sarah Collins
    ...
    Disponible

    35,65 €

  • Music and Monumentality
    Alexander Rehding
    ...
    Disponible

    53,61 €

  • Honoring God and the City
    Jonathan Glixon
    ...
    Disponible

    57,22 €