New Grove - POPULAR MUSIC
New Grove - POPULAR MUSIC
New Grove - POPULAR MUSIC
Richard Middleton
and Peter Manuel
https://doi.org/10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.article.43179
Published in print: 20 January 2001
Published online: 2001
updated and revised, 13 January 2015
A term used widely in everyday discourse, generally to refer to types of music
that are considered to be of lower value and complexity than art music, and to
be readily accessible to large numbers of musically uneducated listeners rather
than to an élite. It is, however, one of the most difficult terms to define
precisely. This is partly because its meaning (and that of equivalent words in
other languages) has shifted historically and often varies in different cultures;
partly because its boundaries are hazy, with individual pieces or genres moving
into or out of the category, or being located either inside or outside it by
different observers; and partly because the broader historical usages of the
word ‘popular’ have given it a semantic richness that resists reduction. The
question of definition is further discussed in §I, 1, below.
Even if ‘popular’ music is hard to define, and even if forms of popular music, in
some sense of the term, can be found in most parts of the world over a lengthy
historical period, in practice its most common references are to types of music
characteristic of ‘modern’ and ‘modernizing’ societies – in Europe and North
America from about 1800, and even more from about 1900, and in Latin
America and ‘Third World’ countries since the 20th century, and even more
strongly since World War II. The focus in this article is on these musical types;
the emphasis is on the main themes, debates, and historical trends, and, in
particular, on the USA and Britain, since 20th-century styles and practices
originating in the USA (together with styles originating in Britain since
about 1960) have come to dominate popular music worldwide. The period after
about 1955 is discussed in more detail in Pop and in other entries on specific
genres. Further information will also be found in articles on individual
countries.
1. Definitions.
A common approach to defining popular music is to link popularity with scale
of activity. Usually this is measured in terms of consumption, for example by
counting sales of sheet music or recordings. While it seems reasonable to
expect music thought of as ‘popular music’ to have a large audience, there are
well-known methodological difficulties standing in the way of credible
measurement, and – perhaps more seriously – this approach cannot take
account of qualitative as against quantitative factors: for instance, repeat
hearings are not counted, depth of response does not feature, socially diverse
audiences are treated as one aggregated market and there is no differentiation
between musical styles. Thus sales figures, however useful, measure sales
rather than popularity.
(ii) Issues.
Even if the main contours of the history of the mass media and popular music
are reasonably clear, much of the detail of the developments, and their
implications and effects, is less so, and has been the subject of lively debate
among scholars, performers, and listeners. Several arguments draw on the
central idea of ‘technological determinism’ – that particular cultural practices
owe their character to the nature of the technology they use. Marshall
McLuhan’s proposition (The Gutenberg Galaxy, Toronto, 1962; Understanding Media,
New York, 1964) that different media, especially the broad categories
delineated by oral, written, and electronic modes of transmission, have intrinsic
properties that condition diverse forms of consciousness and culture has been
developed by John Shepherd and others in an attempt to explain distinct
approaches to musical structure and process. To many, such views seem to
allow too little room for other factors, including political struggle and human
agency. Yet it is plausible to suggest, for example, that the ‘rational’ structures
of many 19th-century popular-song genres and their explorations of major–
minor tonal harmony are at least connected to their notated form; that this
helps to differentiate them from orally transmitted folksongs (which are often
monophonic, modal, and more iterative in structure); and that the recording
process facilitates the recontextualization of some techniques typical of oral
cultures (particularly performed nuance – tiny pitch and rhythm inflections that
cannot be notated – hence the success of such genres as black American blues),
and at the same time introduces new approaches to sound, texture, and form
(e.g. montage, or repetition through computer-sequenced ‘loops’). The historical
model, rural (folk memory) – urban (sheet music) – cosmopolitan/global
(electronic pop), makes some sense described in these terms, even if it is often
too crudely drawn.
In an argument more sociologically sensitive than that of McLuhan, Walter
Benjamin, writing about film in the 1930s (‘The Work of Art in the Age of
Mechanical Reproduction’, 1936, repr. in Illuminationen, Frankfurt, 1961; Eng.
trans., New York, 1968, pp.216–53), suggested that mechanical reproduction
had drastically changed the status of the work of art, by destroying the ‘aura’ of
the unique, authentic object, creating new processes of ‘distracted’ reception
and thus empowering the viewer. At the same time, technically and collectively
highly organized production demystified creativity, and turned passive
consumers into critics. Applications of this analysis to music have become
common. It is certainly clear that owners of a record, who can listen to it when,
where, in whatever mental state, and as often as they want, stand in a different
relationship to the music from that of traditional concert-goers. Some,
following Adorno, point out the ease with which new forms of ‘aura’ can be
created – through the fetishizing of the musical commodity or the glamorizing
of stars – and argue that, in actual musical practice, passive listening is still the
norm. Similarly, while digital technology has the potential to democratize
production and ‘de-throne’ the stars, it can also be used to create new stars,
such as producers and DJs (see DJ) as well as performers. Nevertheless,
Benjamin’s inspiration continues to be evident in the stream of work that began
in the 1970s on music subcultures, and in subsequent research on the ‘active
fan’.
Adorno believed that mass production is an adjunct of what he took to be the
main ideological function of the ‘culture industries’ (including the music
industry) in late capitalism, namely tying standardized products to equally
standardized consumer (listener) responses; this maximizes profits
(homogenized pieces can reach huge markets) and keeps people in their place.
Many writers (for instance, Jacques Attali, in his concept of ‘repetition’) have
advanced similar arguments. Given the financial rewards record companies gain
from a large international ‘hit’, their desire to use the full array of mass media
and marketing techniques to achieve the maximum possible market control is
understandable. Nevertheless, research makes it clear that the market is not
fully controllable (most record releases lose money); that music industry
operations inhabit a field of conflicts among the various sectors, many of which
mirror conflicts among musicians and fans; that new agents, new styles, and
new tastes can never be outlawed – indeed, the logic of the economy requires
them; and that, in any case, musical values cannot be regarded as mere
epiphenomena of economic exchanges: interpretation and use cannot be fully
policed. In this context the most influential model for the popular music
economy draws a relationship between the balance of industry concentration
and diversity on the one hand and the degree of musical standardization or
innovation on the other; the history is viewed in terms of cycles: periods of
oligopoly and conservatism are broken up by new energies coming from
independent sources, which are in turn incorporated and made safe by the
major players. Some qualifications are necessary: late 20th-century technology
loosened somewhat the connection between industry structure and musical
innovation; there are numerous examples of innovation in the outputs of major
companies; and the model does not necessarily apply in the 1920s and 30s
before the tendency to oligopoly really developed. Nevertheless, given that
musical production here takes place in the context of the imperatives of a
capitalist industry, the basic perspective of the model seems persuasive,
suggesting that the history might be pictured as a spiral in which each stage
strives to achieve an equilibrium that is nevertheless inevitably unstable.
Implicit in all these arguments are diverse views of what modern society is and
what part mass-mediated music plays in it. It is a commonplace that each
expansion in the scope of music markets, each increase in the speed of
turnover, tends to intensify a process whereby metropolitan norms replace or
absorb older, indigenous and peripheral styles and traditions. The trend is to
rationalize and democratize by flattening out difference. Thus the promotional
discourses around many 19th-century genres focussed on talk of fashion, the
‘latest’ composition, the ‘talk of London’ (or New York, or Paris, etc.), performed
‘with great success by …’. In the early 20th century J.B. Priestley described the
appearance of ragtime as ‘drumming us into another kind of life in which
anything might happen’ (Baxendale, 1995, p.138). Throughout Europe,
American influences were associated, then and again after World War II, with
modernization and the loss of old worlds. In the late 20th century the
technophiliac futurism of club-dance styles seemed to threaten pop traditions
and to signal the birth of a new transurban ‘jungle’. But cultural geographers
point out that while such processes may destroy and restructure communities,
they can also create the possibility of new ones (real or imagined), for instance
people coming together round a newly discovered music style accessible to
them only electronically. At the same time, as the size of the geographical unit
within which activity is organized expands, so in a paradoxical way norms
associated with intermediate levels (the nation-state, for example) may weaken,
allowing local ‘scenes’ to flourish; increasing compression of time and space
makes plentiful musical materials available. In any case, the industry is adept at
inventing traditions or adapting them for sale to consumers alienated from
their own. The British case – from early 19th-century stereotypes of Irish and
Scottish music, through English folk revival ‘peasants’ and a music-hall ‘golden
age’, to lovable rock and rolling cockney teddy boys and assorted adherents of
(black American or Afro-Caribbean) ‘black roots’ – is a good example. Modernity
has an insatiable appetite for irrational tradition, and most European
traditional musics, most American ethnic styles, not to mention world musics
from further afield, have been drawn into the net. The best overall model, then,
may be some sort of network of levels of activity, continuously evolving in
shape and dynamics, such as the matrix of (global) ‘superculture’, (local)
‘subculture’, and (cross-cutting) ‘interculture’ proposed by Slobin (1993).
3. An outline history.
(i) Before Tin Pan Alley.
As suggested above, it seems safe to assume that in all socially stratified
cultures there is some sort of hierarchy of musical categories. While there may
be a few remote regions where this seems barely to have obtained until
relatively recently (the Scottish Highlands, Serbia, parts of the American
frontier before the late 19th century, for example), in most of Europe and the
New World distinctions between ‘popular’ and ‘élite’ types of music have a
lengthy history. However, before about 1800 there is little sense of this being
considered a problem. When the medieval theorist Johannes de Grocheio (De
musica, c1300) wrote that the motet was not suitable for ordinary people ‘since
they do not grasp its subtlety or delight in hearing it … [it] should be
performed for the learned’, he seems simply to be stating an obvious fact. It
was the growth of social mobility, the increasing effects of capitalist social
relations and the appearance of commercialized leisure activities that led to
anxiety about the culture of the people. This process can be dated to the 17th
and 18th centuries: J.G. Herder’s statement, late in the 18th century (cited in
Burke, 1978, p.22), distinguishing an acceptable vernacular from the horrors of
the contemporary vulgus – ‘The people [Volk] are not the mob of the streets, who
never sing or compose but shriek and mutilate’ – may be taken as conveniently
encapsulating the beginnings of the modern ‘problem’ of popular music.
The subject of popular music in medieval and early modern Europe is one of
the weakest parts of its historiography. This is partly because the sources are
scanty and often unreliable; partly because of insufficient research; and partly
because the work that has been done often exists as an ‘aside’ in music-
historical literature that is focussed elsewhere, or in the literature of highly
specialized disciplines, notably folklore studies (see Folk music). Redfield’s model
of ‘great tradition’ and ‘little tradition’, the former accessible only to the
educated élite, the latter to both the élite and the rest, but with two-way traffic
in content and style, still holds good as a starting-point (see Burke, 1978,
pp.23–64); but the task of placing data about the popular traditions within a
picture of the development of the musical field as a whole is in its infancy (but
see Maróthy, 1966; Ling, 1997). In some ways the interpretative difficulties
intensify when more commercially orientated activities, often aimed at an
embryonic middle class, increased during the 17th and 18th centuries.
Broadside ballads (see Ballad, §I, 7) and the tunes to which they were sung had
already been socially mobile for some time, but in the second half of the 17th
century printed collections of songs and dance-tunes were published (in
England, for example, John Playford’s The English Dancing Master, 1651, Apollo’s
Banquet, 1669, and A Choice Collection of 180 Loyal Songs, 1685, and D’Urfey’s Wit and
Mirth, or Pills to Purge Melancholy, 1699), followed by individual songs, perhaps
drawn from the theatre or, increasingly, specially composed for the growing
domestic market. By the 18th century, simple instrumental pieces were being
aimed at the domestic market too, and the first collections of ‘folk’ music
(mostly ‘Scotch’) appeared. Popular tunes, previously used by, for example,
Elizabethan composers of virginal and consort music, were used in 18th-
century English ballad opera, German Singspiel and French opéra comique. Town
bands, such as the English waits, were joined by more commercially organized
groups performing in taverns and, later, in pleasure gardens and concert
rooms. The new urban tunes percolated out into the countryside, for instance
through the travels of itinerant fiddlers, pipers, and singers, while many
dances, from the saraband and country dance to the early 19th-century waltz,
made the opposite social journey.
The essential background to the history of popular music in the 19th century is
its industrialization. As this process gradually brought most of society within
its orbit, the effect in some ways was to narrow the stream of musical practice:
the range of activities was broad but, leaving aside older rural repertories, the
stylistic range became less so. Much of what we think of now as art music was
widely available through cheap editions, through transcriptions and
arrangements (which often simplified difficult works), through the spectacular
virtuoso recitals pioneered by Paganini and Liszt, and through ‘popular
concerts’. A similar repertory was central to the activity of the mass amateur
choral movements that developed in most European countries (stimulated in
part by the invention of sol-fa notation systems); and art music (especially
opera) also featured strongly in the repertory of the equally popular wind
bands, such as the British brass bands which first appeared around the middle
of the century and quickly coalesced into a unique working-class movement
(see Band, §IV, 3). Many of these activities were part of consciously pursued
attempts to tie the lower classes into the norms (aesthetic and behavioural) of
bourgeois society.
At the same time, it is often difficult to draw a clear dividing-line between these
activities and more ‘down-market’ spheres. Weber (1975) shows that many early
19th-century concerts in London, Paris, and Vienna cultivated a rather vulgar
appeal to the nouveaux-riches. Similarly, in the 1820s, 30s, and 40s in these cities
(and later in others) a new breed of composer-conductor, with a flamboyant,
‘marketable’ personality, appeared: Louis Jullien in London, Philippe Musard in
Paris, the two Johann Strausses in Vienna. Their promenade and outdoor
concerts included not just dances (the Strausses, of course, owed their fame
initially to the waltz) but also pieces for listening, and these performances
(which themselves emerged from earlier pleasure-garden traditions) laid the
ground for the ‘popular concerts’ that developed in the second half of the
century. Large-scale dance halls were another new phenomenon, and dances (as
well as marches) were also popular with wind and military bands. The flood of
music written for domestic performance also shades stylistically from art
norms into what has tendentiously been called Trivialmusik; the distance between
Mendelssohn’s Lieder ohne Worte and the salon pieces of, for example, Gustav
Lange and Sydney Smith, or between the simpler lieder of Schubert and the
songs of Adolf Jensen and F.W. Abt, is not large. Much the same point can be
made about French mélodies and British drawing-room ballads: prevailing norms
are simplified for a mass market. The relationship between the core operatic
repertory – from which many overtures and arias in any case found their way
into orchestral and band concerts, dance and domestic arrangements, and even
barrel organ transcriptions – and new lineages of light opera and operetta (from
Ferdinand Hérold and Offenbach to Gilbert and Sullivan and Lehár) is not
dissimilar.
Even in the British Music hall (and equivalents elsewhere, such as the French café
chantant; see Café-concert) ‘serious’ music was sometimes included, especially
extracts from operas and ballets. But the sources of these new institutions,
which emerged during the mid-19th century, were socially and musically more
diverse. Early audiences seem to have been predominantly working- and lower-
middle-class, and the songs derived from existing folk, street, and urban comic-
song repertories. By the 1860s distinct song styles had been established, and
the first star performers, such as ‘swell’ George Leybourne, had made their
mark. Towards the end of the century, however, increased investment, a
tendency to split the drinking from the entertainment, and a broadening of the
audience turned the halls into something more like variety theatres; there is
still an observable difference in type of appeal and musical character between
them and contemporary musical comedy (see Musical), Cabaret, and Parisian
vaudeville-operetta, but it is not a chasm. Further still down the socio-musical
ladder lie resilient traditions of street, industrial, and political song, which, as
folklorists have shown, drew on and developed older tunes and styles, often
using them in new contexts such as industrial disputes. Here is the place where
striking musical difference (for example, in the form of modal tunes) may still
be found.
The history of 19th-century popular music in the USA is similar in some ways
to that in Europe, and different in others. The ideological gulf between ‘popular’
and ‘élite’ developed more hesitantly and patchily. There were exceptionally
strong and active folk traditions among both rural white communities (notably
in the South) and black slaves and ex-slaves; these assumed great importance in
the early 20th century, since their modes of performance were far better suited
to transmission by recordings than by notation. However, commercial music
publishing in the USA drew at first on European (especially British) sources,
initially broadside ballads and the 17th- and 18th-century collections of
Playford and others, then the ballad opera and pleasure-garden and domestic
song repertories. Irish songs (especially those published by Thomas Moore) and
Italian opera were also popular. Many European musicians, such as the English
singer and composer Henry Russell, visited the USA. Singing schools and other
educational initiatives led to increased musical literacy (see Psalmody,
§II and Shape-note hymnody), and to the growth of domestic markets for vocal and
instrumental music similar to those in Europe. At the same time, ‘singing
families’ such as the Hutchinsons generated distinctive song repertories, as did
the Civil War; and, much more significantly, the minstrel show – emerging as an
identifiable genre in the 1830s, and soon an enormous success in Britain as well
as throughout the USA – evolved in ways that were unique not only in relation
to its negotiation of racial issues but also to its musical fusion of Anglo-Celtic,
Italian, and (to some degree and in diluted forms) black American elements
(see Minstrelsy, American). The fusion is heard at its most influential in the songs,
for both minstrel show and domestic parlour, of Stephen Foster.
Foster is notable for his ability to identify successful song formulae and exploit
them. This tendency is seen even more clearly in the output of subsequent song
composers, including H.P. Danks, Henry Tucker, Septimus Winner, Will S. Hays,
and David Braham, as well as in the production of drawing-room ballads in
Britain from the 1870s by Arthur Sullivan, Frederic Cowen, James Molloy, and
others. Mass production techniques emerged at exactly the same time in the
music hall: Felix McGlennon, who was self-taught, claimed to have written 4000
songs, Joseph Tabrar 17,000 (sometimes 30 in a day). McGlennon said that he
would ‘sacrifice everything … to catchiness …. If a rowdy song takes the ear of
the public, and rowdy songs set in, why, I must needs write them. [The] music
hall songs of all time run in clear grooves’ (Bennett, 1986, pp.9–10). The stage
for Tin Pan Alley was set.
The intricate history of pop music after rock and roll (intricate in terms of its
chronology and its geographical variants) is recounted in detail elsewhere
(see Pop). The emphasis in this article is on laying out the pattern of major shifts
that articulate this history and relating them to the longer-term popular music
narrative. Three such shifts are apparent. The first relates to the emergence
of Rock as a self-standing stream distinct from its antecedents; this dates from
the mid-1960s. The second is associated with the brief flowering of Punk rock in
the late 1970s, which was a symptom of a broader process of fragmentation in
the popular music field. The third revolves around the appearance in the late
1980s of a new wave of highly technically mediated, club-based dance music
styles, which seemed to some to threaten much of the basis on which the
previous popular music apparatus operated (see Dance music). It is important to
note, however, that through these successive shifts existing styles rarely
disappeared; on the contrary, the history shows a cumulative process and an
expanding style-reservoir. Moreover, many pre-rock-and-roll styles also
continued, in the margins, to be joined by a host of adaptations, hybrids, and
revivals associated with ethnic and indigenous traditions particular to many
distinct regions of both Europe (from Irish show bands to Russian rock) and
North America (from Louisiana swamp rock to Jewish klezmer). Indeed, there is
an argument that, as media saturation brought all corners of these societies
into the same electronically mediated space, the very concept of cultural
centres and margins became doubtful, making the historiography of popular
music a politically charged enterprise.
The assimilation of rock and roll by the music industry and mainstream taste in
the late 1950s and early 60s (in the form of blander adaptations) was rudely
upset by a constellation of new developments: from Britain,Beat Music, led by the
Beatles, and a native derivative of rhythm and blues associated most
influentially with the Rolling Stones; from the American West Coast, new
hybrids of folk, blues, and rock and roll, leaving Californian ‘surf music’ behind
and developing into Psychedelic rock; from New York (mainly), modernizing Folk
Music Revival and Folk-rock styles led by Bob Dylan, and the incipient Art Rock of
Velvet Underground. In a context of rapid economic growth, an expanding
college population, youthful protest (especially over the Vietnam War) and
widespread changes in social values, all amounting (it has been suggested) to a
crisis of legitimacy for existing political regimes, the music took on a rebellious
edge and serious aesthetic aims. Rapidly changing studio technology, the
growth of FM radio, and the emergence of LPs (sometimes in the form of
‘concept albums’) as a rival to singles shifted the basis of production and
enormously expanded the available musical means. By the later 1960s ‘rock’
was established in general discourse – with several variants, including (in
addition to those mentioned above) Progressive rock, Hard rock, and Country rock –
and was separating (in terms of audience, production, and aesthetic) from more
chart-orientated ‘pop’. Alongside these developments, distinctive black
American styles, notably Motown and Soul music, sometimes interplayed with
rock currents (through such performers as Otis Redding and Aretha Franklin,
for example) but by and large stayed relatively separate, in market and musical
practice.
In 1976–7 the Sex Pistols, the Clash, and others pioneered British punk rock.
Some of its sources lay in earlier pop (for example, the Who and David Bowie in
Britain, American garage bands and art-rock punks from New York such as Patti
Smith and the New York Dolls), but by tying a stripped down musical
revisionism to a pseudo-situationist philosophy and deliberately outrageous
behaviour, British punk caught the mood of economic recession and social
unrest among working-class youth and exposed the gargantuanism of
progressive rock as pretentious. Perhaps most significantly, it offered an
approach that was both aesthetically and organizationally democratic: anyone
could make music, it was suggested; a huge number of new, often tiny,
independent record companies, distributors, and shops sprang up, in
opposition to the established music business; and new production technology
made very cheap recording possible. By laying bare the seams in their own
music, behaviour, and visual style, punk musicians and fans made the point
that rock, for all its aesthetic claims, was really a branch of entertainment, with
its own modes of artifice. Their insistence on organizational control galvanized
the further fragmentation of popular music, laying the ground for the
emergence of Indie music (the US equivalents were ‘alternative’ or ‘college rock’),
electro-pop (using synthesizers, drum-machines, etc.), Grunge (a punk–heavy
metal hybrid originating in Seattle), and world music, each with its own
audience and (often) organizational network. These joined chart pop, Heavy
metal, the Singer-songwriter, and various black genres (Disco, soul,Funk, Reggae), as
well as older styles and hybrids (rock ballads, rock musicals, etc.), to make what
was by this time an exceptionally broad pop field. The effects took institutional
forms, bringing a diversity of performance contexts (clubs and discos, as well
as concerts and festivals), of radio channels and programme formats, and of
music magazines; similarly an intensification of merchandising and of star
promotion occurred, but alongside an increasing acceptance of the legitimacy
of serious pop journalism and critical writing. The international influence of
punk, and of its effects, was enormous.
For some, these effects threatened ‘the end of rock’ (at least as an ideology), but
arguably a more tangible threat was the rise in popularity of club dance music.
With roots in disco (dance music designed for records to be played in
discotheques, at the peak of its popularity in the 1970s), in funk, in dub
(remixed reggae records; see Dub) and in Hip hop and Rap (originally New York
street musics using intermixed rhythm tracks, drum machines, manually
‘scratched’ records, and ‘rapped’ vocals), the new dance music was clearly
based in black music traditions. Starting in the mid-1980s with
Chicago House and Detroit Techno, and moving through British Rave, a host of
continually hybridizing styles had developed by the 1990s, in centres in North
America, Britain, and many parts of continental Europe. Dance had its own
institutional networks (clubs, illegal raves, record companies, magazines, radio
stations), its own production system (centred on producers, mixers, and DJs,
making music through techniques of sampling, sound synthesis, computer
programming, and live mixing, with few or even no performing musicians
directly involved), its own approach to musical form and texture and its own
social ambience, associated with lengthy (often all-night) dance sessions and
recreational drugs. While crossover into the mainstream market became
commonplace in the later 1990s (usually involving the incorporation of more
conventional elements – instrumentalists, vocals, pop forms), dance music
posed a clear challenge to the previous popular music paradigm.
Rock and roll is often seen as marking a radical shift in popular music practice,
from literate styles clearly related in their musical techniques to broadly
accepted norms of 19th-century European and Euro-American musics, to more
corporeally exciting styles made for records and derived mainly from black
American norms with strong orally transmitted elements. While there is a good
deal of truth in this view, it is possible that it both underplays the strength of
black American influence before rock and roll (see Van der Merwe, 1989, esp.
p.286; ‘with the publication of the first blues the materials of the 20th-century
popular composer were complete. Since then popular music … has striven to
maintain a sense of breathless novelty. But it has come up with nothing that,
fundamentally, cannot be traced back to 1900 or earlier’) and overplays its
triumph since (Tin Pan Alley musical forms and long-established ballad singing
styles survived, for instance, and one of the best-selling albums worldwide
since the 1960s is the sentimental Rodgers and Hammerstein musical The Sound
of Music). Post-rock-and-roll pop might better be seen as the striking culmination
of a lengthy process, going back at least to minstrelsy, whereby mainstream
white society has come to terms with an internal cultural ‘other’. But by this
argument, a stronger claim to musical revolution might be made for late 20th-
century dance music, which, in its most extreme forms, abandons the
presentation of sung feeling, the portrayal of expressive character, in a way that
rock music, any more than Tin Pan Alley songs and 19th-century ballads, does
not.
It is clear, however, that the moments associated with the constellations of rock
and roll on the one hand and Tin Pan Alley, ragtime, and early jazz on the other
do represent important historical shifts. They also map rather well onto
contemporaneous and similarly important shifts in the technology and
economy of musical production (which in turn are no doubt related to broader
adjustments, routinely noted by historians, in the organization of Western
capitalism). Whether or not technological digitization and economic
globalization imply an analogous status for the post-punk period, and
especially for dance music, is a question perhaps best left for further historical
assessment.
Some genres have seen significant change. Thus the popular ballad, starting in
the 19th century as a narrative genre with roots in the folk ballad, came, in the
Tin Pan Alley–Broadway song system, to combine narrative with (and often
subordinate it to) the characteristics of a reflective romantic song; by the time
of the development of the rock ballad the genre can be defined simply as a
slowish pop song, with subjectively orientated and often romantic themes and
a personal mode of address. At the same time, certain aspects of some genres
seem to change very little. From the early British music-hall song Bacon and
Greens to popular successes such as Yes, we have no bananas(1923) and Barbie
Girl (1997, referring to a popular brand of doll), many of the features of the
comic novelty song are remarkably stable.
(ii) Form.
One way of writing the history of popular music forms would be in terms of an
interrelationship between iterative and additive modes on the one hand and the
principle of sectionality on the other. The folk music forebears tended to
privilege the first, through stanzaic song forms and repeating dance-tunes; and
to a greater or lesser degree popular music in the 20th century returned to
similar techniques, derived for the most part from black American influences.
In between, sectionally orientated structures increased in importance, perhaps
because of the closeness of much 19th-century popular music to contemporary
art music norms. An additional factor to be borne in mind in the case of songs
is the role of Lyrics. Through the demands imposed by setting existing words, or
through mutual interaction, or sometimes through the effects of producing
both together, the patterns of verbal form (rhyme scheme, line length, stanza
structure, etc.) and those of musical form are always interrelated.
Most 19th-century popular songs use a strophic form. The roots of such forms
go back not only to folksong but also to theatre and pleasure-garden song,
broadside ballad and Gassenhauer, romance and lied. Commonly (though not
universally) each stanza ends with a short refrain. The phrase structure is
generally made up of regular two-, four-, and eight-bar units, phrases are often
repeated, either immediately or after a contrasting phrase, and there is an
important role for open–closed (antecedent–consequent) relationships between
adjacent phrase-endings, produced melodically or harmonically, or both. Sir
Henry Bishop’s Home, Sweet Home (1823) exemplifies all these tendencies,
illustrating the way in which the additive strophic principle is infiltrated by
elements of a developing sectionalism. Perhaps under the influence of
contemporary art song, some composers went further in this direction,
especially in drawing-room ballads, into through-composed, modified strophic,
or other sectional forms. From the middle of the century refrains of American
songs were often intended to be sung by a group (hence use of the term
‘chorus’) and, similarly, British music-hall songs often have a chorus in which
the audience can sing along. Eight- or 16-bar sections were by now the most
common, for both verse and chorus, and in both repertories a variety of phrase-
structure patterns can be found, for example AABA and (the music-hall
favourite) ABAC. The folding of repetition into lyrical shape through sequence
and the rhyming effect produced by permutations of symmetry and contrast
between phrases and by open–closed relationships between cadences create a
sense of balance, of quasi-narrative movement balanced by degrees of closure,
which is typical of this period.
The sectional principle was even more prominent in the instrumental dance
music of the 19th century (including marches, which could be used for dancing
the quickstep or galop). From quadrille, waltz, galop, and polka to two-step and
cakewalk, practice oscillates and permutates between two types of pattern, each
based on sections of (normally) eight or 16 bars: the string or set pattern (a
sequence of different themes) and the minuet-and-trio or ABA pattern (the trio
generally being in a contrasting key, often the subdominant). Both tendencies
were taken over into instrumental ragtime. Most piano rags use a two-part
form, the first section having a ternary arrangement of sections (or ‘strains’),
the second introducing new strains and perhaps recapitulating an earlier one,
but in any case being in a contrasting key, usually the subdominant (and often
closing there – a peculiarity of ragtime). Common patterns
are ABA/CD, ABA/CAand ABA/CDC, many of the strains being repeated.
In the later 19th century song choruses tended to expand and, increasingly, to
become the focus of the form. This tendency continued in Tin Pan Alley song,
and at the same time the verse section shrank in both size and number. By the
1920s one verse (in any case often omitted in performance) was the norm, and
the chorus was generally 32 bars long, the whole approximating to a recitative-
and-aria structure. Various chorus patterns were used but by far the most
common is the ternary variant AABA, known as ‘standard ballad form’, with the
bridge (the B section) providing contrast melodically, harmonically and
sometimes in key. Such an expansive, well-organized structure can function as
a self-standing entity (hence descriptions of the mature Tin Pan Alley–Broadway
song as the lied of popular music), and would seem to mark the triumph of the
sectional over the additive principle. However, on a micro-structural level many
songs take over from ragtime and blues techniques of building form through
repetition of short figures; from Joe Howard’s coon song Hello! ma baby (1899)
through Lewis F. Muir’s Waiting for the Robert E. Lee (1912), Walter Donaldson’s Yes,
sir, that’s my baby(1925) and George Gershwin’s I got rhythm (1930) to Joe
Garland’s In the mood (1939), this technique points, at least incipiently, away
from sectionalism, towards open-ended iteration.
12-bar blues form, which emerged during the same period, strings together a
variable number of verses (often, confusingly, called choruses), each one
marked internally by a good deal of phrase and smaller-scale repetition, call-
and-response between voice and accompanying instrument(s) and the use of
riffs (see Riff). Early jazz musicians not only improvised on the 12-bar harmonic
sequence (I–I–I–I–IV–IV–I–I–V–V[IV]–I–I[V]) but applied the same approach to the
choruses of Tin Pan Alley songs. From this point ‘chorus form’ refers to pieces
built on iteration (potentially open-ended and usually with variation) of a
structural unit. This constitutes a principal resource for all black American
genres, and also influenced the additive strophic forms typical of country
music; from both traditions it entered mainstream pop music from rock and
roll onwards.
Post-rock-and-roll, pop song used 12-bar blues, together with variant and
equivalent chorus-form chord sequences, and drew on folk revival for simple
additive strophic patterns; but it also retained elements of the standard Tin Pan
Alley form, both the overall pattern itself (especially in ballads) and the verse–
chorus–bridge sectional principle (more widely). By the later 1960s these
lineages were thoroughly combined, and generalization is possible only to the
extent of observing first that songs are usually constructed from a sequence of
sections of variable length, which, depending on their function and
interrelationships, may be termed ‘verses’, ‘choruses’, or ‘bridges’; and second
that at the same time processual links are often created across sectional
divisions through the use of riffs, interrelated musical figures, harmonically
open chord progressions, or foregrounded rhythmic continuities. The impulse
to avoid closure often results in fades at the end of recordings or
performances. Riffs may be melodic (as in the guitar riff of the Rolling
Stones’ Satisfaction, 1965), but more commonly comprise a short chord sequence,
a pervasive technique from the I–IV–v–IV of Richard Berry’s ubiquitous Louie
Louie (1957) onwards, even in clearly sectional forms. The contrasting
temporalities of short harmonic cycle and larger sections can intertwine in
powerful ways: in REM’s Losing my religion (1991) lyrics and musical content
indicate an unorthodox sequence of verses, choruses, and short bridges, but
virtually all the music pivots around a two-chord riff (A minor–E minor), which,
however, grows varied harmonic ‘limbs’ in the different sections of the song.
This pop form mainstream is broadened out by two divergent tendencies. Some
progressive rock groups explored more extended forms (especially on concept
albums), sometimes partly through-composed, sometimes partly improvisatory.
While subsidiary, the influence of this strand can be felt in the fluidities and
irregularities characteristic of the work of some indie bands and of the more
experimental singer-songwriters. At the other extreme, hip hop and dance-
music producers in the 1980s and 90s, using sampling, computer-sequenced
rhythm-loops, collage, and remixing techniques, developed a concept of form
based on arbitrary cuts between a series of repetition-rich textures, each piece
being potentially endless; articulation points seem to be largely local, and form
is heard more like process.
Some scholars have connected the impulses towards form as process (iteration,
variation) and form as organized structure (sectionalism) to non-Western (or
specifically African and Afro-diasporic) and Western practices respectively.
Thus Keil (Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism, 1966) distinguished between a
tendency towards ‘engendered feeling’ in the former and ‘embodied meaning’ in
the latter, while Chester (1970) distinguished between ‘intensional’ and
‘extensional’ forms. A dichotomy is established between pre-planned
composition on the one side and moment-by-moment nuance and inflection,
based on received frameworks, on the other. As ideal types, these provide
useful models; however they are both better regarded as principles, variably
active in all music, on both of which popular music practice draws, in
continually changing proportions, manifestations and interrelationships.
Adorno (1941) connected formal moulds and frameworks in popular music to
the pressures exerted by commodification, and grouped them all under the
pejorative label of ‘standardization’. From music-hall formula and Tin Pan Alley
mass production to the ‘hit-factories’ of pop, it is clear that a tendency to
structural predictability grows directly out of the imperatives of a capitalist
industry. Yet the Adornian critique misses not only the productivity of formula
(in stimulating variative invention) but also the range of formal designs and
processes.
A further question is whether ‘the piece’ is the most appropriate unit for formal
analysis. Two developments, one in cultural theory, the other in musical
practice, have added extra charge to this question. Theories of intertextuality
suggest that relationships between pieces or performances are of structural
significance, and thus throw into relief the importance of covers, of recycling
material, of ‘tune families’ that link songs together and of formulaic processes.
Similarly, techniques of sampling and remixing raise queries about the
boundaries normally placed around a singular musical event. The theory of
‘Signifyin(g)’ drawn by scholars from black American literary studies places the
roots of Afro-diasporic formal thinking in the concept of a ‘changing same’,
which generates intertextual relationships both historically and synchronically,
through continual variation of formulae. The pervasiveness of repetition in
popular music, at all structural levels, suggests that such a perspective may be
at least as relevant here as European formal moulds and quasi-industrial
standardization techniques.
(iii) Style.
It is impossible to discuss in detail here even a few popular music styles, and
the most that can be attempted is a sketch of some important trends. As with
musical form, many aspects of 19th-century styles are linked to or contiguous
with contemporaneous art-music techniques, while in the 20th century these
were at least in part supplanted by, or mixed with, approaches drawn from
black American (and to a lesser extent folk, country, Latin, and world) musics.
This shift happened in conjunction with a different one, a move from norms
moulded by the demands of performance, often in intimate surroundings, to
techniques designed for large-scale performance, often with the aid of
amplification, or for recording, radio, or film, and at the same time shot
through with the effects of enormous changes in the resources and processes
of sound production. This was accompanied too by a gradual transition from a
relative separation of song and dance genres to a situation in which their
attributes are thoroughly intertwined.
Many of these techniques seeped, to variable extents and in variable ways, into
the styles of Tin Pan Alley song, which in other respects continued to develop
along lines already existing in the 19th century. Harmonically, circle-of-fifth and
(from blues) I–IV7 progressions are typical additions to the basic diatonic
framework, though by the inter-war period some chromatic chords (dominant
extensions, added 6ths, augmented, and diminished chords) were also common,
as were passing modulations (especially in bridge sections). Similarly, in the
more sophisticated songs of Broadway shows a denser motivic texture
developed, along with longer-breathed melodic lines. At the same time, dance-
band performance norms were influential: for example, there are the
beginnings of a distinct rhythm section stratum in the texture; and sometimes
strong bass lines suggesting top–bottom thinking; elements of call-and-
response, riff, off-beat accents, parallel voicing, and counter melodies owing
more to jazz polyphony than to European textbook counterpoint infiltrate
accompaniments. This applied across the range of performing groups, from
small dance bands to large, string-dominated orchestras. Singing styles too
were sometimes influenced by jazz (though bel canto norms remained
important as well), and the novel intimacies, nuances and flexibility made
possible by the microphone (in crooning, for instance) pointed towards the
coming revolution in sound.
In rock and roll and subsequent pop styles, techniques derived from black
American sources were developed further, notably shouted, ‘dirty’, dramatic,
and jazz-influenced singing, top–bottom textures with foregrounded
percussion stratum, widespread use of riffs as a textural as well as a structural
device, and instrumental techniques organized around expressiveness and
rhythmic bite. The standard performing group (guitars, drum kit, lead singer,
perhaps with some group singing as well) emerged from the small-band
lineages of rhythm and blues and country music, though additions (keyboards,
brass, synthesizers) and larger groups were also used as the range of styles
expanded. The ‘standard rock beat’ (kick drum on beats one and three, heavily
accented backbeats on two and four, usually on snare drum, plus decorative
cymbal patterns) was established, with a spectrum of variants in different
genres (Moore, 1993, p.36). The harmonic language, while drawing on blues-
type progressions and on Tin Pan Alley for circle-of-fifth and other diatonic
progressions, is often modal, and favours short, repeating harmonic riffs; such
sequences as I–♭VII–IV, I–vi and i–♭III–♭VII are common. Above all, perhaps, a
new sound world was opened up by amplification (resulting, for example, in a
range of electric guitar styles and in the deliberate use of feedback), by
electronic effects (such as wah-wah and echo), by sound synthesis, and by
multi-track recording, which made available techniques of layering, balancing,
blending, and stereophonic spacing of voices that are impossible by any other
means, thus radically changing conceptions of texture.
Texture and sound took on even greater importance in hip hop and subsequent
pop dance styles. With the aid of digital technology, layers of sound, each one
often created by looping rhythms, short figures or sampled noises, are
assembled into montages. While the techniques were incipiently present in
earlier black styles (disco, funk, dub), the tendency in much rave, techno, and
drum and bass music virtually to abandon tune, to shrink periodicity to very
short units and to constrict harmony to short, minimally directed (and often
modal) sequences radically reconstructs the stylistic paradigm. A fast,
metronomically regular beat supporting syncopated, short-note figures is
standard, and a contrast between rapped lyrics and brief, soulful sung phrases
is common. These dance music styles represent an extreme in the broad
stylistic spectrum of popular music at the end of the 20th century; but their
popularity, and even more their influence on more mainstream styles, points to
a perhaps decisive historical significance.
5. Social significance.
(i) Politics.
Art music in the West is generally portrayed as apolitical, and the contrast with
popular music in this sphere is striking. Bob Dylan’s protest songs of the 1960s
may stand as key examples of one sort of popular music politics. Song lyrics
with overt political content have not been uncommon in subsequent pop music,
though in mainstream 20th-century popular music before the 1960s they are
quite rare. In the 19th century there were songs about wars, campaigning songs
(supporting the abolition of slavery, for instance), and songs of social comment
(on such issues as the evils of alcohol), though often their aim was to affirm
rather than protest, as in British music-hall songs with enthusiastically
imperialist themes. Pop music protest stands more in the tradition of strike
ballads and other politically motivated workers’ songs, which in turn can be
related to folksongs containing political comment (a trait surviving in blues and
country music, and passing into pop through the influence of such American
neo-folk and folk-revival singers as Woody Guthrie and Pete Seeger).
Many popular music styles have been subjects of controversy. In the 19th
century, theatres and pleasure gardens were often seen as morally suspect, and
there were frequent attempts to clear music off the streets. New dances,
starting with the waltz, had a habit (so it seemed to their critics) of infringing
the canons of respectability. Music halls responded to efforts to control and
censor them by becoming blander and less risqué. Ragtime, jazz, rock and roll,
and rap were each greeted by a chorus of condemnation which combined
musical criticisms with a moral panic focussed on allegations of violence,
sexual immorality, and uncivilized ‘jungle rhythms’. It is often difficult to
disentangle musical dislike (frequently couched in terms of a discourse of
‘noise’) and fear of social disorder. Thus rock music was resisted by communist
state authorities both because it was felt to be musically aberrant, indeed,
primitive, and because it was seen as a symptom of bourgeois capitalism;
conversely, to dissidents and alienated youth it represented freedom on both
levels. Even claims to no more than ‘fun’ can be regarded as threatening by
defenders of social (especially work) discipline.
For participants in popular music, it often represents ‘community’ at least as
much as it does ‘threat’. Pete Townshend of the pop group the Who wrote:
‘When the music gets so good … everybody for a second forgets completely
who they are and where they are, and they don’t care. They just know they are
happy’ (Frith, 1983, p.80). Such a politics of community takes particularly overt
form at a few specific moments (at the Woodstock rock festival in 1969, for
instance, or in all-night ‘raves’ in the dance clubs of the late 1980s and early
90s), but forms a continuous thread in the appeal of pop music, a thread that
appears to be derived ideologically from the myth of a ‘folk community’
constructed by folk revivalists and folklorists (and before them by the
Romantics). It may manifest itself in some earlier proto-folk situations too – for
example, in the relationship of brass band music or music-hall song to
particular 19th-century British working-class communities. It constantly
intertwines, however, with popular music’s role in what Raymond Williams
(1961) called a ‘long revolution’: the gradual extension of democratic
opportunities (in this case, access to music, both its production and
consumption) to more and more sectors of society. The politics of this shift are
those typical of mass society, and their effects are variously construed (as, for
example, alienation or empowerment; cultural flattening or cultural pluralism),
depending on the observer’s political point of view.
What most observers might agree on is music’s power to ‘place’ people in
society. For Adorno, this pointed to the way that popular music in mass society
acts (he thought) as ‘social cement’, confirming consumers as passive units
performing (willingly) their allotted roles in an incipiently totalitarian capitalist
system. Still less tendentious critiques may refer to, for example, the escapism
in Tin Pan Alley song; and similarly the historian Gareth Stedman-Jones (1974)
describes late 19th-century music-hall song as a ‘culture of consolation’, its
small convivialities (its ‘fun’) compensating for the seeming impossibility of real
social change. For most popular music scholars, however, the ideological effects
of the music are far more variable than Adorno allows, and more subject to
negotiation. At the opposite extreme, subcultural theorists such as Willis and
Hebdige argue for the possibility of particular music styles to act as vehicles of
resistance to dominant cultural and social values, through the meanings read
into them by consumers. It is nevertheless impossible to describe the politics of
production as anything other than vitally important, for they greatly affect
what music consumers will hear. The imperatives of commodity form, of
intellectual property law, and of growing corporate power explain the appeal of
neo-Marxist portrayals of the music industry as a monster. Theories of
‘cooption’ describe how musical innovations are often stripped of any power to
upset, as they are incorporated into mainstream styles; one major record
company enthusiastically promoted the radical musics of the 1960s
counterculture under the now notorious slogan ‘The revolution is on CBS’. As,
through the 19th and 20th centuries, the cultural industries became more and
more significant both to the economy and to social behaviour, the role of the
state became increasingly important as well. Under fascist and Stalinist
dictatorships it was overtly oppressive and directive, but in liberal democracies
the concerns of state agencies are mostly to do with encouraging orderly
consumption and profitable production, along with social tranquillity. Legal
regulation of performance, broadcasting and copyright, taxation and subsidy
policies, censorship and educational strategies form a network of official
involvements. The systemic integrity of the whole production apparatus,
especially by the later 20th century, can look impressive. Nevertheless, most
popular music scholars would want to point also to the faults in this system
(see §2(ii) above), to the impossibility of eradicating these and, above all
perhaps, to the intense difficulties in controlling the meaning of music.
There is good empirical evidence to link many popular music genres with
particular social classes, both working-class groups (street music, industrial
song, brass bands, music hall, blues, and country music up to the 1960s, hard
rock styles and heavy metal) and middle-class groups (parlour and salon music,
operetta, and progressive and art rock styles). Such links tend to be obscured in
the first half of the 20th century by discourses of mass culture, which assume
an incipient universality of social positioning; and these discourses retain some
importance subsequently, if only because, in societies with increasingly blurred
class boundaries and in fluid mediascapes dominated by large organizations
and with socially mobile audiences, theories of class ownership of and class
expression through specific styles seem simplistic. Homology models, derived
from anthropology, in which musical content and class position are mapped
one to the other, raise difficult epistemological issues (they seem to require an
analytical first cause), and, for most scholars, need to be written on a very
coarse scale, to be modulated by theories of negotiation, or to focus on use and
consumption rather than on musical form and content. The last two are the
favoured strategies of subcultural theorists, such as those who have identified
resonances between particular pop styles and the values of punk, mod, teddy
boy, hippie, or other class-based subcultures. Even in the 19th century, when
class-linked musical differences are relatively easy to spot, norms originating in
bourgeois traditions gradually spread their influence through large swathes of
popular music practice, so that a model based on the variable articulation of a
core stock of techniques seems the most convincing one. Despite these
qualifications, however, it remains important to place popular music in its class
contexts. Whatever its exact definition, it is always in some sense culturally
subaltern; from this point of view, all popular styles are ‘people’s music’ (in a
broad sense), positioned against whatever is defined as élite. At the same time,
social distinctions have affected access and responses to musical resources,
resulting in a multitude of differences in taste, practice, usage, and
interpretation, both within popular music and between it and other categories,
but always in some sort of relationship with people’s sense of their place in the
social hierarchy.
(iii) Aesthetics.
Any attempt to raise even the possibility of an aesthetics of popular music
must somehow bypass the scepticism of mass culture critics (e.g. Adorno: ‘The
autonomy of music is replaced by a mere socio-psychological function’; 1941,
p.3) and of liberal musicologists (e.g. Dahlhaus: ‘it is uncertain whether … the
surprisingly elusive qualities that determine a “hit” deserve to be called
aesthetic at all’; 1989, p.312), not to mention the weight of a longer intellectual
history extending back to the emergence of music aesthetics as a separate
discipline in the 18th century. As Adorno’s comment suggests, the
underpinnings of this discipline lie in the doctrine of music’s autonomy, and,
while the insistence by popular music scholars on their music’s social
significance may seem unwittingly to support its reduction to a sociological
datum, their more important achievement has been to show how popular music
helps to reveal autonomy itself as a social construction. The sociological
critique of aesthetics links all cultural practices, tastes, and judgments to
social, institutional, and discursive conditions; thus the transcendent qualities
attributed to autonomous music, and the disinterestedness allegedly required
for its appreciation, are, by this argument, tied to specific interests of the
Western bourgeoisie at a particular moment in its history. To be sure, the
decidedly ‘impure’ production and consumption practices of popular music do
not seem to suit it to the standard criteria of aesthetic worth (even though in its
own way its emergence is linked to the wider spread of leisure time, which
arguably also gave rise to the discourse of autonomy), but popular music
scholars tend to work with theories of relative autonomy, which, while
grounding taste in social conditions, insist that this rules out neither the
integrity and irreducibility of that level of activity and meaning which is
specifically musical nor the distinctive pleasures attaching to its appreciation.
In one of the most influential sociological critiques of aesthetics, Bourdieu
(1984) made a clear distinction between the ‘aesthetic disposition’ (with its
‘pure gaze’) and the ‘popular aesthetic’ (which is ‘realist’, ‘earthy’, grounded in
function), and linked these to taste differences between the bourgeoisie and the
working class. Most popular music scholars have preferred a model with
categories that are more fluid in both their contents and their interplay. Frith
(1996), for example, argues for three distinct discursive frames, each with its
own values, institutions, and social practices (and all arising at about the same
time, around 1800): that of ‘art’, organized around ideas of creative truth-to-self
and educated knowledge; that of ‘folk’, centred on ideas of authenticity and
community; and that of ‘the popular’, focussed on ideas of commercial success
(i.e. popularity), entertainment, and fun. He suggests that none of these
categories has any intrinsic musical content, so that ‘popular music’ (in fact,
any music) can be, and is, placed in any category, or indeed in more than one.
Of course, definitions of ‘originality’, ‘authenticity’, and ‘entertainment’ vary
historically and socially; but this approach enables us to understand how a
single piece – John Lennon’s song Imagine, for example – can function variably,
as a skilful and effective expressive statement (‘art’), as a political cri de
coeur around which a sense of community can be assembled (‘folk’), or as a hit
record, often transplanted to all sorts of routine situations including
background music (‘popular’). It also enables us to make sense of the ways in
which performers and listeners talk about popular music in terms of musical
skill, formal relationships, emotional truth, rhythmic power, original sounds,
and so on, without needing to deny that the criteria will differ historically
(compare a Victorian parlour ballad performance and a rock concert), without
forgetting that the criteria will often be at odds with those common for
classical music (e.g. noise, incessant repetition, and seemingly out-of-control
vocalism are positive aesthetic qualities in much rock music), but also without
wanting to erase the music’s social and political significance.
This significance is vital. To think of a parlour ballad parody in a music hall, of
Chuck Berry’s rock and roll classic Roll over Beethoven, of the Sex Pistols’
irreverent punk anthem God Save the Queen, or of the rap group Public
Enemy’s Fight the Power is to see that their political charge, in specific social
conditions (including, arguably, the large audiences delivered by their
commercial success), is part of their aesthetic achievement. Equally, however,
their political significance is dependent on the appeal of their musical qualities.
While these examples are extreme, the point can be generalized for all popular
music. In the end, then, the most important argument made by theorists of
popular music aesthetics may be that aesthetic experience is not necessarily
extraordinary but can be found in musical practices intimately enmeshed in
(and indeed contributing to) the patterns of ordinary people’s everyday lives in
modern societies.
Bibliography
General
H.R. Haweis: Music and Morals (London, 1871, 16/1891)
C.K. Harris: How to Write a Popular Song (New York, 1906)
T.W. Adorno: ‘Zur gesellschaftlichen Lage der Musik’, Zeitschrift für Sozialforschung,
vol. 1 (1932), 356; Eng. trans., in Telos, vol. 35(1978), 128–64
C. Lambert: Music Ho! A Study of Music in Decline (London, 1934, 3/1966)
T.W. Adorno with G. Simpson: ‘On Popular Music’, Studies in Philosophy and Social
Science, vol. 9 (1941), 17–48
D. Riesman: ‘Listening to Popular Music’, American Quarterly, vol. 2 (1950), 359–71
R. Gelatt: The Fabulous Phonograph: from Edison to Stereo (Philadelphia, 1954, 3/1977)
A. Loesser: Men, Women and Pianos: a Social History (New York, 1954/R)
R. Hoggart: The Uses of Literacy (London, 1957)
R. Williams: The Long Revolution (London, 1961)
S. Hall and P. Whannel: The Popular Arts (London, 1964)
E. Rogers and M. Hennessy: Tin Pan Alley (London, 1964)
C. Keil: ‘Motion and Feeling through Music’, Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism,
vol. 24 (1966), 337–49
J. Maróthy: Zene és polgár, zene és proletár (Budapest, 1966; Eng. trans., 1974,
as Music and the Bourgeois, Music and the Proletarian)
H.F. Mooney: ‘Popular Music since the 1920s: the Significance of Shifting
Taste’, American Quarterly, vol. 20 (1968), 67–85
D. Laing: The Sound of Our Time (London, 1969)
A. Chester: ‘Second Thoughts on a Rock Aesthetic: the Band’, New Left Review, vol.
57 (1970), 75–82
C. Gillett: The Sound of the City: the Rise of Rock ’n’ Roll (New York, 1970, 3/1996)
A. McCarthy: The Dance Band Era (London, 1971)
J. Wenner: Lennon Remembers (San Francisco, 1971)
R. Middleton: Pop Music and the Blues (London, 1972)
M.R. Turner: The Parlour Song Book (London, 1972, 2/1974)
I. Whitcomb: After the Ball (London, 1972, 2/1986)
I. Bontinck, ed.: New Patterns of Musical Behaviour: a Survey of Youth Activities in 18
Countries (Vienna, 1974)
C. Hamm, B. Nettl, and R. Byrnside: Contemporary Music and Music
Cultures (Englewood Cliffs, NJ, 1975)
R.A. Peterson and D.G. Berger: ‘Cycles in Symbol Production: the Case of
Popular Music’, American Sociological Review, vol. 40 (1975), 158–73
R. Pearsall: Popular Music of the Twenties (Newton Abbot, 1976)
R. Williams: ‘Popular’,Keywords: a Vocabulary of Culture and Society (London, 1976,
2/1983)
S. Chapple and R. Garofalo: Rock ’n’ Roll Is Here to Pay: the History and Politics of the
Music Industry (Chicago, 1977)
P. Willis: Profane Culture (London, 1978)
D. Hebdige: Subculture: the Meaning of Style (London, 1979)
P. Tagg: Kojak: 50 Seconds of Television Music. Towards the Analysis of Affect in Popular
Music(Göteborg, 1979)
D. Harker: One for the Money: Politics and Popular Song (London, 1980)
S. Hall: ‘Notes on Deconstructing “the Popular”’, People’s History and Socialist
Theory, ed. R. Samuel (London, 1981), 227–40
A. Hennion: Les professionels du disque (Paris, 1981)
J. Shepherd: ‘A Theoretical Model for the Sociomusicological Analysis of
Popular Musics’,Popular Music, vol. 2 (1982), 145–77
P. Tagg: ‘Analysing Popular Music: Theory, Method and Practice’, Popular Music,
vol. 2 (1982), 37–67
D. Horn, ed.: Popular Music Perspectives II: Reggio nell’ Emilia 1983
S. Frith: Sound Effects: Youth, Leisure and the Politics of Rock ’n’ Roll (London, 1983)
P. Bourdieu: Distinction: a Social Critique of the Judgement of Taste (London, 1984)
J. Parakilas: ‘Classical Music as Popular Music’, JM, vol. 3 (1984), 1–18
R. Lax and F. Smith: The Great Song Thesaurus (New York,1984/R)
J. Attali: Noise: the Political Economy of Music (Manchester, 1985)
D. Laing: One Chord Wonders: Power and Meaning in Punk Rock (Milton Keynes, 1985)
N. Shapiro and B. Pollock, eds.: Popular Music, 1920–1979: a Revised
Cumulation (Detroit, 1985) [with annual suppls.]
P. Wicke and W. Ziegenruecker: Handbuch der populaeren Musik(Leipzig, 1985)
A. Huyssen: After the Great Divide: Mass Culture and Postmodernism (London, 1986)
R. Iwaschkin: Popular Music: a Reference Guide (New York, 1986)
G. Born: ‘Modern Music Culture: on Shock, Pop and Synthesis’, New Formations,
vol. 1 (1987), 51–78
J. Horowitz: Understanding Toscanini (New York, 1987)
P. Tagg: ‘Musicology and the Semiotics of Popular Music’, Semiotica, vol. 66
(1987), 279–98
P. Van der Merwe: Origins of the Popular Style: the Antecedents of Twentieth-Century
Popular Music(Oxford, 1989)
P. Hardy and D. Laing: The Faber Companion to 20th-Century Popular Music (London,
1990/R)
P. Wicke: Rock Music: Culture, Aesthetics and Sociology (Cambridge, 1990)
R. Middleton: Studying Popular Music (Milton Keynes, 1990)
P. Gammond: The Oxford Companion to Popular Music (Oxford, 1991)
M. Parker: ‘Reading the Charts: Making Sense with the Hit Parade’, Popular Music,
vol. 10 (1991), 205–17
J. Shepherd: Music as Social Text (Cambridge, 1991)
P. Tagg: ‘Towards a Sign Typology of Music’, Analisi musicale II: Trent 1991, 369–78
S. Jones: Rock Formation: Music, Technology, and Mass Communication (Newbury Park,
CA,1992)
P. Gilroy: The Black Atlantic: Modernity and Double Consciousness (London, 1993)
A. Moore: Rock, the Primary Text: Developing a Musicology of Rock (Buckingham, 1993)
M. Slobin: Subcultural Sounds: Micromusics of the West (Hanover, NH, 1993)
R. Walser: Running with the Devil: Power, Gender and Madness in Heavy Metal
Music(Hanover, NH, 1993)
J. Baxendale: ‘“… into another kind of life in which anything might happen …”
Popular Music and Late Modernity, 1910–1930’, Popular Music, vol. 14 (1995),
137–54
D. Brackett: Interpreting Popular Music (Cambridge, 1995)
R. Burnett: The Global Jukebox: the International Music Industry (London, 1995)
M. Chanan: Repeated Takes: a Short History of Recording and its Effects on Music (London,
1995)
M. Christianen: ‘Cycles in Symbol Production? A New Model to Explain
Concentration, Diversity and Innovation in the Music Industry’, Popular Music,
vol. 14 (1995), 55–93
C. Hamm: Putting Popular Music in its Place (Cambridge, 1995)
S. Frith: Performing Rites: on the Value of Popular Music (Oxford, 1996)
K. Negus: Popular Music in Theory: an Introduction (Cambridge, 1996)
L. Green: Music, Gender, Education (Cambridge, 1997)
T. McCourt and E. Rothenbuhler: ‘SoundScan and the Consolidation of Control
in the Popular Music Industry’, Media, Culture and Society, vol. 19 (1997), 201–18
J. Shepherd and others, eds.: Popular Music Studies: a Select International
Bibliography(London,1997)
J. Shepherd and P. Wicke: Music and Cultural Theory (Cambridge,1997)
P. Theberge: Any Sound You Can Imagine: Making Music/Consuming Technology (Hanover,
NH,1997)
T. Swiss, J. Sloop, and A. Herman, eds.: Mapping the Beat: Popular Music and
Contemporary Theory (Oxford, 1998)
T. Swiss and B. Homer, eds.: Popular Music and Culture: New Essays on Key
Terms (Oxford, 1999)
G. Born and D. Hesmondhalgh, eds.: Western Music and Its Others: Difference,
Representation, and Appropriation in Music (Berkeley,2000)
USA
Dichter-ShapiroSM
Some of the major conceptual approaches that have informed modern scholarly
studies of world popular musics are reviewed in the following sections. The
term ‘popular music’ is used here to connote genres whose styles have evolved
in an inextricable relationship with their dissemination via the mass media and
their marketing and sale on a mass-commodity basis. Distinctions between
popular musics (defined thus) and other kinds of music, such as
commercialized versions of folk musics, are not always airtight. The scope of
the present section of this article is limited to popular music idioms that are
stylistically distinct from those of the Euro-American mainstream. The
significant role that Euro-American popular music styles play in many non-
Western music cultures is discussed only tangentially here, and is addressed
more specifically in Pop, §V.
There is at present no satisfactory label for popular musics outside the Euro-
American mainstream (just as designations such as the ‘third world’ or even the
‘developing world’ are increasingly problematic). Terms such as ‘world music’,
‘world popular music’, ‘world beat’, and ‘ethnopop’ are too imprecise to be
taxonomically useful, unless clearly defined for specific publications. The term
‘non-Western’, if applicable to many musics, is hardly a satisfactory label for
genres such as reggae or salsa, which, although peripheral to Euro-American
mainstream culture, are certainly products of ‘Western’ societies. The
increasing globalization of world culture and the proliferation of syncretic
hybrid musics also blur the dichotomy of Western and non-Western world
musics, and intensify the terminological challenges.
During the 20th century the core mass medium for popular music was the
phonogram (shellac and subsequently vinyl discs), supplemented by cassettes
from the 1970s, and compact discs from the 1980s. While imported records
from the West initially dominated many regions, in other areas production of
records for local markets commenced early in the century, with the British-
owned Gramophone Company producing over 14,000 recordings in Asia and
Africa alone by 1910 (see Gronow, 1981). Records produced during this period
consisted primarily of genres marketed towards élites, among whom ownership
was concentrated. Public exposure to phonographs greatly increased in the
1920s and 30s, as middle-class ownership grew and less affluent listeners
acquired access to records in local cafés and on jukeboxes, or, in countries like
India, from itinerant entrepreneurs who carried spring-driven turntables
around villages, playing requests for a small fee. In response to market
demand, production came to include an eclectic variety of genres, with
increasing emphasis on syncretic popular musics that evolved in connection
with the new medium. The advent of magnetic tape recording and LPs in the
1950s reduced production costs and overcame the time constraints associated
with 78 r.p.m. records, although most popular song genres worldwide continue
to adhere to three- to five-minute formats.
Uses of technologies like vinyl records have varied in different locales and
genres. In many genres, from salsa to highlife, recordings served primarily as
supplements to or mediated representations of music that was ideally heard, or
danced to, at live performances. In other genres, from Hindi film song to
Jamaican reggae, live performance was not considered essential or even ideal,
such that they evolved largely as studio art forms, disseminated primarily in
mediated forms – in the case of Hindi film songs, via cinema and radio, and in
the case of Jamaican reggae, via mobile sound systems. In some cases, records
could form the basis for music subcultures far from their places of origin; thus,
for example, in the 1970s and 80s, in Cartagena, Colombia, Central and West
African popular music records enjoyed prodigious vogue as dance music played
by ‘picó’ sound systems (Pacini, 1996).
The spread of phonograms in the 1920s coincided with the advent of Radio,
whose reach soon extended at least as far. As with phonographs, access was
not entirely dependent on private ownership, but could involve various forms
of communal listening in public places. Throughout much of the developing
world, as in many European metropoles, radio during the 20th century
remained under state control, operating as a public service and/or as a vehicle
for propaganda. Dependence on electric power, whether external or battery
supplied, continues to limit access in poorer communities.
The spread of sound films from around 1930 introduced a new mass medium
for music that was particularly effective in reaching consumers who were too
poor to purchase radios or phonographs but could afford occasional cinema
tickets. Because of cinema's accessibility, its inherent appeal and its ability to
add a new visual dimension to music, several popular music genres became
closely associated with cinematic musicals, including the tango, Turkish arabesk,
Indonesian dangdut and mainstream Egyptian and Indian popular music (see India,
subcontinent of, §VIII, 1). In most cases, star singers were thus obliged to act (and
often dance) as well, although in the 1940s Indian films adopted the ‘playback’
system, in which actors would mouth words in ‘lip-sync’ to songs separately
recorded by professional singers. Meanwhile, film-related musics were
marketed independently as phonograms. In some regions, such as Latin
America and the Near East, television came to largely replace cinematic
musicals as a medium of musical dissemination. Thus, in Egypt, popular music
eventually became disassociated from melodramatic films while in other
respects becoming linked to television, so that, for example, Sunday evening
broadcasts of concerts by Umm Kulthum became national events throughout
the 1960s and 70s.
In the 1980s the spread of video technology intensified the production and
accessibility of visually contextualized music. To some extent, consumer video
players served to supplement and extend cinema and television, offering users
greater choice and control over selection, storage, and retrieval. Their use also
tended to privatize consumption, bankrupting many cinemas and further
replacing live performance attendance with atomized domestic viewing. The
founding of MTV (Music Television) in 1981 inaugurated the cultivation of
music video as an independent art form, with videos largely produced to
promote recording sales rather than as independent commodities themselves.
As with phonographs and cinema, the developed West, and especially the USA,
monopolized production at first. Satellite transmission of MTV International,
and of Western television in general, provided an additional means of extending
American penetration of global viewing markets. By the late 1980s, however,
music videos were being produced around the world, for dissemination on local
television, in independent video formats, or on MTV International. Although
many music videos outside the developed West during this period were
unpretentious, low-budget productions, others – for example in Indonesia –
were slick and sophisticated, using picturization techniques that were
distinctively local and yet characteristically modern or even postmodern in
style. Meanwhile, television shows featuring amateur singing competition –
typically modeled on the ‘American Idol’ format – were enlivening popular
music scenes throughout the world.
In the late 20th century two contradictory trends in the financing of mass-
mediated music intensified. Music production, especially as conducted by the
multinational record companies, became increasingly capital-intensive, with
expenditure on production and promotion of individual recordings routinely
running into millions of dollars; accompanying this trend was the spread of
compact discs, which, especially in the West, were retailed (with or without
justification) for prices considerably higher than records or cassettes. At the
same time, with the advent of new micro-media, especially cassettes, it became
increasingly possible and common for small-scale, local entrepreneurs to
produce recordings for negligible sums; this development contributed greatly
to the unprecedented ability of subcultures and social minorities to represent
themselves.
The trajectory of the international record industry in the 20th century tended
to follow the general pattern of monopoly capitalism and domination of the
developing world by the West. By the 1930s the world's major music companies
had rationalized the industry and divided the world into distinct spheres of
interest and control: RCA dominated the Americas, Philips controlled northern
and central Europe, the British-owned Decca and EMI (including products
marketed as ‘His Master's Voice’) dominated the entire British Empire, while the
French company Pathé-Marconi monopolized markets in France and its
colonies. In the decades after World War II, the oligopoly coalesced into the
dominance of the ‘Big Five’: WEA, CBS, RCA (then all US-owned), EMI, and
Polygram (the Dutch-owned heir to Philips). Multinational ownership became
further concentrated, if less American-controlled, in the 1990s with the
purchase of CBS by Sony and of MCA by Matsushita, and by Philips’s acquisition
of an 80% stake in Polygram.
3. Urbanization.
The development of modern popular musics is intimately tied to the
phenomenon of urbanization. Cities, with their concentrations of wealth,
power, heterogeneous social groups, and institutionalized forms of musical
patronage, have naturally constituted focal environments for the emergence,
production, and consumption of popular musics. The depth and range of the
effects of urbanization on culture and social structure in the 20th century were
unprecedented, owing to the intensification of urban growth and the
qualitatively new and distinct processes accompanying it.
Popular music often plays a crucial role in the process of adaptation to the new
environment. As Coplan (see Nettl, 1978, 1982) has discussed in relation to
West Africa, this adaptation involves not only reactive adjustment but also the
formation of new identities and their metaphorical articulation in new,
syncretic forms of expressive culture. In such situations, popular musicians can
become important agents of syncretism and innovation, serving as cultural
brokers who articulate new metaphors of social identity and mediate
traditional/modern, rural/urban, and local/global dichotomies. As rapid
urbanization brings together people of diverse regional, linguistic, or ethnic
backgrounds, popular music can serve as a vehicle for social differentiation,
mediation, or homogenization. In many cases, popular music becomes a focus
for the maintenance or construction of discrete social subgroups, who
congregate at their own music clubs, form taste cultures around certain genres
or performers, and celebrate favoured idioms as unique expressions of their
distinct identity. Some urban genres may maintain strong associations with
particular ethnic groups, as is the case with Nigerian Jùjú , which, despite its
broad popularity, remains thoroughly Yoruba in its orientation. In such
instances music may play an important role in the maintenance of ethnic,
regional, racial, and generational heterogeneity.
In other cases music may serve to mediate differences between people of
different backgrounds, or even to unite them, especially as commercial music
industries attempt to create and exploit mass homogeneous markets. Hindi film
music in North India has certainly functioned in this manner, serving as an
aesthetic common denominator for urban dwellers of varied linguistic, regional,
and caste backgrounds. Certain social formations also intensify processes of
aesthetic homogenization. The centripetal, unifying possibilities of popular
music are particularly clear in situations where socially diverse communities,
thrown together in neutral urban settings, develop more inclusive identities
based on occupation, class, or nationalism rather than on regional or ethnic
origin. Such, for example, was the case to some extent in Zaïrean mining towns
in the mid-20th century, where the proletarianization of migrant workers
created a precondition for the emergence of the pan-Congolese pop music that
evolved into what Westerners call Soukous, with its lyrics in the lingua franca
Lingala (wa Mukuna, 1979–80). Similarly, as Coplan (1985) has documented,
South African Marabimusic, performed in proletarian beer gardens, became an
important vehicle for the development of a pan-ethnic urban identity. Whether
popular music serves to reinforce social distinctions or to negate them, many
contemporary idioms, with their idiosyncratic combinations of various local
and global style features, can be seen to reflect fairly explicit strategies by
which artists and communities discursively position themselves in their socially
heterogeneous surroundings.
While genres and songs associated with urban migrants or the urban experience
generally eschew references to particular locales, some individual cities have
played such central roles in cultural life that they are chronicled in song lyrics.
Hence, various Puerto Rican plenas, Trinidadian calypsos, Dominican
merengues, Jamaican dancehall songs, and Newyorican salsa songs narrate
various stages and vicissitudes of the New York migrant experience. Similarly,
Stokes (2010) explores how different 1990s versions of a song about Istanbul
reflect contesting conceptions of the character of that city and its status as an
icon of Turkish national culture in general.
Patterns of urban popular music evolution vary, in accordance with the diverse
histories of cities themselves, ranging from millennia-old metropolises such as
Baghdad, to conglomerations that have emerged in recent times, often from
virtual vacuums, as was the case with Karachi, a former sleepy fishing village
that is now home to over 21 million people. In some older cities, early-modern
professional entertainment musics provided core sources for the subsequent
emergence of commercial popular genres. Thus, Marathi theater music in early-
20th-century Bombay played a seminal role in the evolution of the Hindi film
music that evolved from the 1930s.
In many cases, the exponential growth of modern cities has resulted primarily
from the massive influx of rural migrants, especially from the mid-20th century
as agricultural economies grew increasingly unable to sustain exploding
populations. While such migrants may join the ranks of the assimilated, wage-
earning proletariat, more often they come to constitute an underclass working
in the economy’s informal sectors. Migrant underclasses often make distinctive
and original contributions to urban musical culture, from
Dominican bachata and Brazilian música sertaneja to Thai luktoong (Pacini, 1995;
Carvalho, 1993; Siriyuvasak, 1990). Migrants generally bring rich traditions of
rural folk music with them, whose perpetuation or reconstruction, in however
stylized a form, may provide some sense of stability and identity in the
otherwise disorienting urban experience. At the same time, migrants, especially
of the second generation, often become at least partially alienated from
traditional rural musics as a result of ambivalence towards their parents’
humble backgrounds, exposure to new musics and the general acquisition of
new social identities. In response they may cultivate modernized forms of
traditional rural musics, as in the case of Turkish pop türkü, or they may
idiosyncratically rearticulate other pan-regional genres that they encounter in
the cities. Such, for example, has been the case with Turkish arabesk, which
draws from mainstream Egyptian pop styles, and Dominican bachata, which
developed not as an adaptation of folk genres like mangolina or carabinébut as a
distinctively local reincarnation of the pan-Latin bolero. While the sentimental
lyrics of early bachata – at that point called canciones de amargue or ‘songs of
bitterness’ – did not specifically address the migrant experience, their
frequently angry and machista tenor seemed to reflect the tensions attending the
disruption of extended family networks in the urbanization process
(Pacini, 1995, chap.5). In the subsequent decades, as bachata became at once
more polished and broadly popular, it largely shed its rough and recriminatory
aspect, focusing more exclusively on the genteel pangs of heartbreak and loss.
Often, as in the case of Turkish arabesk, migrant-based genres embrace urban
modernity in their stylistic syncretism while at the same time criticizing in their
lyrics the anomie it can entail (Stokes, 1992). Such musics, disseminated by the
mass media and migrant networks, often circulate back to the countryside,
mediating rural–urban distinctions. As with certain genres of black American
music, some traditional genres seem well suited to mass-mediated
dissemination, albeit in stylized forms, by virtue of their association with
exclusively oral transmission and their aura of alienation from modernity (see,
for example, Middleton, 1990, p.72).
The history of urban popular music in the city of Lima, Peru, illustrates a
sequence of chapters with counterparts elsewhere in the developing world. In
the first half of the 20th century, limeños (longtime Lima residents) prided
themselves on their Spanish pedigree, their superiority to rural Andean Indians,
and their genteel urban culture. The iconic expression of the latter was música
criolla (‘creole music’), consisting largely of salon versions of waltzes and
tangos, often with lyrics eulogizing familiar neighbourhoods (such as Felipe
Pinglo’s De vuelta al barrio [‘Returning to the Neighbourhood’]). From the 1950s
the stable, familiar, quaint character of Lima barrios began to change radically,
as Indian and mestizo migrants poured in from the countryside, settling in
squalid shantytowns and filling the streets as ambulatory vendors and
vagrants. The migrants soon developed their own urban popular music, in the
form of stylized versions of the Andean huayno, with pentatonic melodies
in AABBform and standard chordal harmonizations. Lyrics of these
urban huaynos typically recalled the forsaken village, or – like Picaflor de los
Andes’s Por las rutas del recuerdo(‘Through the Routes of Memory’) – narrated the
vicissitudes of the migrant experience, often with a self-consciously proletarian
perspective (Llorens Amico, 1983). By the 1980s the adult children of this first
generation of migrants – at once alienated from Andean culture and still
disparaged by Caucasian limeños – cultivated a new, more cosmopolitan-
sounding popular music in the form of chicha, fusing familiar pentatonic tunes
with the rhythm of the cumbia, a common-denominator genre cultivated
everywhere from Texas to Argentina. In the 1990s chicha itself gave way to
techno-cumbia, which, with its retinues of scantily clad girls lip-syncing to
karaoke tracks, extended its popularity to urban Peruvian and Ecuadorian youth
in general (Romero 2002).
5. Modernity.
Many aspects of the development of modern popular musics are best
understood as ramifications of the advent of modernity in general.
Urbanization, the mass media, and the rise of modern social classes
(considered in §§2–4 above) are important components of modernity, along
with more general processes of commodification and the emergence of modern
bureaucracies and the concept of the nation-state. In most of the world these
phenomena have tended to be associated, directly or indirectly, with capitalism
and westernization, although distinctly non-Western forms of modernization
have certainly evolved. Equally important to the rise of popular musics are
more subjective features of modernity, including the spread of secular
rationalism, a sense of individual responsibility and freedom, and the
diminished social and ideological realm of inherited religion, dogma, and habit.
The undermining of traditional identities may itself generate neo-
fundamentalist revivals of sectarian or religious identity, which, while reacting
against modernity, are at the same time firmly embedded in it.
6. Socio-political significance.
The tendency for scholarly literature on world popular music to focus on
sociological rather than formal musicological aspects has derived both from the
difficulties of conducting meaningful technical analysis (discussed in §1 above)
and, more importantly, from the recognition of popular music’s undeniable
social significance. Whether or not popular music is seen as aesthetically rich
and profound, its pervasiveness and popularity indicate the importance of its
role in contemporary culture. Much scholarly interpretation has focused on the
nature of this role, and especially on its relation to interrelated questions of
hegemony, manipulation, alienation, resistance, and agency.
8. Gender.
Since the growth of academic feminism in the 1970s, considerable research has
been published on issues of gender in Euro-American popular music and, more
recently, on world popular music. Indeed, a degree of attention to gender
dynamics is increasingly coming to be considered obligatory in any holistic
study of a given world music genre. Hence, for example, in the realm of
Caribbean popular music, notable are the works by Rohlehr (1990), Pacini
(1995), Aparicio (1998), and Cooper (2004), covering gender dynamics and
representations in calypso, bachata, salsa, and reggae, respectively. Published
studies relating to gender issues in other parts of the world are fewer in
quantity, though are increasing in number (e.g. Morcom, 2013; Weintraub, 2010;
Stokes, 2010; Sugarman, 2003). These and other publications have addressed
various aspects of gender studies, including the ways that gender dynamics are
both represented and actively enacted in song lyrics, music videos, album
covers, dance styles, musical tastes, and other aspects of music culture.
The effects of popular music on the extent to which women play an active role
in musical culture are varied. Women’s musical activities, especially in
traditional societies, are often relegated primarily to private, domestic spheres,
with public performance being reserved either for men or for ‘professional’
women of dubious respectability. In some traditional societies the emergence of
a popular music industry has reinforced this form of discrimination by creating
a new and expanded sphere of public discourse from which respectable women
are largely barred. Thus, for example, although women have been active carriers
of genres such as Bedouin music and North Indian regional folk rasiya, modest
women have been to some extent precluded from contributing to the cassette-
based revivals of these musics, since it would be unacceptable for them to enter
urban recording studios or for their songs to be heard by strange men (see Abu-
Lughod, 1989, p.10; Manuel, 1993, pp.175–6). Instead, female popular music
performers in the Arab world and other conservative societies are often
assumed to be ‘public’ women in one way or another; in some cases they come
from the ranks of traditional courtesan-performer castes, such as the
Javanese ronggeng or North Indian nautanki theatre songstresses (Morcom, 2013).
However, there has been a marked trend for popular music cultures to accord
increasing space to female performers of ‘respectable’ (if often colourful)
backgrounds. One celebrated example was the Egyptian singer Umm Kulthum,
whose humble but honourable social background and rigorous training in
Qur’anic chant elevated her status beyond that of the women who sang only
light, commercial songs (Danielson, 1997). Increasingly, female popular music
singers come from urban middle classes, among whom female public
performance is no longer regarded as improper. As a result, female singers of
Indonesian popular music, Indian film music, and other genres are no longer
assumed to be of disreputable backgrounds. (Female instrumentalists, however,
remain small minorities in world popular music.)
In general, most commercial popular musics worldwide have tended to have
predominantly male performers, to be orientated primarily towards young
adult males, and to be dominated by commercial music industries whose
personnel is overwhelmingly male. Many genres were products of distinctively
male subcultures, including the macho, urban underworlds of rebetika and the
early tango, the competitive, rowdy calypso tents, and the lower-class
Dominican taverns in which urban migrant men would gather to listen
to bachata. Popular musics emerging from such contexts typically focused on
extravagant male boasting and its counterpart, indulgent self-pity, while either
idealizing women as unattainable objects of longing or disparaging them as sex
objects or as corrupted by modernity. Representing a somewhat different
category of male discourse are the innumerable Dominican merengues,
Cuban guarachas, Colombian porros, Trinidadian calypsoes, Indian regional folk-
pop songs, and other genres that foreground whimsical erotic puns and double
entendres.
However palpable the sexual politics of some song texts may seem, scholars
increasingly recognize the caution that must be exercised in interpreting them
and attempting to generalize about their meanings to consumers and their
relations to social attitudes and practices. Many song texts are polysemic
enough to allow listeners of either sex (or sexual orientation) to identify with
the first-person narrator, regardless of the specific gendering suggested by the
grammar or by the identity of the singer or composer. Thus women around the
world are often able to enjoy sentimental male-gendered songs, even those
denouncing treacherous women, by relating to the abstract emotions of
longing, desire, and loss expressed in the lyrics, and overlooking the gendered
aspects of the song (Manuel, Popular Music and Society, 1998). Attempts to ‘read
off’ meanings from song texts are further complicated by the need to
contextualize popular musics in their social milieu. Thus, for example, while
some West Indian popular song texts may seem openly sexist, their musical
cultures as a whole may be relatively progressive in the social space they offer
to women, who can exuberantly celebrate their independence and sensuality on
the dance floor (see Cooper, 1993, chap.8; Miller, 1994, pp.113–25). It must also
be remembered that lyrics do not indicate social relations per se but rather
attitudes about them, especially male attitudes. Therefore it may be in some
cases that expressions of misogyny in song lyrics reflect less the actual
subjugation of women than male resentment of or backlash against genuine
female autonomy.
Such considerations aside, there is no doubt that the increasing presence of
female performers and perspectives enriches popular music’s potential to
constitute a democratic vox populi. Performers such as Lebanese songstress
Fairuz, salsa singer Linda ‘India’ Caballero, Texas-Mexican Selena Quintanilla,
and West Africans Angeligue Kidjo and Oumare Sangare have constituted
inspiring role models and spokeswomen for their female audiences. Since the
late 20th century more women have entered the field of popular music around
the world, and the trend towards greater representation of women seems
inevitable, however challenged by neo-fundamentalist reaction in places such as
Algeria and Iran. Particularly remarkable is the emergence, especially in the
Americas, of a set of flamboyantly sexual and transgressive female performers,
such as the Cuban singer La Lupe and Jamaican dancehall vocalist Lady Saw.
While seen as embarrassments by some women, to others these performers
represent a new breed of emancipated women who, rather than being passive
sex objects, are fully in control of their exuberant sensuality. In a different
category – open to different sorts of critical interpretation – are the various
forms of ‘girl groups’, in such genres as Korean K-pop and Andean techno-
cumbia (Wong, 2012), which feature teenage girls who dance and either sing or
lip-sync light pop songs as part of an entertainment act packaged by male
producers.
In general, world popular music seems destined to reflect the greater presence
of female performers, the increasing purchasing power of women and the
modern trend towards greater sexual openness and awareness. In conservative
societies, even sentimental love songs with no overt feminist content may be
experienced as liberating to women, and accordingly controversial, insofar as
they portray women freely choosing their love partners. Hence, as with other
aspects of cultural dynamics, popular music does not merely reflect prevailing
attitudes towards gender, but can often constitute an important arena where
new identities and mores are presented, affectively explored, and negotiated.
Thus, for example, the prodigious popularity of a few transparently gay
musicians in socially conservative Turkey and Russia has arguably promoted a
certain sort and degree of tolerance and openness of homosexuality in those
countries (Stokes, 2010). Meanwhile, popular genres such as calypso, dancehall,
and soukous have often served as forums for spirited gender polemics, in which
male and female artists trade ripostes in successive recordings. In such
animated and often humorous exchanges, popular music seems to live up to its
potential as a dynamic expression of grassroots sentiment in all its earthy
richness and diversity.
9. Dance
A prodigious amount – and perhaps even a majority – of world popular music
has been associated in one way or another with dance. Scholarship on dance
has traditionally lagged behind that on music, primarily because of the
obstacles to notation. Accordingly, it is only relatively recently – and especially
since the 2000s – that scholarly literature on dance in world popular music,
whether written by ethnomusicologists, dance ethnologists, or others, has
begun to appear in any quantity. Such literature is also uneven in scope, as the
great majority of it deals with Latin America and the Caribbean, although
studies of other culture areas are starting to appear (e.g. Spiller, 2010). Extant
literature has tended to explore many of the same themes as that on world
music, especially involving dynamics of class, ethnicity, gender, tradition and
innovation, and cross-cultural flows. Not surprisingly, such literature reveals a
rich abundance of dance styles, which in some cases may exceed that
associated with a given music genre, especially since the mass media – before
the YouTube era – have generally transmitted music more extensively than
dance. Hence, for example, while salsa is cultivated in a relatively standardized
musical style throughout the Americas, its associated dance styles (e.g. in terms
of basic step patterns) vary considerably in such places as New York, the
Dominican Republic, Cuba, and Colombia (Hutchinson, 2013). Similarly, a newly
minted music genre, such as Tijuana-based nor-tec, may be danced to in a
variety of styles, whether drawing on neo-traditional Mexican conventions or
Euro-American disco and rave dancing (Madrid, 2006).
Like modern popular musics, some dance styles, such as those associated with
Sundanese jaipongan, Indo-Caribbean chutney, and Greek bouzouki music, have
origins in traditional folk genres. Others, such as Hindi film dance, are best
seen as idiosyncratic modern creations. Still others are adapted, with or without
variation, from international styles, especially Western ones. Most styles based
on independent closed-couple dancing have ultimate roots in the 19th-century
country dance/contradance complex, while the swaggering, macho freestyle
moves derived from ‘gangsta’ rap have become icons of disaffected urban
youth culture everywhere from Malawi to Mongolia (Gilman and Fenn, 2006).
Meanwhile, a sort of nondescript, loosely Western, freeform couple or group
dancing may constitute a default style throughout much of the world. Thus, for
example, many Akan and Ewe Ghanaians would informally dance in that style
to highlife music at a party or nightclub, though they might also be able to
perform traditional dances like agbadza on certain occasions.
International dance styles can be categorized into a set of formats. An initial
distinction is between social dances and presentational ‘stage’ genres
performed for audiences. Hindi film dance falls in the latter category; although
occasionally performed live at various sorts of stage shows, it does not form
the basis of a social dance, and is quintessentially viewed in its cinematic
setting of choreographed song-and-dance scenes. Another widespread format is
that of a stage show featuring a band or soundtrack accompanying a small
troupe of singer-dancers, as in K-pop or Peruvian-Ecuadorian techno-cumbia
(see Wong, 2012). In many genres, events can accommodate both formats. For
instance, a typical wedding in Sunda might feature a jaipongan troupe, whose
professional dancers might first perform tightly choreographed sequences on
stage, and then mix with audience members for informal social dancing (see
Williams, 1989).
Social dancing itself can take a variety of formats. The format of independent
couples (whether in open form or closed, ballroom-style, loose embrace) now so
common throughout the world was in fact highly unusual in traditional, non-
Western societies, where most social dances adhered to more collective formats
(line and circle dances, or informal solo dancing amidst a group of onlookers).
Closed couple independent dancing did not spread in Euro-American culture
itself until the vogue of the waltz, polka, and forms of the country dance
(contradance) in the decades around 1800. However, the closed couple format
then spread – primarily in association with English and French forms of the
contradance – throughout Latin America, and became the norm in most forms
of modern Hispanic commercial popular music, including salsa, son,
bolero, bachata, merengue, cumbia, tango, chicha, and
norteña/tejano conjuntomusic, as well as the Haitian méringue. Dances within this
format vary widely in style, from the languid, intimate embrace of bolero, to the
tightly executed turns and ‘shines’ of salsa, and the flamboyant acrobatics of
Texas-Mexican quebradita.
In modern popular music culture in the Anglophone Caribbean, closed-couple
dancing is relatively uncommon. Instead, a variety of informal formats prevail.
Trinidadian soca dancing is distinguished primarily by the pneumatic frontal
pelvic pumping called ‘wining’ (from ‘winding’, i.e. the waist), executed
primarily by women. Wining may be performed solo, by an informal group (as
in a Carnival procession), or by two women, or a woman and a man, front to
front or front to back. In Jamaican dancehall, formats are considerably more
varied. A man and woman might sensually ‘grind’ on each other, the man
leaning against a wall, or they might indulge in even more explicitly sexual
‘daggering’. Alternately, a group of friends – whether all-male, all-female, or
mixed, might collectively perform whatever currently fashionable dance is
called for by the ‘mike-man’, featured vocalist, or song lyrics themselves. Such
dances (bearing names like bogle, buttafly, dutty wine, willie bounce, pon de
river, etc.) are constantly being invented, popularized, and then discarded (see
e.g. Niaah, 2010).
Much of the extant literature on dance in popular music has focused on ways in
which dance expresses and (literally) embodies gender dynamics and sexual
identity. Since the 19th century, dance styles have indeed provoked
considerable controversy, and can be said to have constituted focal sites for the
construction, redefinition, and presentation of gender relations. The bourgeois
waltz itself, of course, was ‘revolutionary’ when it emerged, in its ‘asocial’
detachment of the individual couple from the broader social collective. In Latin
America, popular early-20th-century closed couple dances like the tango,
merengue, and son were denounced by conservatives for their intimacy and
their suggestive hip-swaying. Ironically, as Chasteen (2004) explores, both
dances later went on to become embraced by nationalistic elites. In Indonesia,
in the early 2000s the suggestive dancing of dangdut singer-dancer Inul
Daratista became the focus for a national debate about women’s liberation
(Weintraub, 2010).
Aside from polemics about the degree of sensuality embodied in dance styles,
scholars have endeavored to interpret the specific nature of male-female
relations suggested by dance formats and styles. Although tightly coordinated
closed-couple dancing, as in salsa, obliges one partner – invariably the male – to
lead, analysts have judiciously hesitated to regard such a format as inherently
indicative of sexist, patriarchal domination. At the same time, there is no doubt
that some women take explicit pleasure in dancing independently, in a more
‘liberated’ fashion, whether with a male partner or not. Such dancing might
constitute, in nor-tec, a rejection of patriarchic traditional norms
(Madrid, 2006), or, in the extravagant despelote of women dancing Cuban timba,
it might be interpreted as relating to the new financial independence of women
in modern Cuba (Fairley, 2006). And while the vigorous ‘wining’ performed by
female soca and chutney dancers has been denounced by moralists as obscene,
it could also be argued – especially when performed by groups of women – to
constitute an exuberant celebration of female sexuality in a way that need not
depend on or even involve the participation or gaze of men. Indeed, regardless
of whatever sexism might be present in soca or reggae song lyrics, women may
often thoroughly dominate dance floors in these genres, literally relegating men
to the sidelines.
Bibliography
L.B. Meyer: Emotion and Meaning in Music (Chicago, 1956)
T. Adorno: Einleitung in die Musiksoziologie (Frankfurt, 1962, 2/1968; Eng. trans.,
1976)
C. Keil: ‘Motion and Feeling through Music’, Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism,
vol. 24 (1966), 337–49; repr. in C. Keil and S. Feld: Music Grooves(Chicago, 1994),
53–76
A. Lomax: Folk Song Style and Culture (New Brunswick, NJ, 1968)
B. Matamoro: La ciudad del tango (Buenos Aires, 1969)
J.S. Roberts: Black Music of Two Worlds (New York, 1972)
J. Becker: ‘Kroncong: Indonesian Popular Music’, AsM, vol. 7 (1975), 14–19
G. Holst: Road to Rembetika (Athens, 1975, 3/1983/R)
B. Nettl, ed.: Eight Urban Musical Cultures: Tradition and Change (Urbana, IL, 1978)
[incl. D. Coplan: ‘“Go to my town, Cape Coast!”: the Social History of Ghanaian
Highlife’, 146–87]
G. Kanahele, ed.: Hawaiian Music and Musicians: an Illustrated History (Honolulu, 1979)
D. Hebdige: Subculture: the Meaning of Style (London, 1979)
J.S. Roberts: The Latin Tinge: the Impact of Latin American Music on the United States (New
York, 1979)
K. wa Mukuna: ‘The Origin of Zairean Modern Music: a Socioeconomic
Aspect’, African Urban Studies, vol. 6 (1979–80), 31–9
C.M. Rondón: El libro de la salsa: crónica de la música del Caribe urbano (Caracas, 1980)
M. Andersson: Music in the Mix: the Story of South African Popular Music (Johannesburg,
1981)
C. Díaz Ayala: Música cubana del areyto a la nueva trova (San Juan, 1981, 3/1993)
P. Gronow: ‘The Record Industry Comes to the Orient’, EthM, vol. 25 (1981), 251–
84
J. Reuter: La música popular de Mexico (Mexico City, 1981)
L. Acosta: Música y descolonización (Havana, 1982)
D. Coplan: ‘The Urbanisation of African Music: Some Theoretical
Observations’, Popular Music, vol. 2 (1982), 113–30
S. Davis and P. Simon: Reggae International (New York, 1982)
N.A. Jairazbhoy: ‘Nominal Units of Time: a Counterpart for Ellis’ System of
Cents’, Selected Reports in Ethnomusicology, vol. 4 (1983), 113–24
J. Limón: ‘Texas-Mexican Popular Music and Dancing: some Notes on History
and Symbolic Process’,LAMR, vol. 4 (1983), 229–46
J.A. Lloréns Amico: Música popular en Lima: criollos y andinos (Lima, 1983)
A. Shiloah and E. Cohen: ‘The Dynamics of Change in Jewish Oriental Ethnic
Music in Israel’, EthM, vol. 27 (1983), 227–52
J. Stratton: ‘Capitalism and Romantic Ideology in the Record Business’, Popular
Music, vol. 3 (1983), 143–56
D. Castro: ‘Popular Culture as a Source for the Historian: the Tango in its Era of
la guardia vieja’, Studies in Latin American Popular Culture, vol. 3 (1984), 70–85
S. El-Shawan: ‘Some Aspects of the Cassette Industry in Egypt’, World of Music,
vol. 29/2 (1984), 3–45
M.T. Linares: ‘La matéria prima de la creación musical’, Musicología en
Latinoamérica, ed. Z. Gómez García (Havana, 1984), 342–62
I. Wallerstein: The Politics of the World Economy (Cambridge, 1984)
R. Wallis and K. Malm: Big Sounds from Small Peoples: the Music Industry in Small
Countries (New York, 1984)
D. Coplan: In Township Tonight! South Africa's Black City Music and Theatre (New York,
1985)
C. Keil: ‘People’s Music Comparatively: Style and Stereotype, Class and
Hegemony’, Dialectical Anthropology, vol. 10 (1985), 119–30
T. Koguwa: ‘New Trends in Japanese Popular Culture’, Telos, vol. 64 (1985), 147–
52
M. Peña: The Texas-Mexican Conjunto: History of a Working-Class Music (Austin, 1985)
K. Warner: Kaiso! The Trinidad Calypso (Washington, DC, 1985)
D. Castro: ‘Popular Culture as a Source for the Historian: Why Carlos
Gardel?’, Studies in Latin American Popular Culture, vol. 5 (1986), 114–62
D. Laing: ‘The Music Industry and the “Cultural Imperialism” Thesis’, Media,
Culture and Society, vol. 8 (1986), 331–41
P. Manuel and R. Baier: ‘Jaipongan: Indigenous Popular Music of West Java’, AsM,
vol. 18/1, (1985), 91–110
R. Trimillos: ‘Music and Ethnic Identity: Strategies among Overseas Filipino
Youth’, YTMusic, vol. 18 (1986), 9–20
C. Keil: ‘Participatory Discrepancies and the Power of Music’, Cultural
Anthropology, vol. 2 (1987), 275–83; repr. in C. Keil and S. Feld: Music
Grooves(Chicago, 1994), 96–108
E. Koskoff, ed.: Women and Music in Cross-Cultural Perspective (Westport, CT, 1987)
P. Manuel: ‘Marxism, Nationalism and Popular Music in Revolutionary
Cuba’, Popular Music, vol. 6 (1987), 171–8
P. Vila: ‘Rock Nacional and Dictatorship in Argentina’, Popular Music, vol. 6
(1987), 129–48
R. Graham: The Da Capo Guide to Contemporary African Music (New York, 1988)
P. Malavet Vega: Del bolero a la nueva canción: la música popular en Puerto Rico: de los
años '50 al presente (Ponce, 1988)
P. Manuel: Popular Musics of the Non-Western World: an lntroductory Survey (New York,
1988)
C.A. Perrone: Masters of Contemporary Brazilian Song: MPB, 1965–1985 (Austin, 1988)
S. Feld: ‘Notes on World Beat’, Public Culture, vol. 1 (1988–9), 31–7
U. Hannerz: ‘Notes on the Global Ecumene’, Public Culture, vol. 1 (1988–9), 66–75
L. Abu-Lughod: ‘Bedouins, Cassettes and Technologies of Public Culture’, Middle
East Report, no.159 (1989), 7–11, 47
F. Fukuyama: ‘The End of History?’, The National Interest (1989)
N. García Canclini: Culturas híbridas: estrategias para entrar y salir de la
modernidad(Mexico City, 1989; Eng. trans., 1995)
J. Halper, E. Seroussi, and P. Squires-Kidron: ‘Musica Mizrakhit: Ethnicity and
Class Culture in Israel’, Popular Music, vol. 8 (1989), 131–42
C. Hamm: ‘Graceland Revisited’, Popular Music, vol. 8 (1989), 299–303
P. Vila: ‘Argentina’s Rock Nacional: the Struggle for Meaning’, LAMR, vol. 10
(1989), 1–28
A. Appadurai: ‘Disjuncture and Difference in the Global Cultural
Economy’, Public Culture, vol. 2 (1989–90), 1–24
S. Williams: ‘Current Developments in Sundanese Popular Music’, AsM, vol. 21/1
(1989), 105–36
G. Baumann: ‘The Re-Invention of Bhangra’, World of Music, vol. 32/2 (1990), 81–
98
A. Goodwin and J. Gore: ‘World Beat and the Cultural Imperialism
Debate’, Socialist Review, vol. 20 (1990), 63–80
V. Juste-Constant: ‘Haitian Popular Music in Montreal: the Effect of
Acculturation’, Popular Music, vol. 9 (1990), 79–86
R. Middleton: Studying Popular Music (Milton Keynes, 1990)
L. Mientjes: ‘Paul Simon’s Graceland, South Africa, and the Mediation of Musical
Meaning’, EthM, vol. 34 (1990), 37–74
G. Rohlehr: Calypso and Society in Pre-Independence Trinidad (Port of Spain, 1990)
J. Scott: Domination and the Arts of Resistance (New Haven, CT, 1990)
U. Siriyuvasak: ‘Commercialising the Sound of the People: Pleng Luktoong and
the Thai Pop Music Industry’, Popular Music, vol. 9 (1990), 61–78
C. Waterman: Jujú: a Social History and Ethnography of an African Popular
Music (Chicago, 1990)
L. Acosta: ‘The Problem of Music and its Dissemination in Cuba’, Essays on Cuban
Music: Cuban and North American Perspectives, ed. P. Manuel (Lanham, MD,1991),
187–213
W. Bender: Sweet Mother: Modern African Music (Chicago, 1991)
V. Erlmann: African Stars: Studies in Black South African Performance (Chicago, 1991)
S. Hall: ‘The Local and the Global: Globalization and Ethnicity’, Culture,
Globalization, and the World-System: Contemporary Conditions for the Representation of
Identity, ed. A. King (Binghamton, NY, 1991), 19–40
M. Jackson: ‘Popular Indian South African Music: Division in Diversity’, Popular
Music, vol. 10 (1991), 175–88
A. Kimura: ‘Japanese Corporations and Popular Music’, Popular Music, vol. 10
(1991), 317–26
J. Robbins: ‘Institutions, Incentives, and Evaluations in Cuban
Musicmaking’, Essays on Cuban Music: North American and Cuban Perspectives, ed. P.
Manuel (Lanham, MD, 1991), 215–48
J. Tomlinson: Cultural Imperialism: a Critical Introduction (Baltimore, 1991)
J. Collins: West African Pop Roots (Philadelphia, 1992)
R. Garofalo, ed.: Rockin’ the Boat: Mass Music and Mass Movements (Boston, 1992)
[incl. R. Garofalo: ‘Introduction’, 1–13, and ‘Understanding Mega-Events: if we
are the World, then How do we Change it?’, 15–36; J. Collins: ‘Some Anti-
Hegemonic Aspects of African Popular Music’, 185–94]
A. Giddens: The Transformation of Intimacy: Sexuality, Love, and Eroticism in Modern
Societies (Stanford, CA, 1992)
R. Graham: The World of African Music (London, 1992)
A. Jones: Like a Knife: Ideology and Genre in Contemporary Chinese Popular Music (Ithaca,
NY, 1992)
A. Rasmussen: ‘“An Evening in the Orient”: the Middle Eastern Nightclub in
America’,AsM, vol. 23 (1992), 63–88
R. Robertson: Globalization: Social Theory and Global Culture (London, 1992)
M. Slobin: ‘Micromusics of the West: a Comparative Approach’, EthM, vol. 36
(1992), 1–87; repr. as Subcultural Sounds: Micromusics of the West (Hanover, NH, 1993)
M. Stokes: The Arabesk Debate: Music and Musicians in Modern Turkey (Oxford, 1992)
L. Acosta: Elige tú, que canto yo (Havana, 1993)
M. de U. Carvalho: ‘Musical Style, Migration, and Urbanization: some
Considerations on Brazilian música sertaneja’, Studies in Latin American Popular
Culture, vol. 12 (1993), 75–94
C. Cooper: Noises in the Blood: Orality, Gender and the ‘Vulgar’ Body of Jamaican Popular
Culture (London, 1993/R)
V. Erlmann: ‘The Politics and Aesthetics of Transnational Musics’, World of Music,
vol. 35/2 (1993), 3–15
J. Flores: Divided Borders: Essays on Puerto Rican Identity (Houston, 1993)
P. Gilroy: The Black Atlantic: Modernity and Double Consciousness (Cambridge, MA,
1993)
J. Guilbault: Zouk: World Music in the West Indies (Chicago, 1993)
D. Hill: Calypso Calaloo: Early Carnival Music in Trinidad (Gainesville, FL, 1993)
S. Loza: Barrio Rhythm: Mexican American Music in Los Angeles (Urbana, IL, 1993)
P. Manuel: Cassette Culture: Popular Music and Technology in North India (Chicago, 1993)
M. Slobin: Subcultural Sounds: Micromusics of the West (Middleton, CT, 1993)
M. Webb: Lokal Musik: Lingua Franca Song and Identity in Papua New Guinea (Port
Moresby, 1993)
J. Wilson: ‘Enka: the Music People Love or Hate’, Japan Quarterly, vol. 40 (1993),
283–91
S. Broughton and others, eds.: World Music: the Rough Guide (London, 1994)
J. Clifford: ‘Diasporas’, Cultural Anthropology, vol. 9 (1994), 302–38
C. Díaz Ayala: Cuba canta y baila: discografía de la música cubana, vol. 1: 1898 a
1925 (San Juan, 1994)
J. Gross, D. McMurray, and T. Swedenburg: ‘Arab Noise and Ramadan Nights:
Rai, Rap, and Franco-Maghrebi Identity’,Diaspora, vol. 3 (1994), 3–39
C. Keil and S. Feld: Music Grooves (Chicago, 1994), esp. 96–108, 109–150
G. Lipsitz: Dangerous Crossroads: Popular Music, Postmodernism and the Poetics of
Place(London,1994)
P. Manuel: ‘Puerto Rican Music and Cultural Identity: Creative Appropriation of
Cuban Sources from Danza to Salsa’, EthM, vol. 38 (1994), 249–80
D. Miller: Modernity: an Ethnographic Approach: Dualism and Mass Consumption in
Trinidad (Oxford,1994)
D. Wong: ‘“I Want the Microphone”: Mass Mediation and Agency in Asian-
American Popular Music’, Drama Review, vol. 38 (1994), 152–68
S. Barlow and B. Eyre: Afropop! An Illustrated Guide to Contemporary African
Music(Edison, NJ, 1995)
H. Calvo Ospina: Salsa! Havana Heat, Bronx Beat (London, 1995)
S. Feld: ‘Pygmy POP: A Genealogy of Schizophonic Mimesis’, Yearbook of Traditional
Music (1996), 1–35
R. Glasser: My Music is my Flag: Puerto Rican Musicians and their New York Communities,
1917–1940 (Berkeley, 1995)
C. Keil: ‘The Theory of Participatory Discrepancies: a Progress Report’, EthM, vol.
39 (1995), 1–20
G. Lee: ‘The “East is Red” Goes Pop: Commodification, Hybridity and
Nationalism in Chinese Popular Song and its Televisual Performance’, Popular
Music, vol. 14 (1995), 95–110
P. Manuel: ‘Music as Symbol, Music as Simulacrum: Pre-Modern, Modern and
Postmodern Aesthetics in Subcultural Musics’, Popular Music, vol. 14 (1995), 227–
39
P. Manuel, M. Largey, and K. Bilby: Caribbean Currents: Caribbean Music from Rumba to
Reggae (Philadelphia, 1995)
D. Pacini: Bachata: a Social History of a Dominican Popular Music (Philadelphia, 1995)
M. Savigliano: Tango and the Political Economy of Passion (Boulder, CO, 1995)
S. Steumpfle: The Steelband Movement: the Forging of a National Art in Trinidad and
Tobago (Philadelphia, 1995)
G. Groemer: ‘Edo’s “Tin Pan Alley”: Authors and Publishers of Japanese Popular
Song during the Tokugawa Period’, AsM, vol. 27 (1995–6), 1–36
P. Austerlitz: Merengue: Dominican Music and Dominican Identity (Philadelphia, 1996)
C. Lum: In Search of a Voice: Karaoke and the Construction of Identity in Chinese
America(Mahwah, NJ, 1996)
K. Negus: Popular Music in Theory (Hanover, NH, 1996)
D. Pacini: ‘The Picó Phenomenon in Cartagena, Colombia’, America Negra, vol. 11
(1996), 69–115
G. Averill: A Day for the Hunter, a Day for the Prey: Popular Music and Power in
Haiti(Chicago, 1997)
V. Danielson: The Voice of Egypt: Umm Kulthum, Arabic Song and Egyptian Society in the
Twentieth Century (Chicago, 1997)
R. Moore: Nationalizing Blackness: Afrocubanismo and Artistic Revolution in Havana, 1920–
1935(Pittsburgh, 1997)
T. Taylor: Global Pop: World Music, World Markets (New York, 1997)
R. Allen, ed.: Island Sounds in the Global City: Caribbean Music and Culture in New
York(New York, 1998)
F. Aparicio: Listening to Salsa: Gender, Latin Popular Music, and Puerto Rican
Literatures(Hanover, NH, 1998)
P. Manuel: ‘Chutney and Indo-Caribbean Identity’, Popular Music, vol. 17 (1998),
21–44
P. Manuel: ‘Gender Politics in Caribbean Popular Music: Consumer Perspectives
and Academic Interpretation’, Popular Music and Society, vol. 22/2 (1998), 11–30
P. Manuel: ‘Improvisation in Latin Dance Music: History and Style’, The Course of
Performance: Studies in the World of Music Improvisation, ed. Bruno Nettl (Chicago,
1998), 127–48
T. Mitsui and S. Hosokawa, eds.: Karaoke around the World: Global Technology, Local
Singing (London, 1998)
I. Perelson: ‘Power Relations in the Israeli Popular Music System’, Popular Music,
vol. 17 (1998), 113–28
A. Quintero-Rivera: Salsa, sabor y control! sociología de la música tropical (Mexico City,
1998)
C. Washburne: ‘“Play it Con Filin”: the Swing and Expression of Salsa’, LAMR, vol.
19 (1998), 160–86
M. Pedelty: ‘The Bolero: the Birth, Life, and Decline of Mexican Modernity’, LAMR,
vol. 20/1 (1999), 30–58
M. Schade-Poulson: Men and Popular Music in Algeria: The Social Significance of
Rai(Austin, TX, 1999)
T. Turino: Nationalists, Cosmopolitans, and Popular Music in Zimbabwe (Chicago, 2000)
R. Romero: ‘Popular Music and the Global City: Huayno, Chicha, and Techno-
cumbia in Lima’, From Tejano to Tango: Latin American Popular Music, ed. W.A.
Clark (New York, 2002), 217–39
S. Feld: ‘A Sweet Lullaby for “World Music”’, Public Culture, vol. 12 (2000), 145–71
H. Simonett: Banda: Mexican Musical Life Across Borders (Middletown, CT, 2001)
B. Barendregt and W.V. Zanten: ‘Popular Music in Indonesia Since 1998, in
Particular Fusion, Indie and Islamic Music on Video Compact Discs and the
Internet’, YTM, vol. 34 (2002), 67–113
R. Harris: ‘Cassettes, Bazaars, and Saving the Nation: the Uyghur Music Industry
in Xinjian, China’, 265–83
J. Upton: ‘The Politics and Poetics of Sister Drum: “Tibetan” Music in the Global
Marketplace’, Global Goes Local: Popular Culture in Asia, ed. T. Craig and R.
King(Vancouver, 2002), 99–119
B. Eyre: ‘African Reinventions of the Guitar’, The Cambridge Companion to the Guitar,
ed. V. Coelho (Cambridge, 2003), 44–65
C. Ragland: ‘Mexican Deejays and the Transnational Space of Youth Dances in
New York and New Jersey’, EthM, vol. 47/2 (2003), 338–54
J. Shepherd, D. Horn, D. Laing, P. Oliver, and P. Wicke: Continuum Encyclopedia of
Popular Music of the World (7 vols.) (London, 2003)
J. Sugarman: ‘Those “Other Women”: Dance and Femininity among Prespa
Albanians’, Music and Gender: Perspectives from the Mediterranean, ed. T.
Magrini (Chicago, 2003), 87–118
R. Supanggah: ‘Campur Sari: A Reflection’, AsM, vol. 34/2 (2003), 1–20
J. Chasteen: National Rhythms, African Roots: the Deep History of Latin American Popular
Dance (Albuquerque, 2004)
C. Cooper: Sound Clash: Jamaican Dancehall Culture at Large (New York, 2004)
S. Hutchinson: ‘Mambo on 2: The Birth of a New Form of Dance in New York
City’, Centro de estudios puertorriqueños-Boletín, vol. 16/2 (2004), 109–37
V. Perna: Timba: the Sound of the Cuban Crisis (London, 2005)
J. Fairley: ‘Dancing Back to Front: Regeton, Sexuality, Gender, and
Transnationalism in Cuba’, Popular Music, vol. 25/3 (2006), 471–88
D. Garcia: Arsenio Rodríguez and the Transnational Flows of Latin Popular
Music(Philadelphia, 2006)
L. Gilman and J. Fenn: ‘Dance, Gender, and Popular Music in Malawi: the Case of
Rap and Ragga’, Popular Music, vol. 25/3 (2006), 369–82
D. Hope: Inna di Dancehall: Popular Culture and the Politics of Identity in
Jamaica(Kingston, Jamaica, 2006)
S. Hutchinson: ‘Merengue Típico in Santiago and New York: Transnational
Regionalism in a Neo-Traditional Dominican Music’, EthM, vol. 50/1 (2006), 37–
72
A. Madrid: ‘Dancing with Desire: Cultural Embodiment in Tijuana’s Nor-tec
Music and Dance’, Popular Music, vol. 25/2 (2006), 383–400
N. Manabe: ‘Globalization and Japanese Creativity: Adaptations of Japanese
Language to Rap’, EthM, vol. 50/1 (2006), 1–36
R. Moore: Music and Revolution: Cultural Change in Socialist Cuba (Berkeley, 2006)
S. Hutchinson: From Quebradita to Duranguense: Dance in Mexican American Youth
Culture(Tucson, 2007)
M. Veal: Dub: Soundscapes and Shattered Songs in Jamaican Reggae (Middletown, CT,
2007)
A. Adamu: ‘The Influence of Hindi Film Music on Hausa Videofilm Soundtrack
Music’, Global Soundtracks: Worlds of Film Music, ed. M. Slobin (Middletown, CT,
2008), 152–76
G. Booth: Behind the Curtain: Making Music in Mumbai’s Film Studios (New York, 2008)
S. Gopal and S. Moorti, eds: Global Bollywood: Travels of Hindi Song and
Dance(Minneapolis, 2008)
A. Madrid: Nor-tec Rifa! Electronic Dance Music from Tijuana to the World (New York,
2008)
M. Slobin, ed.: Global Soundtracks: Worlds of Film Music (Middletown, CT, 2008)
J. Wallach: Modern Noise, Fluid Genres: Popular Music in Indonesia, 1997–2001 (Madison,
WI, 2008)
C. Washburne: Sounding Salsa: Performing Latin Music in New York City (Philadelphia,
2008)
N. Manabe: ‘Going Mobile: the Mobile Internet, Ringtones, and the Music Market
in Japan’, Internationalizing Internet Studies, ed. G. Goggin and M. McLelland (New
York, 2009), 316–32
C. Ragland: Música Norteña: Mexican Migrants Creating a Nation between
Nations(Philadelphia, 2009)
S.S. Niaah: ‘Dance, Divas, Queens, and Kings: Dance in Culture in Jamaican
Dancehall’, Making Caribbean Dance: Continuity and Creativity in Island Cultures, ed. S.
Sloat(Gainesville, FL, 2010), 132–48
H. Spiller: Erotic Triangles: Sundanese Dance and Masculinity in West Java (Chicago,
2010)
M. Stokes: The Republic of Love: Cultural Intimacy in Turkish Popular Music (Chicago,
2010)
A. Weintraub: Dangdut Stories: A Social and Musical History of Indonesia’s Most Popular
Music (New York, 2010)
G. Baker: Buena Vista in the Club: Rap, Reggaeton, and Revolution in Havana (Durham,
NC, 2011)
K. Wong: Whose National Music? Identity, Mestizaje, and Migration in
Ecuador(Philadelphia, 2012)
S. Hutchinson: Salsa World: A Global Dance in Local Contexts (Philadelphia, 2013)
G. Jen: Tiger Writing: Art, Culture, and the Interdependent Self (Boston, 2013)
A. Morcom: Illicit Worlds of Indian Dance: Cultures of Exclusion (London, 2013)
P. Manuel: ‘The Regional North Indian Popular Music Industry in 2014: From
Cassette Culture to Cyberculture’, Popular Music, vol. 33/3 (2014), 389–412