Music and Environment Symposium

Call for papers
Music and Environment Symposium
University of Technology, Sydney
Friday 26 April 2013 (tbc)

Music relates to different types of environmental transformations: social, economic, political, cultural or technological, while environmental changes can be heard in music and soundscapes. There has been an increase in academic discourse relating to the ecology of sound, or ‘green music’, often in relation to the preservation of an environment’s sonority. Continue reading

International Club Health Conference

Club Health Conference on Nightlife & Substance Use
San Francisco
28-30 May 2013

The Club Health Conference on Nightlife & Substance Use will be invading San Francisco 28-30 May 2013. This will be the 8th annual gathering and the first time this event will take place in the United States. Come join us to present, discuss, and network on ideas for designing and implementing harm reduction policies at raves, clubs, large-scale festivals, and other entertainment settings around the world. Information on registration and presentation submissions is available at the official website.

Petition on Behalf of Musicians Union of Cameroon

At the request of the International Federation of Musicians, LabourStart has today launched a new online campaign in defense of the hundreds of members of the Musicians Union of Cameroon who were savagely attacked by police as they peacefully marched.

To learn more and to show your support for the musicians, please click here.

Please spread the word — forward this message to your fellow union members, friends and family — and to any musicians you know!

Changing the Tune – Music and Politics

Call for papers
Changing the Tune
Popular Music & Politics in the 21st Century from the Fall of Communism to the Arab Spring
Strasbourg University, France
7-8 June 2013

Popular Music scholars have devoted considerable attention to the relationship between music and power. The symbolic practices through which subcultures state and reinforce identities have been widely documented (mainly in the field of Cultural, Gender and Postcolonial Studies), as has the increasingly political and revolutionary dimensions of popular music. Most studies have focused on the genres and movements that developed with and in the aftermath of the 1960s counterculture. Yet little has been written about how the politics of popular music has reflected the social, geopolitical and technological changes of the late 20th and early 21st centuries, after the fall of Communism. Continue reading

Ray Browne Conference‏

Call for papers
Ray Browne Conference on Popular Culture
Modes of Mobility: Popular Culture in an Age of Technology
8 – 10 February 2013
Bowling Green State University
Bowling Green, Ohio

To build on the success of the First Annual Ray Browne Conference, and usher in the fortieth year of the Popular Culture Department at Bowling Green State University, the Popular Culture Scholars Association at BGSU would like to invite any and all students (undergraduates and graduate), scholars, critics, former members of the POPC program and friends of the department to join us for the Ray Browne Conference on Popular Culture to be held February 8 through February 10 2013, on the campus of Bowling Green State University. Continue reading

Queensland Conservatorium Research Centre 2012 Research Festival

Queensland Conservatorium Research Centre 2012 Research Festival
19-22 November 2012
South Bank, Brisbane, Australia

This is a FREE public event open to all local, national and international academics, students, organisations and individual participants with a keen interest in music research and practice. Download the event flyer and program for more information.

Australian National University

Lecturer/Senior Lecturer in Music
School of Music, Research School of Humanities and the Arts
College of Arts and Social Sciences
Australian National University
Canberra, ACT, Australia

Situated in a magnificent purpose-built building in the heart of Australia’s leading research University, the ANU School of Music is seeking Lecturers and Senior Lecturers in Music who have an emerging or established record of research and research-led teaching and performance. Continue reading

Journal on the Art of Record Production: Publication of Issue 7‏

Journal on the Art of Record Production
Publication of Issue 7‏: Technology, Time and Place
www.arpjournal.com

We are pleased to announce the online publication of Issue 7: Technology, Time and Place

The issue opens with Dr. Mark Katz and Dr. Samantha Bennett’s editorial and includes: 10 articles; Ken Scott, Kevin Doyle and Dave Fisher interviews; a review of Allan Moore’s new book Song Means: Analysing and Interpreting Popular Recorded Song; and a review of Ken Scott’s EpiK DrumS – A Ken Scott Collection.

Read more at www.arpjournal.com