Lecturer in Music
University of York – Department of Music (expertise in Black Music Studies or Global Musics):
Lecturer in Music
University of York – Department of Music (expertise in Black Music Studies or Global Musics):
IASPM-ANZ 2022 Conference: Call for Papers
Opening Up: Reconnecting, Remixing, Remastering
Conference Dates: Wednesday 7th – Friday 9th December 2022
Venue: RMIT University City Campus, Latrobe St Melbourne and online
Organising Committee: Catherine Strong, Shelley Brunt, Ian Rogers, Tami Gadir, Sebastian Diaz-Gasca, Olivia Guntarik
We are pleased to announce the call for papers for the 2022 IASPM-ANZ conference, to be held at the City Campus of RMIT University.
There will also be options for online presentations for members who cannot attend in person.
Continue readingFred Rogers was a musician and believed that music was a critical component for the development of young people. He used music to build relationships with his television friends. The Fred Rogers Center is excited to announce that applications for the Gretsch Fellowship in Children’s Music for the year of 2022-2023 are now OPEN! Applications will remain open until April 15th, 2022. To learn more about the Fellowship and apply, please click on the link below.
https://www.fredrogerscenter.org/what-we-do/music-fellowship
Dear colleagues,
On behalf of the Ethnomusicology Group of Barcelona, we want to announce our colloquium for March entitled:
“APPROACH TO THE LAMBE-LAMBE THEATRE AS A STAGE RESONANCE DEVICE: (INTIMATE) HETEROTOPIES IN THE PUBLIC SPACE”
The presentation will be carried out by sociologist and Master in Music as Interdisciplianry Art (University of Barcelona), Amarú Araya González. The event will be held face-to-face and online, on Thursday, March 31st. Check the links below to find detailed information about the content of the session and the biographical data of the collaborator.
Where: To be confirmed
When: March 31st, Thursday.
Time: 18h-20h (Spanish local time)
Language: Spanish
Transmitted via Facebook Live: @etnomusicologiabcn
Call for Conference Papers and Creative Practice: Voices in and out of Place: Misplaced, Displaced, Replaced and Interlaced Voices
6-7 September 2022
Submissions Deadline: 30 April, 2022
The International Centre for Music Studies at Newcastle University (ICMuS) is hosting the second biennial on-line Vicarious Vocalities, Simulated Songs conference in collaboration with the Centre for Interdisciplinary Voice Studies, now celebrating its tenth year. The theme of this year’s conference is “Voices in and out of Place: Misplaced, Displaced, Replaced and Interlaced Voices”, and is intended to cover both new and longstanding questions around the location or place of the voice with regard to the body AND equally perennial debates around the voice in relation to geographical and temporal place and space.
Continue reading
With the outbreak of the Covid-19 pandemic and the crisis following to the increasing number of deaths, forced closures, exclusions and lockdowns, and the social, emotional economic aftermaths; the reemergence of the biopolitical argument is hardly surprising. In his last lecture “Society Must Be Defended,” (1975-1976), French philosopher Michel Foucault refers to biopolitical governmentality, which determines the differential exposure of human beings to health and social risks. According to Faucault’s historicized view of modernity, citizens are not subjects of law, but a biological entity to be controlled by means of epidemiological (biostatistical) surveillance. The emergence of biopolitics paved the way for fragmenting the biological continuum, in order to create hierarchies between different groups and, thus, differences in the way in which the latter were exposed to the risk of death. Racism became the “condition of acceptability” of such a differential exposure of lives in a society in which power is mainly exercised to protect the biological life of the population and enhance its productive capacity.
Continue readingDear all
On behalf of the organisers, I am pleased to let you know of the
2022 IASPM-Norden conference: “Disciplining Music Heritage”
organised jointly with the Finnish Society for Ethnomusicology
13–14 October 2022, Seinäjoki, Finland
The deadline for proposals is 31 March 2022. Please visit this website for the call and further details:
https://www.uniarts.fi/en/events/disciplining-music-heritage-conference/
Please direct your enquiries to discipliningmusicheritage@gmail.com.
With best wishes,
AV Kärjä
Dear all,
We regret to inform you that the local organising committee have decided to take most of the sessions in IASPM XXI 2022 as virtual to make sure a safe and sound conference experience for all participants despite the unstable situation of COVID-19. We have closely monitored the situation thus far with a hope of holding a fully face-to-face conference. However, we reached the point in which we could not delay the decision any longer.
Continue readingINET-md | NOVA FCSH
The idea of independence in music making has been the subject of academic research and discussion ever since the establishment of popular music studies as well as in intersecting areas of knowledge such as ethnomusicology and the sociology of music. Most studies on independence in the 20th century address the possibilities for musicians and other agents within the sphere of music making, distribution and mediation to operate and reach an audience outside the oligopoly of the big music corporations. The last twenty years have seen important changes in the power balance between those forms of music making and the big companies due to the effects of digitalization and disintermediation in the music production cycle. These opened new possibilities for artists and micro-labels to release music by bypassing the distribution chain provided by big companies. However, we also see the rise of new forms of corporate distribution and funding, such as through streaming platforms and brand sponsorship. These changes raise important questions about the shifting notions of independence and what it means in these new contexts. Many of these changes and what they meant have been scrutinized, especially in the contexts of the UK and the US. This book seeks contributions on independent music making outside of the UK and US in relation to the impact of digitalization on music related practices in the 21st century.
Continue readingInternational Journal of Art, Culture, Design and Technology (https://www.igi-global.com/journal/international-journal-art-culture-design/41032)
(currently being renamed to: International Journal of Art, Culture, Design and Technology) invites applications for Art & Culture journal-article peer reviewers.
We are a growing journal, currently expanding our scope – and thus our Editorial Review pool – to include Art & Culture experts. We offer reviewing experience and guidance (to those that want it) to emerging scholars, for whom this would be an appropriate level of experience.
If of interest, please submit an online application via: https://www.igi-global.com/journals/become-a-reviewer/ . (The publisher will be adding more Research Field checkboxes to the site, so please check any that are relevant to you, and the editor will get to know your work better through the Statement and CV you submit.)