Full programme now available for “Diva: Hip-Hop, Feminism, Fierceness” at the University of Wolverhampton, 17 July: diva symposium
https://benjaminhalligan.com/divasymposium/
CFP: 2nd IASPM-SEA Conference 2020
CFP: 2nd IASPM-SEA Conference 2020
Date
31 January – 2 February, 2020
Host
Ateneo de Manila University
Katipunan Ave, Quezon City, 1108 Metro Manila, Philippines
Organizer
International Association for the Study of Popular Music – Southeast Asia Branch (IASPM-SEA)
Theme
Within, Across and Beyond Borders: Southeast Asian Popular Music Studies
Call for Contributions: Sampling Politics Today
Call for Articles, Podcasts, Videos, and Photo Series
SAMPLING POLITICS TODAY
the first digital, open-access publication on the upcoming Norient Space «The Now in Sound»
Continue reading
New publication on jazz research: Jazzforschung heute (open-access)
Dear all,
we’re happy to announce the release of our proceedings on jazz
research in the German-speaking area, “Jazzforschung heute. Themen,
Methoden, Perspektiven”. Articles are partly in German- and
English-language and accessible as open-access:
Single articles: https://jazzforschung.hfm-weimar.de/publikationen/
full-text PDF: https://e-pub.uni-weimar.de/opus4/frontdoor/index/index/docId/3868
Martin Pfleiderer & Wolf-Georg Zaddach University of Music Franz
Liszt Weimar/Germany
Songwriting, Streaming, and Sustainability
Dear IASPMites,
Registration is now open for the second Songwriting Studies Research Network event taking place in London on Aug 8th in partnership with The Ivors Academy and the Meltdown Festival.
This time around our morning and afternoon sessions will feature discussions between professional practitioners, industry experts, and leading academics over at The Ivors Academy, followed by a live Sodajerker podcast with special guests Nile Rodgers and Merck Mercuriadis as part of Meltdown at the Southbank.
Go here to find out about the event and to book your free tickets: https://songwritingstudies.com/events.
Look forward to seeing you there!
Simon Barber, Mike Jones, and the Songwriting Studies team
cfp: CREATIVE IDENTITIES IN TRANSITION
Call for Papers
CREATIVE IDENTITIES IN TRANSITION:
HIGHER MUSIC EDUCATION & EMPLOYABILITY IN THE 21ST CENTURY
27–29 February 2020
University of Music and Performing Arts Vienna
Austria
Organisers: Rosa Reitsamer, Rainer Prokop
www.musiksoziologie.at
Keynote speaker:
Christina Scharff
King´s College London, UK
Continue reading
Canberra conference welcome statement
This was the IASPM 2019 Canberra conference welcome statement by Franco Fabbri, the chair of 2017-2019 EC. We thought it should be shared for the whole IASPM community, as it looks back to the history of the association:
Welcome
It is my turn now to say “Welcome to the Twentieth International Conference on Popular Music Studies”. The title of the first one, held at Amsterdam University in 1981, was slightly different: International Conference on Popular Music Research. It was organised by a Dutch radio programmer, the late Gerard Kempers, by a British librarian and blues scholar, David Horn, and by a British musicologist then teaching in Sweden, Philip Tagg. At the end of that conference, those three pioneers and a few other musicologists, sociologists and music professionals proposed to establish an “International Association for the Study of Popular Music”. The acronym was awkward, but nobody at that time would pronounce it differently from “Iaspm”.
Many things have changed, from the first decade. Some for worse. Article 2.1 of the Statutes said (says) that “The aim of the Association is to provide an international, interdisciplinary and interprofessional organization for promoting the study of popular music”, and among the founders one could find a radio programmer and a professional musician; in the 1980s there were rumours that Peter Gabriel had become a member, and Rock in Opposition founder Chris Cutler was certainly one; if, at that time, one had mentioned Georgina Born, it would probably be because that former member of the avant-rock band Henry Cow and of the Feminist Improvising Group was doing research at the Ircam in Paris; and one thing that the non-African Iaspm members – about twenty – attending the Accra conference in 1987 will never forget was the ceremony held one night in a shantytown near Ghana’s capital city, when several hundreds of people paid homage to the best known local rapper, died just few days before, and the European, North American, Australian and Asian music scholars (there was a very adventurous Japanese, Shuhei Hosokawa, among them, and the Aussie was Marcus Breen) were the only people invited who weren’t part of that African community.
Now Iaspm (for some, Aiaspm) is seen basically as an academic association. As one of the founders once commented, in the first years nobody would have ever foreseen that at some point being a Iaspm officer, even at national level, could become an important qualification for obtaining an academic position, in some countries. On the other hand, Iaspm has grown considerably: it has more than thirteen hundred members all around the world and sixteen active national or regional branches. And it has given impulse, directly or indirectly to a large number of journals, book series, publications. Popular music studies are important in today’s academic world, and other musicological societies are, at least, concerned. For those who for a century (since Guido Adler) had been defining the canon of which music deserves to be studied, and which not, things have dangerously changed; and the good relationships existing between Iaspm and the International Council for Traditional Music, at international or local level, must not make us forget that until the beginning of this century popular music had been the hic sunt leones of ethnomusicology, the region a serious scholar should avoid carefully.
The task of keeping Iaspm alive and growing is not easy, but there are reasons for optimism: we are going to have a great conference here in Canberra, and I am pleased, as Chair, to congratulate the Local Organising Committee and to thank our host, the Australian National University, and the other institutions which gave their support. And we have already excellent proposals for the next conference, which will be discussed at the General Meeting to be held on Thursday morning, at 8:00 am. I warmly invite all conference participants to attend that meeting, which is the main governing body of our association, along with the Executive Committee.
Thank you very much.
Franco Fabbri
cfp: Documenting Jazz 2020
DOCUMENTING JAZZ 2020
‘We never look at just one thing; we are always looking at the relation between things and ourselves. Our vision is continually active, continually moving, continually holding things in a circle around itself, constituting what is present to us as we are’, John Berger, (ed.) Ways of Seeing. 1987.
Birmingham City University is pleased to announce the Call for Papers for the Documenting Jazz conference, to be held on 16–18 January 2020. Now in its second year, Documenting Jazz brings together colleagues from across the academic, archive, library, and museum sectors to explore and discuss documenting jazz. Since its first edition in Dublin 2019, the Documenting Jazz Conference aims to offer an unparalleled variety of experiences drawn from across the world. We hope to include contributions from individuals of all career stages, from established scholars and practitioners to those just starting their careers. We embrace the academic sector and other heritage and cultural organisations in partnership with each other and with communities. Our keynote speakers are drawn from across the academic sector to inspire debate and discussion amongst participants.
Continue reading
IASPM General Meeting at Canberra, June 27, 2019
Dear Members,
Please find access to the relevant documents for the IASPM General Meeting at Canberra (Australian National University, School of Music, Larry Sitsky Recital Room), June 27, 2019, 8:00-10:30 am.
2017-2019 Executive Committee Report (including Appedixes)
Both documents can be accessed via IASPM web-pages, under section ‘Minutes and Reports‘ (section B)
IASPM EC
cfp: The Road to Independence: the Independent Record Industry in Transition (extended deadline)
Deadline extended to 1 September 2019
Call for Chapters: The Road to Independence: the Independent Record Industry in Transition.
Call for chapters
The Road to Independence: the Independent Record Industry in Transition.
Editor : Victor Sarafian.
Publisher : Presse de l’Université Toulouse 1 Capitole