Abstracts - Indiana University Conferences
Transcription
Abstracts - Indiana University Conferences
Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 Abdel-Gawad, Riad Thousand Oaks, California Sufi Egyptian Instrumental Music Acosta, Camilo Simon Bolivar Symphony Orchestra, Caracas CMS The Usefulness of Alberto Ginaster's Pampeana No. 1 for Various College Teaching Settings CMS Today’s Arab artists and scholars trace their lasting musical ancestry, artistry, theory, and pedagogy from the Old Arab Maqam School. The following study of the Egyptian local tradition aims to describe historical and direct sources as a means to recognize continuity and coherency of principles of, and systems of training in the Old Arab Maqam School. The Arabic treatises by ancient authors epitomize the theory, practice, and philosophy of the Maqam School. The Maqam School also inherits an earlier layer of musical ancestry from past millennia. The Old Arab Maqam-School moreover coheres Egypt’s regional aesthetics of Quranic text cantillation and sacred chant genres and its indigenous musical art. The School’s values and teaching subdivide threefold: first, improvisatorial artistry, second, maqam teachings, and third, oral transmissions. Knowledge and skills impart in continuity between mentor and student that keeps vibrant the musical tradition of Arabs. A contemporary historiography also introduces one of the masters of the Old School that gives fresh approaches to, and new wellsprings for perspectives in theory, craft in composition, and virtuosity in performance. See Tabor, Michelle - The Usefulness of Alberto Ginaster's Pampeana No. 1 for Various College Teaching Settings Adamenko, Victoria University of West Florida CMS Ethnography of Modernism: Schoenberg and Mythological Thought When teaching history of modernism, Schoenberg's twelve-tone technique and his theoretic views, ethnographic approach may be fruitful in understanding the role of this part of twentieth-century culture. Although scholars have emphasized the dualism of Schoenberg's thought, the composer himself tends to search for a mediator between the opposites. First, I will illustrate how his definition of tonality grows to an all-embracing category and thus functions as a mediator between different types of pitch organization. Second, I will compare this mediation to the one of the traditional functions of myth: it helps to reassert the notion of unity. In archaic societies, the shaman is the one who recreates a unity of a ritual object, which had been previously disassembled and is consequently assembled in a new order. In modern society, where art assumes some of the function of an archaic ritual, the artist substitutes for the shaman in the tasks of the "healing reunification" and reanimation. The transformation of Schoenberg's musical language from tonal to atonal to twelve-tonal has a task similar to that of an initiation ritual in an archaic society. Just as the elements of the unconscious in Schoenberg's early works resembles the ritual dismemberment, the "new body" gained by the shaman parallels the "new form," the twelve-tone method introduced by Schoenberg. If we understand this, we can better evaluate the transformations in our own culture. Part II: Performance of Compositions Lunja Nahawand - Lunja is an instrumental genre; nahawand names an ancient Muslim city - and the piece’s maqam and chief pitch class tetrachord. The Western violin’s (kamanjah or kaman) strings tune to the following pitch levels: IV-F, III-C, II-F, and I-Bb. Two performance versions of Lunja Nahawand comprise first, for solo violin, second, for MIDI sampled-piano on tape and violin. Sama’i Saltanah Yakah - Sama’i is also an instrumental genre; as well, sama’i means “audible” or “acoustical.” Saltanah yakah names the piece’s maqam saltanah furthermore signifies a state of musical inspiration - yakah additionally specifies a pitch level. When teaching history of modernism, Schoenberg's twelve-tone technique and his theoretic views, ethnographic approach may be fruitful in understanding the role of this part of twentieth-century culture. Although scholars have emphasized the dualism of Schoenberg's thought, the composer himself tends to search for a mediator between the opposites. First, I will illustrate how his definition of tonality grows to an all-embracing category and thus functions as a mediator between different types of pitch organization. Second, I will compare this mediation to the one of the traditional functions of myth: it helps to reassert the notion of unity. In archaic societies, the shaman is the one who recreates a unity of a ritual object, Individual Abstracts 1 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 which had been previously disassembled and is consequently assembled in a new order. In modern society, where art assumes some of the function of an archaic ritual, the artist substitutes for the shaman in the tasks of the "healing reunification" and reanimation. In this video, the featured musicians include trained school pupils, college students as well as the professional musicians residing in the villages in Kenya. The instruments range from the traditional rhythmic and ageless instruments such as the nyatiti (8-stringed lyre of the Luo tribe) to the mwazindika (a large drum of the Taita tribe). The transformation of Schoenberg's musical language from tonal to atonal to twelve-tonal has a task similar to that of an initiation ritual in an archaic society. Just as the elements of the unconscious in Schoenberg's early works resembles the ritual dismemberment, the "new body" gained by the shaman parallels the "new form," the twelve-tone method introduced by Schoenberg. If we understand this, we can better evaluate the transformations in our own culture. Ahn-Kwon, Songtaik Hanyang University, Seoul, Korea Music Theory Pedagogy: An International Perspective Alamo-Pastrana, Carlos University of California, Santa Barbara SEM La bomba de hoy: Authenticity and Subversion in Puerto Rican Folk Music Bomba music has usually been thought of in Puerto Rico as a folkloric musical tradition that on many occasions has been dangerously close to extinction. Originally brought over by African slaves who worked along the coastal regions of Puerto Rico, bomba music has remained a marginalized musical genre used primarily by working poor Blacks and celebrated during special occasions identified by the state. Through the use of the Institute of Puerto Rican Culture (ICP) and its standards of performance, the state has attempted to define what constitutes legitimate bomba music, musicians, and its performative elements (Davila, 1997). As a result, conflict has arisen between those who define themselves as traditionalists of bomba and younger newcomers to this musical genre. In this paper, based on ethnographic fieldwork with bomba musicians and dancers, I aim to understand how it is that youth/young adult bomba groups actively engage in resisting traditional claims of authenticity established by the state through the use of new performance models while maintaining some fidelity to historical precedent. Through the use of subversive contestations to the state such as refusing to wear uniforms and reconfigurations of the use of space and style, these young bomba musicians and dancers engage in a form of residual culture that seeks to remove bomba music from a formal and folklorized musical genre and into a more commercial and popular form of music in Puerto Rico (Williams, 1977). In carrying out these practices of resistance these young musicians and dancers believe that bomba music can continue to survive in a competitive and global market. Without these tactics, bomba’s future remains uncertain. CMS See Neff, Severine - Music Theory Pedagogy: An International Perspective Akombo, David Otieno University of Florida SEM Folk Music of Kenya: Bridging the gap between the City and the Village. This proposal is for a recently completed video for an unlimited audience, dealing with the folk music of Kenya. The video is extracted from the annual Kenya music festivals whose participants range from kindergarten children to the university students. The festival is open to all schools. The video situates itself in the theme of "The survival of Cultural Traditions in a Changing World". It is a practical introduction to the search and preservation of Kenya’s cultural heritage and it will enable the audience to view the cultural performance outside of their cultural contexts, and help to generate some questions touching on issues such as the viability of the art in a semi-commercial enterprise as opposed to the context in which it is culturally performed. The video will also give a glimpse of the diverse traditional and improvised repertoire of the Kenyan people. Kenya's music scene is rich and diverse, with musical styles ranging from lullabies to popular music. One can find a diverse tapestry of traditional rhythms and instruments combined in endlessly creative fashion. Individual Abstracts 2 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 Alburger, Mark Vacaville, California CMS What You Can Do with a Career in Music: Career Options Outside of Music Teaching and Performance In this paper, based on the experiences of the Chilean musician, composer and exile Quique Cruz, I examine the use of biography and autobiography as an ethnographic technique, in order to posit the individual as a locus for the play of both personal and cultural forces. And also and as a strategic narrative and artistic technique used by Quique himself to situate his life story and musical career within a larger cultural narrative of the 1970s Chilean “social dream,” which ended with the Chilean military coup of September 11, 1973. See Lamkin, Kathleen - What You Can Do with a Career in Music: Career Options Outside of Music Teaching and Performance Alviso, J. Ricardo California State University, Northridge SEM Revenge, Regret and Redemption in the Corridos of Terminal Island Prison Inmates By placing Quique’s musical biography within descriptive historical and musical/artistic contexts, I demonstrate his connection to specific critical moments and persons (musicians and artists) in Chilean history. In this way—and taking my cue from anthropologists L.L. Langness (1965, 1981), and Lawrence C. Watson and Maria-Barbara Watson-Franke (1985), I posit Quique’s musical life history as a “cultural document” that extends beyond the idiosyncratically personal to illuminate aspects of the relationship between the individual and his culture. Among inmates at Terminal Island Federal Correctional Institution, music and songwriting is an essential ingredient in coming to terms with sadness, anger, and loss. Latino songwriters often use traditional Mexican song genres, particularly the corrido, to tell their story and comment upon social conditions that contributed to their incarceration, especially the United States' "War on Drugs." In this paper I will discuss the influence of the corrido on music and memory. I will share texts and transcriptions that I collected over the course of a year of fieldwork in this prison. I will show the ways in which music provides a critical tool for inmates to express sentiments and viewpoints that would otherwise be inappropriate or dangerous. And I will ultimately show that, for some songwriters, music leads them toward reflection, reconciliation, and redemption so that they may move on and live full and productive lives inside and outside of prison. Arrigotti, Jacopo Universita Degli Studi di Padova SEM The feast of the Saints Cosma and Damiano in Riace. Musical performance and a changing rite within an intercultural tradition of Southern Italy In the dry landscape of the jonian coast of Calabria, is laid the village of Riace (600 people). Every year in September is held here a three-day feast in honour of the two saints, Cosma and Damiano. The cult of the two holy doctors, who lived in the region of Cilicia (Turkey) in the 4 century a.D. has been brought to Calabria around 1000 a.d by Byzantine monks. Amigo, Cristian University of California, Los Angeles SEM The Use of Life History Materials (Biography and Autobiography) in an Ethnographic Musical Context The rite is divided into three phases: waiting for the procession, outgoing procession, returning procession. In anthropology, individual life history materials (biographies, autobiographies, diaries) have been used by such diverse figures as Alfred L. Kroeber, Margaret Mead, Robert Redfield, Edward Sapir, Gregory Bateson and Clyde Kluckhohn. However, in the history of anthropology and ethnomusicology, biography has been downplayed as a disciplinary resource. This is due, in part, to a lack of development of theoretical and evaluative tools; and also, to the long-standing and discipline-defining focuses on the basic unit of “culture,” an orientation which has made it institutionally difficult to assess the role of particular individuals and their relationship to “culture.” Individual Abstracts Three main social groups take part at the rite: 1) the local community, under the guide of the Church; 2) pilgrims coming from the mountains of the hinterland; 3) Roma communities, coming from all Calabrian provinces. The unique symbol of the saints is then the pivot for at least three main ritual structures, which are expressed in a variety of performative activities. 3 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 Singing is a priority in pilgrms’ ritual. The pilgrimage ends in the main church, in front of the statues. Music-based performances are the very fmal act of the pilgrimage. Asmar, Sami University of California, Los Angeles SEM Quality of Arab Music in the era of Mass Productions for Competing Satelitte Broadcasts The Rorna community is characterised by tarantella dancing. Secular dancing, vehicle for social meanings, but also sacred dance in front of the saints, which involves altered states of consciousness. The modern popular music of the Arab World evolved over nearly a century. With the end of the cultural rule of the Ottoman Empire, the newly independent Arab nations accepted European arts along with new technologies that allowed the establishment of national radio stations followed by television transmission as well as recording studios and private production companies. The new media brought music to practically every home and popularized star singers that would otherwise not reach beyond their country prior to radio broadcasts. The recording industries forced fundamental changes to the music by shortening the traditional long suites of performances to songs of decreasing lengths. Radio stations intent on not losing the attention of audiences with new choices on the radio dial also encouraged the modernization of music. The concept of modernization often causes heated debates in the circles of Arab musicologists. Modernizers added Western instruments to traditional takht ensemble while purists longed for the genres of classical poetry sung with emphasis on vocal skills and demonstrations of musical modes. Modernization took a quantum leap with the introduction of American-style music videos, called video clips. Worldwide reaching Arab satellite television channels amplified the competition to fill airtime and star-search programs thrust scores of new performers into music videos of synthesized sounds and dance rhythms. Art was often sacrificed for entertainment by telegenic performers. This paper describes the changes in the quality of Arab music in the era of satellite broadcasts in stiff competition for audiences of all ages and musical tastes. A study that is based on the musical and performative texture during the rite, both secular and sacred, reveals anthropological relevances: continuity and contiguity, but also conflict and transformation, of relations that govern the three main groups as well as smaller groups included in the main ones. Asai, Susan Northeastern University The Quest for Freedom in Asian American Jazz-based Music SEM The socio-political dimension of Asian American music is rooted in Black nationalism of the 1 960s and its cultural arm, free jazz. The continuing social, economic, and political exigencies of people of Asian descent in the U.S., have moved many Asian Americans to turn toward their Asian heritage and musically frame aspects of their cultural past within an African American creative form. Through the lens of Black nationalism and free jazz, a study of Asian American jazz- based music narrates the connection of this music to African American culture and politics. The rise of the Asian American political movement in the late 1 960s through the 1970s parallels the development of an Asian American sound that began in earnest in the 1 970s. Asian American activists involved in the movement realized the need for cultural forms that would provide a means to express their newly emerging identity. Artists within Asian American communities responded to the growing political consciousness. Many musicians turned toward free jazz artists Albert Ayler, Cecil Taylor, Eric Dolphy, John Coltrane, Ornette Coleman, musicians from the Association for the Advancement of Creative Music (AACM), and others for inspiration and guidance. The musical openness and collective improvisation of free jazz gave voice to a people in quest for freedom, providing a model for Asian Americans. This paper explores the influence of free jazz, both politically and stylistically, in shaping many Asian American musicians’ approach toward their music, and the work of two artists will be presented to illustrate these influences. Individual Abstracts Atkins, Carl J Rochester Institute of Technology Processionals, Parades and Marching in the African Diaspora SEM Processionals, parades and marching, and the pageantry associated with these activities, have long been an integral part of the music-making and dance activities of people of color around the world. From traditional ceremonial parades and processions in Africa, to parade and processional activities in New World colonies; from the brass and funeral bands in cities like New Orleans, to the modern day phenomenon of the historically Black college marching band, people of African descent have combined music, motion, and pageantry in interesting and sometimes, unique ways. The documentation and comparison of these activities and their role 4 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 in the societies that spawned and often nurtured them has not been the subject of a distinct and widely circulated effort. especially singers, is not without controversy. A recent example of this is the controversy that has arisen among fans of the popular 1990s band Pearl Jam and the currently popular band Creed. Scott Stapp, the lead singer of Creed, has been accused (by not only fans but also music critics, radio DJs and others) of sounding too much like Eddie Vedder, Pearl Jam's lead singer. This paper, through the use of timbral analysis, will show the similarities and differences between Vedder's and Stapp's voices and will explore the implications of the marketing and selling of singers who sound alike. In particular, I will focus on the possibility that not only is there a “natural” resemblence between Vedder’s and Stapp’s voices but also that the similarities in their voices may be intensified by record producers through deliberate, artifical means. This intensification is, if nothing else, a useful marketing tool. The goal of the present investigation is two-fold: to provide a comprehensive overview of the global involvement and influence of people of color in parade, marching and processional activities and, to answer the question, “Should specific examples of present-day marching, parade and processional activities among people of African descent be seen as products of Western acculturation or of an African cultural imperative?” The methodology involved will include (1) investigation and analysis of processional, parade and marching activities found in selected West African societies, (2) tracing African processional, parade and marching activities via the African diaspora through Islamic northeast Africa to Turkey and Europe, (3) analyzing the affects of the Atlantic Slave Trade on the spread of certain African processional, parade and marching activities in the New World, (4) comparing the characteristics of African marching, parade and processional activities with those of various non-African cultures and societies encountered in the diaspora, and investigating the affect they had on each other, and (5) exploring the culture of the historically Black college marching band as an example of a possible present-day manifestation of an African cultural imperative. This will be accomplished through case-studies of the Florida A & M Marching Band, and the Grambling State University Marching Band. Baily, John University of London Music in Kabul after the Taliban Based on a month's fieldwork in October 2002 I found plenty of evidence of music making. Despite all this positive activity heavy censorship of music in Afghanistan remains. Within Kabul, there is a complete ban on women singing on radio and television, and in theaters. Outside Kabul much stricter censorship is imposed by local fundamentalist commanders and a grenade attack on a wedding and severe beatings of musicians near Kabul are reported. Few musicians venture outside the capital to play at weddings. It is anticipated that this effort will provide insights into various historical, global manifestations of African parade and processional activities and their cross-cultural influences. However, it is also my belief that, through investigating this history and the resulting activities in various geographic and cultural settings, a link can be established between a number of contemporary processional and parade practices in the West and many traditional African practices. Against this background of sometimes violent opposition to music we can understand the dilemmas facing musicians returning from Pakistan. Many come from the Kucheh Kharabat, Kabul's musicians' quarter. Radio Afghanistan employs about 30, offering a small monthly salary. Most music broadcast by Radio Afghanistan and Kabul TV is archival; there seems to be very little recording of new songs. The musicians employed by the radio station actually earn their living from playing at weddings. Attrep, Kara University of California, Santa Barbara SEM "Creed Jam, an Alternative or the Same Thing?: A Timbral Investigation" The future of music in Kabul is quite unpredictable. Traditional musicians want to rebuild the Kharabat, bring master musicians back from abroad, and train new generations in the arts of the Kabuli ghazal and classical rubab playing. Others, often amateurs from educated backgrounds, are more interested in the instruments of western popular music, and with modernising and westernising Afghan music. The marketing of similar sounding bands and singers has become commonplace in the American music industry. Of course musicians have always been influenced by one another and in some cases tried to imitate and emulate one another for aesthetic reasons. However, this propensity toward similar sounding performers, Individual Abstracts SEM 5 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 This all raises some interesting dilemmas for those wishing to help the people of Afghanistan re-establish their music culture. My paper examines the unusual features that mark Holiday’s repertoire from this time period (1939- 1941), and argues that the introduction of these features can be linked to the prolonged political crisis of the Depression era and World War 2. Employing conceptual frameworks developed by political theorist Antonio Gramsci, my paper suggests that the changes Holiday introduced into her repertoire after 1939 can best be understood as a creative response to a moment of musical conjuncture, a moment of musical possibility that was itself rooted in the broader conjunctural crisis of the l930s- 1940s. Bain, Reginald University of South Carolina ATMI Numerussonorus: Using Max/MSP to Explore the Compositional Potential of Number Sequences and Deterministic Algorithms The paper will open with a brief discussion of the concept of numerussonorus, or "sounding number," a term borrowed from Renaissance theorist Zarlino. Mappings of number sequences to musical parameters have a long history. As such, the demonstration portion of this presentation will begin with a set of historical examples: musical mappings such as soggetto cavato, Guido d^(1)Arrezo^(1)s text setting algorithm from his "Micrologus," and the Musical Dice Game generally attributed to Mozart. The basic principles of algorithmic composition will be discussed, and the author will take the audience on a tour of the Max/MSP patch library he has created to allow students to explore the compositional potential of a variety of number sequences and deterministic algorithms. Examples will include mappings of well-known natural constants like pi, e and phi, as well as deterministic algorithms based on fractals, the Doppler equation, the logistic equation, and Lorenz Attractror, among others. Bakan, Jonathon York University Billie Holiday's Café Society Repertoire Bakan, Michael B. The Florida State University CMS Rhythm-a-ning: Participation-centered learning and the teaching of complex rhythms in the world music classroom In the teaching of undergraduate world music survey classes, coping with the myriad rhythmic complexities inherent in different music traditions can present vexing pedagogical challenges. It is one thing to describe in words how, say, "West African polyrhythm" or "Balinese interlocking" works and use recordings or video examples to illustrate one's points. It is quite another thing, however, to place students inside the experience of polyrhythm or interlocking, to provide them with a pathway to encountering these largely alien and abstract rhythmic ideas not as passive music-listeners and recipients of information, but as active, engaged musical performers . In my own experience, this kind of embodied, performancecentered learning - in which the students actually "do" polyrhythms, interlocking, and the like, rather than just hearing them done or hearing about them - has generated more student interest and excitement about both music itself and music as culture than any other learning mode. SEM Critics and commentators have long noted the occurrence of an important shift in the repertoire and performance style of jazz singer Billie Holiday after her recording of the controversial song “Strange Fruit” in 1939. Holiday introduced “Strange Fruit” into her act at the beginning of a 2-year engagement at the New York nightclub known as Café Society. Café Society was notable, not only for being Manhattan’s first prominent jazz club with a strict policy of racial integration, but also for being a favored nightspot of New York’s left-wing artistic and intellectual circles. “Strange Fruit,” which was composed by Communist Party activist Abel Meeropol, was well suited to the audience at Café Society. A powerful song of protest against the practice of lynching, “Strange Fruit” was an immediate success, and soon became Holiday’s best-selling recording. This workshop is devoted to a practical illustration of several accessible, classroom-appropriate, group performance exercises. Workshop participants will be encouraged to take part actively as a "mock class" of world music students. Each exercise highlights some fundamental rhythmic principle that underlies the multi-part rhythmic complexity of its associated musical style. In particular, the musics to be addressed are Balinese gamelan, Ghanaian highlife, salsa, and blues. I will conclude with a demonstration of how to extend the core performance exercises into vehicles for collective student improvisation experiences. Following the success of “Strange Fruit,” Holiday recorded a number of striking and unusual songs, including her own composition “God Bless’ the Child,” and several songs composed by pianist Irene Kitchings. Individual Abstracts 6 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 Barnes, Gail University of South Carolina Digital Video and Teacher CMS remembering and memorializing by reconstituting memory in song texts, introducing different ways of understanding medical interventions, and ensuring continuity through musical memory. “The Memory Project,” a recent initiative, is a highly effective tool used by NGOs such as NACWOLA, the National Community of Women Living with HIV/AIDS, a Ugandan NGO devoted to and run by HIV+ women. Members of NACWOLA and other faith- based organizations provide counseling, emotional support, and practical assistance. Many women now create child-specific Memory Books that include sections on parent’s favorite song(s), important rituals, rites of passage, and music associated with clans and ethnic groups of the mother. In addition, song texts concerning HIV/AIDS as well as hymns and choruses are woven into individual Memory Books for didactic reasons—to educate children to avoid exposure to the virus, coping with issues related to mother-to- child transmission of the virus, and to provide details on how to locate a child’s home village, grandparents, and extended family—all contribute to a musically informed identity. In this paper I will also focus on the contributions of musical performances to individual and communal understandings of and transitions in memory by women in faith-based communities for whom performances function as a process of “re memorying” and a means for communicating changes in behavior and conceptualizing the virus and disease for children and family members. Digital technology is a training tool for both pre-service and in-service teachers. Current technology allows teacher educators to record teaching labs digitally and create an electronic teaching portfolio. The components of this digital portfolio can be structured to meet the criteria for both INTASC (Interstate New Teacher Assessment and Support Consortium) for undergraduates and NBPTS (National Board of Professional Teaching Standards) for inservice teachers. Barry, Nancy H. University of Oklahoma Scenes from an Interview: Dramatizations and Workshop CMS This workshop provides proactive strategies for addressing difficult situations that typically arise during the interview process. A series of dramatic vignettes depicting "do's and dont's" in difficult interview situations are featured. Examples for entry-level and mid-to-late career stages include: *The ride from the airport (addressing inappropriate questions and dealing with the "hidden agenda") *The research/teaching presentation (putting your "best foot forward"-relating to students and colleagues) *The lunch interview (addressing "casual" probes into why you are interested in leaving your current position) *The interview with the Chair/Dean (pitfalls to avoid) *The career-change interview (due to family responsibilities, you have not been in a full-time college music postion before) The dramatizations serve as a tool to stimulate discussion. Each vignette is followed by opportunities for questions and interaction from workshop participants. Barzan, Paola Universita di Padova SEM Patriarchino chant: a repertory on the borderline of written and oral tradition Barzel, Tamar University of Michigan SEM "Easily Slip Into Another World': Dream-States and Nostalgia in New York City's Balkan-Influenced Jazz/Improvisational Music" In the 1990s and 2000s, an important current in New York City’s jazz/improvisational music scene has been the turn toward Balkan and Eastern European musics. U.S.-trained composer/improvisers collaborate with a handful of European immigrants to present music rooted in jazz but with Bulgarian, Macedonian, Serbian, or other Eastern European influences. Advertising materials, CD packaging, and textual clues such as song titles reveal an attendant engagement by musicians, promoters, (and, presumably, audiences) with two facets of the Western imaginary: first, an associative, nostalgic dream-state that correlates with Barz, Gregory Vanderbilt University SEM "My Children Must Know About HIV/Aids!: Music, Memory, and Identity in Uganda" Memory work influences and guides the expressive culture of many HIV+ women in Uganda today. Among East African faith-based NGOs (non-governmental organizations), musical performances and memory books represent processes of Individual Abstracts 7 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 stereotypes of old Eastern Europe; and second, an exotic state of wildness and abandon associated with the “Gypsy” of the Western imagination. Long a fixture in rock, European classical music, and the bohemian pantheon, the exotic “Gypsy” is the more familiar of the two tropes. Equally significant in jazz is musicians’ ongoing interest in creating musical dream-states. Stereotypically associated with the hackneyed use in films of a whole tone scale to convey a dream sequence, dream-states are evoked in Balkan-influenced jazz/improvisational music through particular musical strategies, such as using small, clinking rattles and bowing the edge of a cymbal to produce an otherworldly voice. What is the relationship between such musical strategies, the nostalgia that suffuses the promotional materials for the music, and the cultural context of musical production? Informed by two years of fieldwork, attendance at performances, and interviews with New York City musicians, this paper analyzes excerpts drawn from contemporary Balkan-influenced jazz/improvisational music to engage with this question. Bates, Eliot University of California, Berkeley Bi-musicality and Middle Eastern Musemes in Electronica Music This case study suggests new ways of studying sampling-based popular music forms, by situating the act of sampling in a field of learning, selection, and manipulation processes. It also challenges the utility of terms such as “fusion,” terms that miss the diversity of ways in which musicians develop familiarity with multiple styles of music. Becker, Judith University of Michigan Towards A Theory of Trance Consciousness The theory of consciousness developed by the neuroscientist Antonio Damasio in his book The Feeling of What Happens. Body and Emotion in the Making of Consciousness, provides, I believe, a model upon which one can begin to hypothesize about trance consciousness in a way that integrates what we know about trance phenomenology with what we know about neurophysiology. Bringing the phenomenology of the trancer, the first-person experience of communion with special spirits or deities or God into dialogue with biological models of consciousness makes imaginable the unimaginable, makes speakable the unspeakable. SEM Electronica can be viewed as a mode of working with recorded sound, and the artists who create this music grapple with varying degrees of familiarity with musical traditions they incorporate into the mix. If the primary instrument of electronica is, loosely speaking, “the studio,” then these artists, to some extent, develop bi-musical practices with the musics they appropriate and adapt to their primary studio musicality. %Emotion is key to understanding Damasio’s theory of consciousness as it is key, I believe, to understanding the relationship between trance consciousness and music. The brain nuclei primarily concerned with homeostasis are closely interconnected with those concerned with emotion. This suggests that homeostasis of the body and the production of emotion are conjoined. This is the basis for the assumption that emotions are basic to survival and adaptation. Some artists (such as Dead Can Dance) never developed musicianship skills with Middle Eastern instruments, but hired professionals to record and perform them. Some simply used records or samples from the Orient. Others attained a substantial degree of musicianship with particular instruments over a lengthy period of time, though their learning technique and resulting musicianship was idiosyncratic. Darnasio posits a two-layered theory of consciousness, “core” consciousness and “extended” consciousness and I explore its implications for a theory of trance consciousness. I am suggesting that while trancing, core consciousness is unaffected, but that the autobiographical self, extended consciousness, is temporarily replaced by a trance persona, a trance consciousness. I propose that the analgesic properties of trancing may be a result of the substitution of the trance persona for the autobiographical self, the self who normally ascribes discomfort to itself. Damasio’s theory links both forms of consciousness to emotion, placing emotion at the center of our sense of self If this is so, then the emotions of trancing, emotions in part aroused by music, may play a central role in the production of trance consciousness. For all these artists, exotic musemes comprised the most characteristic aspects of their compositions. In their own ways, they developed progressively more intricate ways of incorporating and engaging with Middle Eastern musemes, suggesting that some form of learning process took place during their compositional career. However, the net result of an increasing familiarization did not result in these artists creating Middle Eastern music, and I wish to explore this distinction. Individual Abstracts SEM 8 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 Benedict, Cathy Kassell New York University Chasing Legitimacy: The National Music Standards CMS The research involved both ethnographic work, notably, interviews and analysis of web sites, and musicological analysis. One objective of the project is to measure the extent to which the selection of songs, and their actual sounds relate to users’ description of the music and of its effects. Approached from the theoretical angle of polytextuality, these preliminary results should point to the importance of studying a practice that is neglected despite its social significance. This session seeks to examine the status of music education as a marginalized society and postulates that the National Music Standards are a byproduct of larger forces and powerful assumptions. In order to better understand how these forces influenced the development and adoption of the Music Standards document, I will first examine the Music Standards through a theoretical framework provided by the critical theorists Paulo Freire, Henry Giroux, and Michael Apple. Bennett, Barbara University of California, Riverside CMS Teaching Music Theory from a Cross-Cultural Prospective - A Report from Year Three in the Field I will then compare and contrast the National Music Standards to the National Mathematics, Language Arts, Science, and History Standards in order to examine the ways in which those National Standards reflect a paradigm shift in the educational climate while ours seem bound by more traditional parameters. This paper is conceived of as a field-report from the third year of a project in what might be called "applied ethnomusic-theory". At our California university, an existing course in "Harmony" has been reconceived to fit the needs of a diverse student population which has partly resulted from the recently enacted antiaffirmative action legislation. Two questions informed the restructuring of this course: "how does one provide students from diverse backgrounds with the basics of a language which allows them to communicate with themselves and others about music writ large?" and "how can we as teachers invite students - most of whom are performers - to think critically about Blacking's 'socially organized sound', a form of behavior in which they all participate". The challenge has been to locate hegemonic structural theories in a relational and thus socially derived context in which cultural biases are located within structural theories. The challenge has also been to show that the social disproves any notion of the natural. Based on the perspective of the critical theorists and the analysis of the documents, I will then make suggestions that reflect a pedagogical and philosophical stance found in the current educational climate, while at the same time maintaining the full integrity of music education. Bennett, Andy University of Surrey Phonographic Anthologies: Mix Tapes, Memory, and Nostalgia SEM As illustrated by Nick Hornby’s High Fidelity (1995) and the release of its cinematographic adaptation (Frears 2000), the practice of assembling personal collections of music (“mix tapes”) is now a prominent activity among music fans around the world. However, there has been very little interest in this aspect of music fandom by scholars (Herlyn and Overdick 2002). Mix tapes could be defined as anthologies of recorded pieces of music made by individuals on recordable carriers (cassette tapes, CD-R’s, MP3’s, etc.). Also known as “compilations,” these anthologies typically reflect their compiler’s tastes, interests, moods, etc. As such, mix tapes form an important part of the compiler’s biography, being a statement of lifestyle (Chaney 1996) and, thus, a means by which compilers present themselves to others. They can also act as a communication tool between individuals belonging to what could be described as “compilation communities”. Within such communities, the art of producing and comparing mix tapes constitutes a form of cultural capital (Bourdieu 1984). The proposed paper will present the results of a preliminary study on these “phonographic anthologies”. Individual Abstracts After a discussion of the goals and intentions of the course, we contend with its real effects, interviewing current and former students regarding its successes and failures in meeting the needs of a punk skateboarder who pounds out Beethoven between classes and 360s to those of a Korean student who wishes to study Pansor'i. These discussions/interviews contend with concerns about commonlanguages, standards, and the notion of a musical education, traditionallyconceived of as being total and complete, which must now impossibly encompass a great deal of the known world. 9 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 Benson, Cynthia Bowling Green State University Is Technology an Effective Teaching Tool? ATMI salsa dancing as a social activity in working class Puerto Rican families—a perspective on dance that has been thus far ignored in the academic literature. Far from the nightclub or ballroom where many people today are going to dance, and perhaps to learn salsa for the first time, I learned salsa listening to recorded music at “Viernes Social” (Social Friday) or weekend gatherings in our home or in family/friends’ houses. In this context of ‘bailando salsa en la sala’ people of different genders, race and ages (unlike a club) interact; and through the joyful and playful experience of dancing they learn many codes of social conduct, not just courtship. Such dancing is also a means of cultural affirmation and transmission, particularly for Puerto Ricans in the diaspora. I will demonstrate these kinds of learning and affirmation using videos of ballroom salsa instruction and videos from my own family gatherings in Puerto Rico, Florida, and Seattle. While my examples speak specifically to a Puerto Rican experience, I will discuss ways in which they are generalizable for other Latino and Caribbean peoples who experience their roots (and routes) through social dancing. As extra time, energy and money are invested into using technology, outcome of student learning is a concern. Do students learn more effectively and efficiently with technology? How does technology affect student attitude? What are students learning with technology they could not otherwise? This presentation discusses the research literature designed to determine if students are learning with technology and the results of a study completed by the presenter on the effects of instructional media on student piano practice and performance achievement. The results from and implications of this review on using technology in music teaching and how this information can be practically applied to instruction is included in the presentation. Benson, Cynthia Bowling Green State University ATMI The Effects of Synchronized and Non-Synchronized Music Software on Student Achievement in Sight-Reading Bhattacharya, Nilanjana University of California, San Diego Transitional Histories in South Asian Performance The purpose of this study was to investigate the effects of synchronized (accompaniment automatically follows player) and non-synchronized (accompaniment does not follow player) software on student achievement in sight reading. Students enrolled in group piano courses were divided into three groups: synchronized software, non-synchronized software, and no software. Each group was presented the same sight-reading excerpts. The effects of the software or no software were assessed with the following dependent variables: correct notes, correct rhythm, steady tempo, expression, and time spent learning excerpt. The electronic poster will include demonstrations of these software programs, video clips of students using the software, student performances of sight-reading examples, and the results and implications of this study. Early twentieth-century Indian dancer and musician Uday Shankar performed extensively throughout Britain and New York in the 1920’s. Trained as a painter rather than as a dancer, he devised his own style of choreography and conveyed to curious audiences his unique vision of modern Indian culture. After returning to India in the 1930’s, he focused on innovating Indian arts to accommodate the needs of a growing nationalist movement and a modern, independent Indian state. These attempts to define an authentic Indian culture against that of the colonizer were often based on the ideas of British Orientalist thinkers. British Asian Underground musicians during the 1990’s also struggled to define their identities as 2nd-generation South Asians against mainstream English culture—in many of the same ways. Uday Shankar and early nationalist thinkers’ attempts to define “Indianness” and Indian culture during the 1920’s and 1930’s actually resurfaced in a nearly identical guise during the 1990’s, as the Asian Underground struggled to differentiate their identity from that of their British popular music counterparts. As if to underscore this connection, members of the Asian Underground even adopted Uday Shankar’s son, the pioneering 1970’s Indian fusion musician Ananda Shankar, as their aesthetic patriarch. My paper focuses on the continuities of experience that connect Uday Shankar with Berrios-Miranda, Marisol University of California, Berkeley SEM "Bailando Salsa in the Living Room, How We Learned to Dance and to Live" During the last decade, salsa dancing has acquired an international popularity that is unprecedented in the history of Latin music. In the course of this internationalization stereotypes of Latin music and dance as hot, sexy, and exotic (Aparicio 1998) have been reproduced and amplified. In this paper I will contrast such exoticized depictions of salsa with my own (and my peers’) experience of Individual Abstracts SEM 10 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 contemporary musicians. As I recount the similar ways in which these musicians transgress accepted political and cultural boundaries, I reconsider our perception of globalization as a recent phenomenon. Bidner, Sara Southeastern Louisiana University Preparing the Next Generation of K-6 Music Teachers ultimately the self and other—are encoded in style and embedded in aesthetic disposition. Within a Peircian semiotic framework, I suggest that specific dance movements, such as hip action, shoulder and arm movements, and rapid footwork are perceived by White Americans as signifiers of sexuality and liberation and strategically encapsulate essentialist notions about Latin American ethnicity. This paper traces the stylistic transformation of salsa dancing from one significant point of introduction—U.S. dance clubs that cater to a mixed constituency of Latinos and non-Latinos—to its adoption among White dancers and performance in predominantly White venues. CMS See Trinka, Jill - Preparing the Next Generation of K-6 Music Teachers Bilderback, Barry Linnfield College CMS What You Can Do with a Career in Music: Career Options Outside of Music Teaching and Performance Bowker, Barbara E. William Rainey Harper College The Many Facets of Community College Music Education How do community college students differ from conservatory or university music students, if at all? Do they have different goals and career objectives? How do the diverse backgrounds in music that community college students bring with them affect how they learn? What about retention issues compared to conservatory or university music students? Are community college music students more or less likely to graduate and continue in music fields of study? How are community college missions changing with increased diversity and with changes in technology? How are these missions changing as some community colleges begin to offer four-year degree programs? Will the profile of the community college student change too? Are community college faculty given adequate budget and administrative support to educate their students appropriately? And how do community colleges serve their communities through music and the arts? See Lamkin, Kathleen - What You Can Do with a Career in Music: Career Options Outside of Music Teaching and Performance Bosse, Joanna Bowdoin College SEM "I Want to Get Ethnic: White Salsa Dancers and the Pursuit of Ethnicity, Sexuality and Liberation" Throughout the Twentieth Century, White Americans have been fascinated by Latin American dance and music styles, leading to the romanticization of Latin Americans, and their expressive forms, into exotic caricatures. Since the introduction of the tango into North American polite society, Latin American dances have been mined for their inclusion in U.S. popular culture and subsequently transformed into versions considered more suitable to the aesthetic disposition of the U.S. mainstream. Though this stylistic transformation of Latin American genres into North American popular forms has received noteworthy attention from scholars using concepts such as “domestication,” “tinge,” and the more problematic “whitening,” and “whitewashing,” these ideological constructs mask the complexities of the process and gloss over a complicated reality that begs more detailed study. Our discussion of these questions begins with brief presentations from two highly successful programs. Dr. Sue Epstein teaches at Miami-Dade College, which is the largest college in the United States, serving as a gateway to education for many students from diverse backgrounds, and which has just added a 4-year baccalaureate degree in education. Dr. Manuel Prestamo heads Oklahoma City Community College?s acclaimed Cultural Awareness Series and Arts Festival Oklahoma, whose many events feature distinguished artists, and enhance the local quality of life while also raising the level of international awareness and understanding of those served. These examples launch our discussion of the myriad issues facing the fastest growing segment of American higher education, the community college. We eagerly welcome any and all who would like to participate! Based on an ethnographic case study of White salsa dance/music devotees from the Midwest United States, this paper examines why stylistic transformation occurs and illuminates how prevailing conceptions of race, ethnicity, physicality—and Individual Abstracts CMS 11 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 Bowman, Robert York University SEM Regionality, Class, Political Economy and the Transformation of the Memphis Sound Bowyer, Don University of Alabama in Huntsville CMS Teaching Music on the Internet: The Fifth Generation of Computer-Assisted Instruction in Music The story of Stax Records is about as improbable and unforeseeable as any tale could possibly be. Started in Memphis, Tennessee by a white country fiddler named Jim Stewart who, by his own admission, originally knew next to nothing and cared even less about black music, in the 1960s Stax Records developed a readily identifiable sound that defined the very possibilities of southern soul music. Virtually from the beginning and during an era of de jure segregation, Stax Records was racially integrated in the studio, in the front office and, by the midway point of its history, at the level of ownership. By any logic that one can call forth, musicologically and sociologically Stax Records simply shouldn’t have been possible. The earliest examples of Computer-Assisted Instruction (CAI) in music were created for university mainframe computers between 1967 and 1975. The second generation of CAI music software began with the introduction of the first microcomputers in 1978. The third generation began in 1981 with the introduction of 16-bit computers and the definition of the Musical Instrument Digital Interface (MIDI) standard. The subsequent development of the multimedia computer, with CD-ROM, larger hard disk, enhanced graphics display, better sound quality, and faster computer processor, brought on the fourth generation of CAI music software. The music produced by Stax Records between 1960 and 1968 became known as the “Memphis Sound”—a blues-gospel hybrid sound with pop, rock, and country influences. A signifier of southern soul, the “Memphis Sound” had limited appeal north of the Mason-Dixon line, where the “Motown Sound” had cross-cultural appeal. This situation began to change around 1968 when Al Bell, co-owner and former black DJ, reconfigured the creative staff to include producers and arrangers from the north for the purpose of broadening and diversifying the sound. This paper will examine how Al Bell transformed the original Stax aesthetic into a new sound that resonated among both southern and northern blacks and crossed over into the mainstream. Brand, Manny Hong Kong Baptist University CMS Dragons in the Music Classroom: Political and Philosophical Subtexts in Chinese School Music Textbooks Bowman , Judith Duquesne University Placing A Degree Program On-Line While China's school music education teaches musical understanding and skills, it also serves an ideological function. In this presentation the song lyrics in Music, the most widely used children's music education textbook series in China, are analyzed in terms of Confucian ideals, nationalistic content, and communist ideology. This study's methodological approach is grounded in semiotics, the study of symbols and signs, such as language and visual and verbal cues found in a culture. Such symbols communicate social and political knowledge, norms, and expectations to members of a culture. CMS Therefore, this presentation will include an: (1) introduction to Music, the government approved music text used in most of the PRC's 70,000 primary and secondary schools; See Williams, David A. - Placing A Degree Program On-Line (2) explanation of the ideological messages found in these Chinese school music texts; and (3) examination of specific song lyrics reflecting Confucian ideals, nationalistic content, and communist ideology. Individual Abstracts 12 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 There are some that view China as an exotic mystery and a threatening foe. An understanding of the symbols and ideological characteristics of music education might contribute to a demystification of China so that greater understanding and respect can be achieved within the membership of the world's music education communities. While this presentation focuses on the ideological content of school music materials from one particular country, it more broadly examines the innumerable messages found in school curricular materials used in shaping and producing a particular ideology. Brett, Thomas New York University Drum Machines and the Shaping of 1980s Musical Experience exploring the notion of a “Memphis Jazz Sound” during the “golden age” of Memphis jazz, 1940-1970, a period of prolific activity which produced a number of musicians who went on to record with such jazz luminaries as Miles Davis, Max Roach, Art Blakey, Eric Dolphy, and Horace Silver. The argument presented here has a three-fold purpose: (1) to debunk the myth that jazz is solely a phenomenon of a few select cities (i.e., the commonly cited New Orleans Chicago-Kansas City-New York model); (2) to examine the ways in which the Memphis jazz community co-existed with and within other musical communities in the city; and (3) to define the formulation of a “Memphis Jazz Sound” that may have resulted from the confluence of musical experiences enjoyed by Memphis jazz musicians. SEM The 1980s were watershed times for technological-aesthetic innovation in the American popular music industry, witnessing a shift from old—school “play your instrument”—style music making towards a “program your machine” approach. Two technological developments in particular were responsible for this shift: MIDI, a protocol for synthesizers to communicate with one another, and the drum machine. Although they have existed in various forms since the late 1950s, drum machines came into their own in the 1980s with the advent of machines such as the Linn Drum and the Roland TR-808 Rhythm Composer. These units, and many others like them, lead musicians to new methods of composing, new sounds, and to new musical structures. In a cybernetic feedback loop linking the technology to the senses, drum machines also led to new conceptions of the body though “cyborg” or “posthuman” drumming capabilities, and prompted musicians to theorize about musical time in terms of “mechanical” versus “human” feel. Drawing on interviews with New York music producers and session musicians as well as archival research, in this paper I trace a history of drum machines and examine how they shaped the production and experience of 1980s popular music. Briscoe, James R. Butler University Tania León's A Scourge of Hyacinths: A Multi-Cultural Dynamic CMS Born in Havana in 1943, Tania León is a US composer who has served as Revson Fellow and New Music Adviser to the New York Philharmonic, guest conductor of the Gewandhausorchester Leipzig and the American Composers’ Orchestra, and as artistic director of the annual festival Sonidos de las Americas. Her family heritage is African, French, Spanish, and Chinese. Briggs, Ray A California State University, Long Beach SEM At the Nexus of Gospel, Blue and Bop: The Forging of a Memphis Jazz Sound International criticism has recognized Tania León for her multi-cultural leanings. The Nigerian writer Wole Soyinka, a Nobel Prize recipient, wrote the play on which León based her opera of 1984, A Scourge of Hyacinths. The work severely criticizes totalitarian cruelty generally and in Nigeria by implication. This paper views the composer’s multi-culturalism in the light of this major work. In a recent interview, León suggested both the African and Cuban musical sources of A Scourge of Hyacinths, with its “marked rhythms that trace to Africa, but with relationship to Cuba, to tigo drumming….merging is part of my idiom from day one.” Tania León identifies Yoruba tribal drumming as dominant in the Cuban idiom and important in the opera. This paper discusses the jazz tradition of Memphis, Tennessee and the sound identity associated with the city. Memphis, a city with an impressive musical heritage rooted in blues, gospel, rhythm and blues/rock and roll and soul, has been the subject of many scholarly studies, yet very few works have documented the existence of a vibrant jazz tradition. This paper seeks to fill this lacuna by The force of the drama also owes much to the Western operatic tradition, as examples of an aria and scene structure will show. The work draws upon a dense chromaticism and dissonance in León’s expressionist voice. This idiom provides a mounting intensity and leads to the climax of the work near the end, at the execution of the main character. Overarching these elements of multiple cultures, Individual Abstracts 13 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 significantly, is the unique artistry whereby the composer forms an integrated new dynamic. Brown, Christopher M Northwestern University Using Flash to Help Teach Jazz Improvisation I will firstly show how musical stories in Indo-Persian texts operate, not as purveyors of literal “facts”, but as “fictional” constructions that convey more important cultural truths about music and its relationship with state and society. I will then demonstrate how a culturally informed reading of these stories can be used to challenge the prevailing understandings of political and social history. In doing so I will present an ethnomusicological paradigm for writing music history that integrates musical and wider questions, and brings music in from the margins of historical debate. ATMI While visiting this online workshop, students are able to go online and receive aural practice in learning heads of standard jazz tunes, blues accompaniment patterns, jazz scale patterns, and riffs they can use while soloing. This is taken from the aural teaching methods many jazz educators use in teaching improvisation. The teaching of jazz heads by ear and emphasis on the use of chordal patterns - both to help learn improvisation -- are a major part of the site. Browne, Kimasi L. Asuza Pacific University SEM The African American Music Experience in Underground Britain: A Brief History of Northern Soul” This presentation will show you how to construct the three main concepts I used on the site. Flash can be intimidating at first because it has a different graphic interface than other programs. But as with any complex software one needs to focus on the capabilities that will assist in accomplishing the desired task. On the jazz improvisation site there are four interactive sections “Arps”, “Heads”, “Riffs” and “Scales” that provide interactive experiences to students. Brown, Katherine Butler Cambridge University Fact, fiction, and faction: writing culture into music history In the early 1960s, records by African Americans began being broadcast from pirate ships anchored off England’s shores. These ships played songs by the Supremes, Sam Cooke, the Marvelettes, and others. The songs became popular with British youth cultures like the Mods and the Rockers. In the early 1970s, soul fans in the north of England demanded rarer and more obscure versions of this music. Many underground clubs opened in the UK and created a dance culture and market for dealers and collectors of these hard to find recordings. This culminated in the 1980s with many of these soul clubs closing and subsequent revivals of the movement that continue in the present. This movement was dubbed "Northern Soul" in 1970. British soul fan's reception of this music has evolved into "the experience of identity"(Frith 1996:11). In this paper I argue, these predominantly white British working class youth continue to exhume and consume this once commercially-dead African American music, and thus, have produced a new music-culture endowed with history, community, economy, and affective experience. While several studies have examined the influence of African American music on "above-ground" popular culture in Britain (Small 1987; Jones 1988), this paper addresses the scarcity of ethnomusicological studies that focus on the underground phenomenon of Northern Soul (Hollows and Milestone 1998; Chambers 1985). Using CDs and video footage I will trace the history of Northern Soul from 1962 to 2002. This study is based on my ethnographic fieldwork in England, Wales, and the Republic of Ireland. SEM Ethnomusicologists have long argued that music uniquely illuminates its political, social, and cultural world. Similarly, the discipline of cultural history reveals how cultural artifacts can be powerful mediators of important political and social phenomena previously obscured from historical debate. Theoretically, the music of the past should therefore be a revelatory lens through which to view wider historical processes. Recently, ethnomusicologists have indeed begun studying past musical cultures in their own right. Yet in the field of Mughal studies in which I work, historians “disdain” our historical work as “marginal” (1). Why? Because we have not applied our understandings of music’s mediatory power to our writing of history. Based on my research on Mughal India, in this paper I will demonstrate that music can indeed be used to change history – if we reintegrate cultural questions into our reading and writing of the past. Our historical approaches have been diminished by inappropriate face-value readings of primary texts, and the unquestioning adoption of debatable secondary historical paradigms. Individual Abstracts 14 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 Brucher, Katherine University of Michigan, Ann Arbor Dueling Bandas: Honor through Music at Despiques in Portugal SEM are fondly remembered by the youth of the Cultural Revolution above all for the powerful impact they had, and continue to have, in people’s emotional lives. In northern and central Portugal, bandas filarmónicas (civic wind bands) make or break their reputations at concerts called despiques. I will argue that when bandas filarmónicas perform at despiques, they participate in a musical honor culture. Bands establish their musical reputations, but furthermore, they assert the social importance of their hometown or village. Despiques are typically part of secular entertainment during patron saint festivals. Two bandas filarmónicas perform on separate bandstands and alternate playing a variety of marches, classical, popular and folk music composed or arranged for banda filarmónica. Although the concerts are not officially competitions between the two bands, they are highly competitive in nature. Audience members and musicians anticipate despiques, especially between rival bands. Afterwards, the concerts are discussed for days (sometimes for months and years) in terms of which band won or lost. Participating musicians and spectators measure this by how well the bands played and by the audience’s response to their performances. In my paper, I will draw on ethnographic data from my fieldwork and from historical material preserved by bands to explore how the honor culture of the despique plays out in musical and social terms. Scholars in the social sciences have argued that the political events of one’s youth are most significant in shaping our cultural memories and social identities. In this paper, I will demonstrate how and why such politically motivated songs trigger such a compelling sense of nostalgia in the memories of the youth of the Cultural Revolution. Additionally, I will suggest that the multiplicity of meanings that grew out of these songs effectively subverted the state’s effort to produce a certain kind of identification for model citizens. Buchanan, Donna A University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign SEM How to spin a good Horo: Melody, Mode and Musicianship in the Composition of Bulgarian Dance Tunes Since at least the nineteenth century, Bulgarian musicians, as soloists and in small groups, have accompanied community dances with spontaneously improvised, “spun-out” tunes called horo-s on indigenous instruments. Although such tunes comprise the backbone of traditional instrumental repertory even today, the theoretical principles governing certain aspects of their construction remain largely unexamined. Based on fieldwork conducted during summer 2002 with professional folk musicians residing in Sofia, this paper extends previous scholarship by Mark Levy, Timothy Rice, and the present author concerning the creative process surrounding horo composition. While earlier studies examine the indigenous theory informing the organic development of a horo’s motivic and phrase structure, my current analysis explores 1) the nature of indigenous horo categories; 2) links between instrumental horo-s and pre-existing song models; and 3) factors governing musicians’ choice of rhythmic material, register, ornamentation, and mode as they improvise. Bryant, Lei Ouyang University of Pittsburg SEM Music, Memory and Nostalgia: Interpreting Meaning in Chinese Revolutionary Songs Despite fervent efforts to educate and mobilize the masses in the Chinese Cultural Revolution, the individual reception of revolutionary music often strayed greatly from its original political intentions. At times, music and dance provided an outlet from traumatic times as well as a tool for group participation and defining one’s identity.The Cultural Revolution was a time of heightened and spirited political activity, particularly for the generation that came of age during this tumultuous period; this intensity may help to explain why today the songs evoke such powerful and emotional memories. Regarding the latter, I am particularly interested in problematizing the relationship of horo modality to Turkish makam. Just how makam should be understood in a Bulgarian context remains a contentious issue that has received little musicological attention; between 1944 and 1989 socialist politics discouraged native and nonnative scholars alike from investigating such Ottoman Turkish influences, and even today, many view the topic with ambivalence. My research suggests, however, that instrumentalists employ scale types resembling Turkish makamlar freely, as a key feature of horo improvisation, and that modulation to and between these makam Based on fieldwork conducted in China and the United States, I will analyze the variety of meanings developed through an anthology of revolutionary songs and examine how these meanings vary in the collective and cultural memories of different generations. Contradicting their intended goal, I contend that the songs Individual Abstracts 15 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 -like modes is a conscious decision guided by previously unexplained compositional precepts. My objective is to demonstrate these principles and their implication for cross-cultural musical analysis. Bugallo, Helena State University of New York at Buffalo Conlon Nancarrow and his Influences Burkett, Eugenie Shenandoah University ATMI Beyond the Talking Head: Multimedia Interactive Projects for Elementary Music Methods Current research suggest that technology is (1) not modeled by university education faculty as a viable teaching tool, and (2) not being used by recent graduated of teacher education programs to implement music education standards. There is a need to adapt and develop curricula that enable educators to establish their classrooms and organize instructional priorities in an efficient and cohesive format. This presentation will delineate the foundations and processes underlying custom designed computer-based multimedia instructional programs: multimedia PowerPoint presentations, video analyses of peer presentations, and interactive Web-based multimedia software with digital video presentations of teaching scenarios. The presentation will include a brief summary of the research tools, an overview of the crafting of the multimedia instruments, and a discussion of effective approaches for the use of multimedia technology in undergraduate music education classes. CMS See Williams, Amy - Conlon Nancarrow and his Influences Burchman, Sathya Wesleyan University Soundtracking Cuba: The Political Economy of Cinematic SEM Music has provided a central text in many non-Cuban cinematic narratives of Cuban nationhood. Such representations have engaged a discourse of authenticity with soundtracks that represent essentialized notions of what it means to be Cuban. These images and soundtracks have affected both foreign imaginings of Cuba and Cuban imaginings of self with very real consequences. This paper examines the intertextual narrative between soundtrack and visual sequence in Wim Wenders’ 1999 documentary film “Buena Vista Social Club” and compares it to prerevolutionary (before 1959) Hollywood film soundtracks of Cuba. Burnim, Melonee Indiana University Voices of Women in Gospel: Resisting Representations SEM Those familiar with the African American gospel music tradition are aware of the longstanding historical presence of women in gospel music that continues to this day. Mahalia Jackson and Clara Ward recorded the first million-selling gospel records, and Arizona Dranes and Sallie Martin pioneered distinctive gospel piano styles. Women have been and continue to be choir directors of repute, instrumentalists, owners of music publishing companies and radio announcers. In the history of gospel music women have been neither invisible, nor silent. The pre-revolutionary Hollywood films I analyze depict Cuba as an enchanting, exotic, and voluptuous background for American plots to unfold. “Buena Vista Social Club” uses documentary realism to depict Cuba as a dilapidated relic with a curatorial agenda of documenting cultural artifacts before they are lost forever. Although quite different, both constructions fueled tourism in Cuba and consequently stimulated a market for culture with foreign desires and expectations that have shaped local cultural production. These filmic formulations of “cubanidad” have been sites of articulation where identity is negotiated between outsider description and insider ascription. The paper highlights the political and economic implications of representation and draws attention to the merits of an interdisciplinary approach to the study of music. On the surface, the medium of music appears to be a gender equalizer, a language through which women could communicate without barriers. To the contrary, this paper indicates that women’s high visibility, power and authority in gospel music provides no assurance that the gospel terrain is a level playing field. What exists on the surface as victorious presence and power actually obscures the battles either fought and won, or averted, that allowed women to rise to positions of renown. In order for their voices to be heard, women of gospel music constantly confronted prevailing images of themselves and of their music which stereotyped and restricted them. Their challenge was against representations of who they were and Individual Abstracts 16 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 Butler, Melvin Lloyd New York University SEM "Fighting Fire with Fire:" Pentecostal Transcendence, Music0-Spiritual Warefare and Transnationalism in Haitian "Heavenly Army" Churches what they were capable of doing as women, on the one hand, and who they were and what their capabilities were as musicians on the other. This paper will foreground the voices of pioneering women of gospel as a critical lens to understanding the complex dynamics of race and gender that define this African American musical genre. In this paper, I discuss the role of music as a powerfully expressive form that reinforces a Biblically— informed cosmology and facilitates spiritual transcendence and ecstatic experience in Haitian Pentecostal church services. I contend that, through musico—spiritual transcendcnce, Haitian Pentecostals find not simply a temporary ‘‘escape but, rather, a means of consistently accessing the divine power to survive by waging warfare against adversarial spiritual farces contributing to social misery in local and transnational spaces. Burns, Kristine H. Florida International University CMS How to Make Your Wife Listen: Gender Issues in Music Technology Advertising "You'll capture her every fancy as well as her attention when you turn on the Fisher 440-T stereo receiver." As the description continues, the reader's wife will be so captivated by the receiver that she will forget about everything else, quiet down, and enjoy listening to the music. In independent ‘‘heavenly army’’ churches, participants deploy a powerful arsenal of musical weaponry, using Pentecostal ‘‘point songs” (chan pwen), lament songs (plent-s intense bodily movement, and traditional instruments (i.e., graj, senbal, tambouren, and batri ) to ‘‘heat up’’ (chofe) the spiritual atmosphere and invoke divine manifestations. Through this transcendent musico—spiritual “work,’ the heavenly armies, comprised of ‘‘gifted’’ Spirit—filled pr also express opposition to state— sanctioned religious folk practices (e.g.. Vodou) and compete with annual Carnival and Rara events. The notion of spiritual warfare resonates with an ethos of militarism in Haitian culture. This paper presents an overview of the main issues associated with gender in recent music technology publications. In general, gender-biased advertisements tend to fall into three main categories: advertisements with sexual overtones that are aimed at both men and women; "humorous" advertisements with sexual overtones aimed exclusively at a male audience; and advertisements that are overtly sexist, misogynist, or discriminatory. This paper also deals with the ways in which Haitian Pentecostals respond to local and global hegemonies. Spiritual power, along with the musical practices through which Pentecostals gain access to it, is linked to the power to resist religious, socio-econonmic, and political forces that Impact Pentecostals’ everyday lives. The use of Haitian musical forms such as konpa and indigenous instrumentation articulate a form of cultural nationalism that contributes towards broader efforts to elevate Haiti’s position within the global hierarchy of nation-states. However, I contend that Haitian Pentecostals’ musical and religious practices not only take the form of ‘‘local’’ resistance to global cultural hegemonic forces, but also oppose these hegemonies on their own transnational ‘‘turf’ so to speak. That is, through transcendent musical and religious practices, Haitian Pentecostals self-identify with a transnational “community of practice and attempt to fight one form of transnationalism with another. This paper will include present visual examples of all three categories from the past thirty years. Both consumer and "pro-sumer" (professional/consumer level) magazines from the last two decades have been examined; advertisements in publications such as Mix, Remix, Pro Sound News, EQ, and Keyboard were scrutinized. In addition, a recently completed comprehensive study of one of the most popular such publications, Electronic Musician, includes complete list of the types and numbers of gender-biased advertisements found. Individual Abstracts 17 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 Callen, Jeffrey University of California, Los Angeles SEM Don't call it world music. I don't know what to call it but it’s the music of my world socially- conscious teaching that ideally transfer to thoughtfttl teaching designs and deliveries in the public school teaching positions for which these students strive. The songs of Hoba Hoba Spirit (Casablanca, Morocco) fuse gnawa, cha’abi and other Moroccan musical styles with rock and roll, reggae and a little bit of punk. Working outside the boundaries created by the Western music industry and local music producers, an increasing number of musicians from the global South are turning the defining concepts of both locally produced popular music and the World Music phenomenon on their head. Not content to produce music that fits the narrow horizons of local music producers or to act as raw material or exotic scenery (visual or aural) for the Western market, they struggling to create their own music. During the last decade, an often under-recognized subtext to the resistance to the globalization of culture has been a reinvigorated interest in cultural exchange that does not follow the center-periphery model implicit in the World Music phenomenon but moves along the fissures and fault lines between the “peripheries.” This presentation will look at the efforts of a growing number of musicians in one country on the “periphery,” Morocco, to create music that reflects the world they live in: a world that is rooted in local tradition and enmeshed in webs of connection that make hip-hop, reggae and salsa as much a part of their world as cha’abi, melhoun and gnawa. Campbell, Patricia Shehan University of Washington CMS Music in Bulgaria: Collaborative Moments for Teaching a Musical Culture Campbell, Patricia University of Washington "Local Excursions to a Living Culture" This paper will examine songs from the musicals of Will Marion Cook (18691944) and offer an analytical perspective on the complexities surrounding AfricanAmerican theater at the turn of the twentieth century. Beneath the surface, a "minstrel mask" metaphor produces its mixture of accommodations and strategies that give Cook's compositions their peculiar energy and historical contingency. The ultimate purpose of masking lies in the deceptive coping strategy as revealed by the folk: See Rice, Timothy - Music in Bulgaria: Collaborative Moments for Teaching a Musical Culture Carter, Marva Griffin Georgia State University Removing the 'Minstrel Mask' in the Musicals of Will Marion Cook Since the early 1830s, African Americans have been portrayed as comic stage figures in the popular entertainment tradition known as minstrelsy. The instrumentalists Tambo and Bones, the ragged Southern plantation darky, and the overdressed Northern city dandy are all masked characters perpetuating stereotypic images of the black American. Childlike grins, rounded eyes, rollicking laughter, a penchant for watermelon and chicken, razor fights, and coon dialect are only a few of the caricatures on the stage. The contradictions between these stage representations of African Americans and the grim realities of racism are poignantly addressed in Paul Laurence Dunbar's poem "We Wear the Mask." SEM This presentation discusses the integration of a locally-living culture, the Yakama Indians, into a music teacher education program. The University of Washington’s Minority Affairs and School of Music have collaborated in an ongoing “cultural immersion” project that supports university students’ short-term residencies at schools on the Yakama reservation. Students teach assigned musical units in a local reservation school whose population is 75% Yakama and 20% Chicano (mostly migrant workers), as part of their methods course training. Students perform their own music at tribal schools and pow-wow gatherings, and live locally with families on and surrounding the reservation. They are exposed to Yakama drumming and singing expressions in teaching sessions, and engage in dancing through participatory pow-wow experiences. These short-term immersion experiences for undergraduate students raise questions regarding repertoire, transmission, and Individual Abstracts CMS Got a mind for white folks to see 'Nother for what I know is me. Cook is apart of a crusade to remove the minstrel mask from the musical stage that includes: the use of realism, verbal weapons, double-consciousness, and universal themes. The ultimate purpose in unmasking the musicals of Will Marion Cook is to convey the various means African Americans reveal the truth about themselves and others in their pursuit of social justice and equality. 18 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 Casey, Don DePaul University The Professor As Administrator CMS paper addresses these issues in an African-Indian community in India, where Sidi faqirs have toured their sacred Sufi performances for centuries, most recently by invitation to cultural festivals, five-star hotels and the West. Does touring sacralize non-sacred spaces rather than secularizing celebrations of their African merchantsaint? Billing themselves quite secularly as “African Tribal Dancers” or “Zulu Dancers.” Sidis retain and reinvent traits and memories, often imagined, of their African origins through Swahili soundbytes and African-inspired costumes, makeup, music and movements. These “exotic” performers often surprise Indian audiences backstage with their fluency in local languages. This paper concerns a collaborative project between Sidis and Scholars (Catlin-Jairazbhoy and Alpers, eds. Rainbow Publishers-AWP 2003) for developing knowledge and materials about the Sidis (“Sidi CDs” and cassettes) and the African and sacred elements of their music, including a “revival camp” for the disappearing Sidi musical bow malunga. Sidis are now distributing these materials in India, as they did among British audiences during the first Sidi tour abroad in Fall 2002, and European and American tours are planned in the near future. The paper is intended to generate discussion about the politics of such forms of cultural intervention, the implications and future history of touring Sidi sacred materials abroad, and the effects of tourism on Sidi pilgrimage sites and communities in communalism-tom Gujarat. See Green, Richard - The Professor As Administrator Castro, Christi-Anne Pomona College A Folkloric re-envisioning of the Spanish era in the Philippines SEM The imperialist venture of the U.S. in the Philippines ended three centuries of Spanish rule and began the transition from one colonial power to another. The Americans promoted as a national hero Jose Rizal, who had been martyred by Spanish authorities, to help vilif the Spaniards and to elevate Rizal’s message of reform over revolution, a lesson against further rebellion over U.S. incursions. Despite American efforts at negation, the Spanish colonial inheritance today remains evident in the collective imagining of the Filipino self and nation; and, ironically, the widely read novels of Rizal have contributed to a nostalgia for the Spanish past, even though they were intended to criticize colonial rule. For many, Rizal’s Maria Clara is the epitome of Filipino femininity and a symbol for the racially hybrid nation. The daughter of a Filipina and Spanish friar, she stirs in the imagination an age of grace and stability that stands in contrast with the dislocations of modernity. Hence, the popular nicknaming of a repertoire of Spanish-derived folkioric music and dance as “Maria Clara” seems apt. This paper will examine how nostalgia for a re-imagined Spanish past pervades Filipino foildoric presentations, both in consort and in contrast with State nationalist posturings. I will take into account Susan Bennett’s observation that the performance of nostalgia is less rooted in reverence for “traditions” than in the aspirations of contemporary cultural power brokers to stabilize modern political identities for self-serving ends (1996) and the persistence of endo-hegemony in Filipino performative representations of self. Chernoff, John SEM Encountering Different Perceptions of Historical Significance in Field Research among Dagbamba Drummers The drumming music of the Dagbamba of northern Ghana articulates a determined self-consciousness about history. Music is a nexus for relating history to community and family relationships. The nucleus of major Dagbamba musical styles is a historical epic, performed biannually in important towns. The epic is the source of proverbial praise-names that link individual Dagbamba to one another and to chieftaincy lineages through public praise-drumming and singing and through public dancing to rhythms also derived from praise-names. Drummers are both interlocutors and musicians at social gatherings like funerals or weddings, which are organized to show people's family relationships in both contemporary and historical focus. Dagbamba drummers face many difficulties learning a vast amount of information in order to fulfill their social role. They reach significantly different standards, and those with greater interest in learning specialize in various areas of knowledge. Western scholars have discussed many characteristics of how oral traditions of knowledge are transmitted and maintained, and Dagbamba Catlin-Jairazbhoy, Amy University of California, Los Angeles SEM Touring and Being Toured: An Applied Approach to (Re)presenting Afican Indians One hallmark of applied ethnomusicology is the use of ethnomusicological tools in non-academic settings. Another is to deliberately influence materials and societies researched, often collaboratively as in Participatory Action Research. This Individual Abstracts 19 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 Clague, Mark University of Michigan SEM What So Proudly We Hail'd: Performing Meaning in The Star-Spangled Banner drummers have many such institutionalized and customary arrangements. During long-term research on Dagbamba drumming, I noticed many differences between Dagbamba and Western historiographies, between what Dagbamba consider worth knowing about themselves and the types of historical knowledge that Westerners, including me, have assumed to be significant and have worked to learn. My presentation will describe how I encountered such issues in field situations and how I and my collaborators among Dagbamba drummers attempted to interpret or work through our differences. When Jimi Hendrix stepped on a distortion pedal during his rendition of the StarSpangled Banner at Woodstock on August 17, 1969, he touched off an ideological controversy about the appropriate manner of performing the U. S. national anthem. Yet, while Hendrix’s realization is probably the tune’s most infamous, it is but one of many. Hendrix’s Woodstock performance connects to a long-established tradition of arranging the anthem for popular performances that extends back through such composers as Igor Stravinsky, Duke Ellingon, John Knowles Paine, Dudley Buck, and Louis Moreau Gottschalk. Hendrix also reinvigorated this tradition, helping to inspire recent recordings by such artists as Charlie Daniels, Stevie Ray Vaughan, Bela Fleck, Whitney Houston, Carla Bley, and U2. Chuse, Loren Independent Scholar SEM "Gitana Soy": The articulation of Gypsy Identity in Spanish Flamenco Flamenco music is the result of a centuries-long symbiosis between lower-class urban Andalusians and gitanos (Gypsies). Since its emergence in the midnineteenth century, flamenco has been associated with marginalized social groups and social spaces. This marginalization has given way recently to enhanced prestige and a large, diverse audience in Spain. Flamenco is at once Spanish, Andalusian, and gitano. The Gypsy element looms large in flamenco performance, due in part to stereotypical imagery concerning Gypsiness that has its origin in romanticism. The Gypsy ethos associated with flamenco foregrounds values of freedom, spontaneity, passion and tragedy. Placed in context, such arrangements and performances intersect with everyday questions of just who is an American and how should an American behave. Each performance makes an implicit claim to American identity and may extend its definition by suggesting a confluence of an overarching Americanness and various subcommunity identities. Hendrix, for example, claimed the right to perform the anthem as a black American as well as a member of a psychedelic youth counterculture. By giving voice to the Star-Spangled Banner, Hendrix enacted his identity as an American in sound. Rather than violent, Hendrix’s performance is sensitive to and depicts Key’s text. While Hendrix’s intent remains a subject for some speculation, other composers have made explicit political claims in their reworkings of America’s national song. Although these stereotypical notions are central to the promotion of flamenco in recording, film and tourist industries, there is a real and important gitano component that is central to flamenco. Gitano performers articulate, and in their performances "enact" a strong sense of being Gypsy that functions as a powerful site of tradition and at the same time as an important and meaningful marker of contemporary social identity. Drawing on my research on women flamenco singers and on Nuevo Flamenco fusions I examine the gitano expression in flamenco song; the ways in which gitanismo is articulated through texts, musical style and song performance. I consider the significance of these expressions within flamenco as they articulate a uniquely gitano identity. Finally, I demonstrate the sophistication of this articulation (its ironic and contradictory role) in the representations of Gypsiness by flamenco performers whose work spans the stylistic continuum from traditional to innovative forms of flamenco today. Individual Abstracts Clark, Frank Georgia Institute of Technology ATMI Lights, Camera, Action: Alternate MIDI Controllers and Lessons Learned This demonstration provides an overview of successes, failures, and suggested practices for incorporating alternative MIDI controllers into performance. The controllers to be showcased include interactive light, video, graphic, color, motion, amplitude, temperature, and proximity devices. Now, more than ever, alternative MIDI controllers can easily, affordably, and reliably be incorporated into traditional and non-traditional performance. The demonstration also documents lessons learned and "failures to be avoided." Like all instruments, alternative MIDI devices have limitations, weaknesses, and quirks. These need to be understood, 20 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 Coe, Judith University of Colorado-Denver Top Ten Lists: Mediating Conflicting Methodologies documented, and disseminated. The demonstration concludes with suggested performance practices, specific implementations, and recommended paths for exploration. The commercial and non-commercial systems to be considered include the Infusion System I-CubeX, the DIEM (Danish Institute of Electroacoustic Music) Digital Dance System, OptiMusic Interactive and Reflective Lights, STEIM I See Sturman, Janet - Top Ten Lists: Mediating Conflicting Methodologies Cohen, Sara University of Liverpool Popular Music, Heritage, and Urban Regeneration. Clements, Carl City University of New York SEM Hariprasad Chaurasia and Nityanand Haldipur: Stylistic Differences within a Gharana SEM This lecture will focus on tourism in order to explore connections between popular music and the city. Music has always played an important part in tourism. It may be a tourist attraction in its own right (as, for example, with the Mozart festival in Salzburg and Gamelan tours in Indonesia) but it also plays a significant role in tourist activities more generally, influencing, for example, tourists' perceptions and experiences of places. This lecture will discuss a growing but as yet little studied area of interface between music and tourism which is tourism based on visits to locations that are significant to the lives and work of popular musicians. In particular it will draw upon ethnographic research on Beatles tourism in the city of Liverpool. The Beatles became a symbol of modern, global culture and have been judged to be the music and musicians ‘of the millennium’, but at the same time they have also been closely connected with the culture and economy of one particular city. The case of Beatles tourism in Liverpool will be used to explore popular music’s role and significance in urban regeneration and the institutionalization and heritigisation of rock/pop music within Western European and North American cities. This paper will address some aspects of convergence and divergence of two dominant styles of bansuri playing in contemporary Hindustani music. The first style, here represented by Nityanand Haldipur, is that of the late Pannalal Ghosh (1911-1960), the founder of modern Hindustani classical bansuri playing. The second is that of Hariprasad Chaurasia (b. 1938), who, though probably inspired by Ghosh’s playing, developed his style independent of his distinguished predecessor. Both Ghosh and Chaurasia have trained a number of noted students, and seem to represent distinct stylistic lineages. Technically, however, both styles exist within the Maihar gharana.A comparison of Haldipur and Chaurasia is of particular interest as both are students of Annapurna Devi, daughter of Ustad Allaudin Khan. Despite this fact, their approaches to bansuri playing are in some ways dramatically different, as evidenced by flute design (six-hole versus sevenhole), pacing, emphasis on tradition versus innovation, types of compositions, embellishment, articulation, and use of rhythm. This paper will explore some of these stylistic choices, and consider the affiliations, both within and external to the Maihar gharana, that they may reflect. Conkling , Susan Eastman School of Music CMS Preparing Doctoral Students for their Roles as Teachers in Higher Education The primary mode of investigation will be analysis of transcriptions of performances by Nityanand Haldipur and Hariprasad Chaurasia. The observations drawn from this analysis will be supported by statements made by writers, critics, and the artists themselves, as well as reference to authorities on Hindustani classical music (such as Bhatkhande, Paluskar, and Ali Akbar Khan), historical documents, and discussion of technical aspects of the instruments. Individual Abstracts CMS See Henry, Warren - Preparing Doctoral Students for their Roles as Teachers in Higher Education 21 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 Conlon, Paula University of Oklahoma Creek-Seminole Stomp Dance in Oklahoma SEM (turtle rattles worn on the women’s lower legs to accompany the men’s singing) for the past three years, at both indoor winter social dances and the outdoor private Green Corn Ceremony held each summer. The impetus for my work with the Talahvse Ceremonial Grounds stems from our mutual desire to aid in the transmission of information about this rich tradition. This paper looks at the position that the Talahvse Ceremonial Grounds holds in the Oklahoma stomp dance community, and discusses the results of our collaboration in relationship to the Native American music class that I teach at the University of Oklahoma. If you ask someone what Native American event they most expect to find in Oklahoma, they are likely to say “powwow,” which is certainly prevalent in this state. However, a number of tribes now situated in Oklahoma do not participate in powwows, and a balanced class will include information about their traditions. This research looks at contemporary Creek/Seminole stomp dancing in Oklahoma, comparing these dances with historical accounts, both in Oklahoma (Howard, 1984) and in the eastern United States where the stomp dance originated (Densmore, 1956), along with a discussion of recent studies (Jackson and Levine, 2002). This vibrant tradition is under-represented in the published literature, and merits further study. The focus of this paper is on the author’s work with the Talahvse Ceremonial Grounds of the Mvskoke/Creek Nation, whose stomp grounds are just outside of Cromwell, Oklahoma. The ideal way to learn about something is to actively participate, and I have had the privilege of shaking shells (turtle rattles worn on the women’s lower legs to accompany the men’s singing) at both indoor winter social dances and the outdoor private Green Corn Ceremony held each summer. This paper looks at the position that the Talahvse Ceremonial Grounds holds in the Oklahoma stomp dance community, and their role in the preservation of stomp dancing into the twenty-first century. The paper concludes with a discussion of the incorporation of the results of this research into the teaching of my Native American music class at the university. Conlon, Paula University of Oklahoma Native American Stomp Dance in Oklahoma Connell, Andrew James Madison University SEM Jazz in Brazil: Authenticity and Universality in the Music of Hermeto Pascoal Is there a Brazilian jazz? Most U.S. jazz histories note the influence of bossa nova on jazz during the 1 960s and the fusion work Brazilian emigres such as Airto Moreira and Flora Purim in the 1 970s, yet few suggest that this music may have a narrative history of its own. Moreover, Brazilian musicological literature rarely mentions instrumental music (known in Brazil as mi instrumental brasileira) beyond references to choro (a traditional instrumental genre) as a canonical stage in the evolution of Brazilian popular music. Yet during my field research in Rio de Janeiro and S Paulo, I uncovered an instrumental music scene whose rich collection of personal and historical narratives evidence a continuing interplay of local and metropolitan musical styles and ideas. In this paper I focus on the noted multi-instrumentalist, composer, and bandleader, Hermeto Pascoal. During my interviews with local musicians, Hermeto’s music and idiosyncratic persona were commonly cited as being “authentic.” For these instrumentalists, Hermeto serves as a kind of “reference,” a standard bearer of both uncompromising musical vision and genuine Brasilianness (brasilidade). However, Hermeto frequently declares that his music is universal and thus unconstrained by nationalist ideologies or geographic boundaries. Bringing together these seemingly conflicting viewpoints, I examine the way that Hermeto’s appropriation of choro, northeastern styles, jazz harmonic language, free improvisation, natural and electronic sounds reflects a uniquely personal conceptual vision that is at once individual, local, national, and universal. CMS If you ask someone what Native American event they most expect to find in Oklahoma, they are likely to say “powwow,” which is certainly prevalent in this state. However, a number of tribes that were forcibly removed to Indian Territory/Oklahoma do not participate in powwows, and their voices should also be heard. This research examines contemporary Native American stomp dancing in Oklahoma, comparing these dances with historical accounts, both in Oklahoma (Howard, 1984) and in the eastern United States where the stomp dance originated (Densmore, 1956). The focus of this research is on the author’s work with the Talahvse Ceremonial Grounds of the Mvskoke/Creek Nation, whose stomp grounds are just outside of Cromwell, Oklahoma. The ideal way to learn about something is to actively participate, and I have had the privilege of shaking shells Individual Abstracts 22 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 Connors, Carla Tallahassee, Florida Straight Talk on New Notes: Composers and Performers Together CMS What appears initially to be an uncomplicated invitation to “come on up and pick (or sing) a song” is but one facet of an intricate process through which authenticity within this community is established, membership within the “signifying social system” (Walser; 1993) of country music is earned, and critical social roles and identities are initially negotiated, continually reconfigured, and periodically contested. Analysis of this performance practice reveals much about core values embedded within country music culture as well as ways through which enactment of those values assists in the formation and maintenance of community boundaries. See Zaimont, Judith Lang - Straight Talk on New Notes: Composers and Performers Together Conway , Colleen University of Michigan CMS The Role of Music Teacher Education in Assisting the Beginning Music Teacher Sara Thornton and others have urged the analysis of the “distinction systems of popular culture” (Thornton, 1995:163). Through presentation and discussion of events experienced during ethnographic research from 1996 to 2002 within the “distinction system” that describes country music culture, and that gained through personal performance experience during the 1970s and 1980s, this paper explores these values and processes, focusing upon the intricate social “dance” of sitting-in. Recent research on beginning music teacher mentoring and induction has suggested that school district-sponsored programs for beginning teachers rarely meet the content-specific needs of the beginning music teacher. The purpose of this workshop will be to present possibilities for higher education involvement in beginning music teacher mentoring and induction. Issues to be addressed will include: funding; university teaching load; the ability to maintain continuity into the field (with the mobility of new teachers as well as university professors); professional development school options, and music education reform through induction support. Issues concerning preservice preparation for the first years of teaching will also be addressed. Participants will be encouraged to interact so that a dialogue regarding these important issues may be initiated within the College Music Society. Cornelius, Steven Bowling Green State University The Layering of Text in Dagbamba Music Scholars in the West have long been fascinated by the talking lung-a drums of the Dagbamba people of northern Ghana. With good reason. By imitating the inflections and rhythms of speech, members of the drummer’s clan (lung-si) can beat out a range of language that runs from generations-old proverbs to the slang of modern life. But drumming constitutes just one layer of language use in Dagbamba music. Flute players also bring out language through their choice of song-derived melodies. If this use of language seems less mysterious to the outsider, the social meanings being conveyed can be equally broad and incisive. Corin, Amy Moorpark College SEM Sitting In: Authenticity, Status, and the Maintenance of Social Boundaries through Performance Practice in the Country Music Community Many an unknown country performer has gained entry to a local performance community through “sitting in” with other musicians, while more established country musicians and singers have, through time, employed this practice as a vehicle for ongoing negotiation of authenticity, status, and maintenance of visibility within a community of performers and fans. A tacit, but highly structured, clearly understood code of behavior has developed around the practice of “sitting in” and of publicly recognizing and welcoming visiting musicians and singers when they “drop in” on another band or performer. Individual Abstracts SEM Yet, while drums and flutes constitute two independent language layers that are simultaneously brought forth in musical performance, additional strata are also common. In a traditional performance of the funeral dance bamaya, for example, male (baanga) and female vocalists (lung-pagba) chant out the social histories and lineages of the dancers. This paper examines the four-part layering, or “linguistic counterpoint” as it were, of bamaya. First, I offer a brief introduction to bamaya in which I place the genre into a historical and contemporary context. Next, I outline the various knowledge 23 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 bases from which each of these four classes of musicians/verbal artists draws musical information. Finally, and with an eye on the social aggregate of a bamaya performance, I examine the range and nature of what each of these groups is actually saying and how their language affects both performers and audience. time. Syria has been designated as an “axis” of evil by the George W. Bush White House; Syrian musicians cannot get visas to come to the United States; the Immigration and Naturalization Service demands registration of foreign nationals including Syrians, but some of those who voluntarily register are thrown in jail indefinitely with no charge of wrong doing; and the Unites States Government is on the verge of making a unilateral, pre-emptive strike on Iraq. It is a tough time to be an ethnomusicologists. Cruz, Jon University of California, Santa Barbara SEM "Can you make it Look Old?": Fender "Relic" Guitars and the Politcs of Nostalgia This paper explores a number of complex ethical issues that confront contemporary One of the meanings of nostalgia is "homesickness," the longing to return to a place deeply missed. An ironic feature of social and cultural transformation wrought by modernity is that cultural places and spaces can actually disappear; they are uprooted by "development." Nostalgia under such conditions becomes a longing that can never "truly" be appeased; the actual return to a missed "place" cannot be obtained, for it is "gone." Under modernity, longing for a "past" seems a powerful cultural feature, a condition perhaps guaranteed by the constant erosion of social change. ethnomusicologist: 1. Documentation when the processes and results are problematic in Attempts to appease the desire to "return" to what once was, is now a major field for corporate product development. This paper examines the recent phenomenon of corporate "reissues" of "vintage" instruments in general, and will focus on the Fender guitar company's line of "relic" guitars. Fender's "relic" line of guitars features a return to early, high-quality craftsmanship, but with the peculiar twist of producing brand new instruments that appear quite convincingly to have been well used. They must display all the apparent signs of years of service; the "relic," though brand new, must appear off the production line as if it had forty to fifty years of wear. Treating "relicing" as a cultural refraction, this paper examines "corporate nostalgia work" as it is constituted through public relations and ad copy, guitar fan discourse, and testimony of "relic" owners in order to bring into light the relations linking manufactured responses to nostalgia and music, desire and longing, and political and aesthetic memory work of cultural moments of the past. Based on fieldwork conducted in Syria from 1997-2001 and activities in the United States since return to the USA, this presentation documents the struggles of an ethnomusicologist to negotiate politics “in” and “of’ “the field”. This documentation urges ethnomusicologist to embrace their roles in advocacy, agency and dialogue. Syria and the United States 2. Palestinian and Kurdish question in the field and abroad 3. Should the Society of Ethnomusicology as a whole, or any part thereof, want to make a stand at home and / or abroad? Currie, Scott New York University Berlin Free Improvisation Initiative: Between noise and (n)ostalgia Throughout its history, and especially during the Cold War, Berlin has occupied a liminal position between East and West, with significant implications for the development of independent jazz scenes in the divided city, linked by boundarycrossing media and intermittent state policies allowing limited artistic exchange. In the decade or so since reunification, these scenes have been brought and held together at this cultural crossroads in an uneasy coexistence, within which the unresolved tensions of incomplete assimilation manifest themselves both in the socio-aesthetic disjunctures that still divide improvising musicians, and in the strategies they employ to bridge them. Based on ethnographic data gathered during an extended period of participant-observer research within a collective association Currey, Nancy University of California, Santa Barbara SEM Responsible Ethnomusicology: Syria's Case for Advocacy, Agency, and Dialogue For an ethnomusicologist who lived and worked in Syria, this is a deeply troubling Individual Abstracts SEM 24 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 of musicians, this paper will explore the main social and stylistic movements structuring the contemporary Berlin free-improvisation scene, from the eroding dominance of established East-German free-jazz artists to the increasing influence of younger West-German Geräuschmusik players. The conflicts and confluences among these that have emerged in concerts organized by the Berlin Free Improvisation Initiative will receive particular attention, as will the endeavors of its members to transcend longstanding socio-cultural divisions in spontaneous musical performance, and the ultimate significance of these efforts. Cynthia McGregor and Susan Piagentini, Music Educator's Web Authoring Tools as formal opening of the Queen’s balls (Guilcher 1969). As an essential part of the French aristocratic education, perfect rendition of the contredanse also became a mandatory aspect of the planters’ training, though they lived away from court. Much to the colonists’ dismay however, the mulatoes appropriated the dance soon after it was introduced in Martinique, and made it an integral part of their political discourse of race and cultural identity. My paper focuses on the semiotics of social dance in Martinique at the turn of the 19th century. It examines quadrille as a kinesical and musical expression of power at a moment of violent confrontation and complex transition in the Caribbean. Based primarily on recent archival and historical research carried out in France and in Martinique, my paper will further elucidate the genesis of a dance that influenced the [Antilleans’] ways of shaping the world (Guilbault 1985). Northwestern University ATMI The Music Educator's Web Authoring Tools, is a public site for the music educator that offers key tutorials and templates in applications such as Dreamweaver, Flash, and QuicktimePro. The site offers step-by-step guidelines to achieve a specific goal (such as creating an interactive listening guide) so that music educators can efficiently create materials for their students. Our templates include a library of images, which can be used as buttons or roll-overs, as well as interactive exercises that can be edited to create other projects such as simple drag and drop sequences using Flash. Instructors and students can go to the site and learn about specific interactive features in these web-based applications without being weighed down by the entire program. Daugherty, James F. University of Kansas Transforming Music Education: Creating Alternatives See Reichling, Mary - Transforming Music Education: Creating Alternatives Daughtry, J. Martin University of California, Los Angeles A Nostalgia of Laughter: Musically Reclaiming the Soviet Past SEM In the post-Stalinist Soviet Union, the quasi-underground figure of the guitarwielding "bard" was cherished by university students, intelligentsia, and millions of others who participated in the substantial gray area separating official music from outright dissidence. During this period, bards' performances created, in Izaly Zemtsovsky's words, "islands of freedom," virtual places where individuals could communicate their uncensored feelings. Cyrille, Dominique O. City University of New York SEM "Welldone, Ladies! You too, Lavaliers! Politics of Quadrille Performance in 19th Century Martinique" The Revolution that abruptly ended the French monarchy in the late 1780s, also generated great turmoil in the Caribbean. To most born-free mulatoes in the French colonies, the revolutionary motto "Freedom, Equality, Fraternity" seemed a promise that their dreams of freedom and equal rights with the European-French was about to come true. These notions, however, were foreign to the white plantation owners, true rulers of Martinique since 1635. Their safety and personal fortunes depended on clearly defined socio-racial barriers separating them from the black populations. Despite the evaporation of the authoritarian "sea" that made those islands meaningful, bards continue to perform their intimate songs in concert halls, clubs, kitchens and around campfires throughout Russia and the émigré world. In this paper, I draw upon collaborative work with bards based in Russia and California to illuminate the musical and cultural transformations that their songs have undergone in the post-Soviet era. In particular, I argue that post-Soviet bards have largely replaced the implicitly oppositional dimension of their songs with an explicitly nostalgic one. The end of the 18th century also coincided with the rise of the French contredanse Individual Abstracts CMS 25 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 Proceeding from Svetlana Boym's contention that nostalgia is characterized by a longing "for a home that no longer exists or has never existed" (2001:xiii), I first explore a number of the virtual "homes" that contemporary bards musically evoke. I then propose that the bards complicate received notions of nostalgia (in particular its links to sadness and the idealization of the past) by adopting a playfully ironic stance, one that allows for the creative reclamation of the Soviet past while avoiding its sanctification. writers might refer to musical styles to represent a particular characteristic they witnessed, or recall specific ensembles (orchestra) or genres (opera) to portray the ineffable. Davidson, Jinmi University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Music Theory Pedagogy: An International Perspective Davis, Mary Ellen University of Florida Papá Liborio: el santo vivo de Maguana The results are genuinely stirring accounts of the war, brought to life in a way that combines what was for the soldiers an object of simple beauty with their most traumatic experiences. CMS See Neff, Severine - Music Theory Pedagogy: An International Perspective Davidson, Marilyn American Orff-Schulwerk Association Preparing the Next Generation of K-6 Music Teachers "Papá Liborio" documents the historical development and current devotion to Olivorio Mateo, "Papá Liborio," the greatest messianic leader of the Dominican Republic, from the early 20th century during the period of transition from a precapitalistic to a capitalistic society. The work views Liborio as both a peasant leader in political-economic context and spiritual leader and healer. Music associated with the region and specifically with Liborio is featured: "palos" (longdrums) associated with the regional brotherhood of the Holy Spirit, "salves" (the sung Salve Regina), and the "comarca," accordion music probably derived from the "carabiné" social dance which Liborio used in his healing rituals. CMS See Trinka, Jill - Preparing the Next Generation of K-6 Music Teachers Davis, Jim SUNY-College at Fredonia The Great Opera of Death: Musical Imagery in Civil War Writings CMS De Bano, Wendy University of California, Santa Barbara Peforming Against Silence: Celebrating Women and Music in Iran For the majority of young men who eagerly enlisted in 1861 the War Between the States meant a time of harmless adventure with friends, the chance to show off in a uniform to the folks at home. All were quickly disabused of this romantic notion following the terrible carnage of the war?s first major engagements. The horrific reality of post-Napoleonic combat was beyond the comprehension of most Americans, and soldiers found themselves in situations for which they were intellectually and emotionally unprepared. SEM The Fourth Annual Jasmine Music Festival, a weeklong event sponsored by and for women in contemporary Iran, highlights the dynamic processes whereby musicians and audiences articulate multiple identities. This festival celebrates the resilience and dedication of leading musicians who have continued to be musically active, despite many post-Revolutionary restrictions regarding female performers. The festival’s recent emergence also reflects significant social and cultural changes in Iran since Khatami was elected. I will argue that this festival provides a unique space for Iranian women to establish important socio-cultural networks, to articulate individual and collective identities, and to share and contest their visions of the future. Letters, diaries, and memoirs of the time reveal how these men struggled to verbalize the hellish maelstrom surrounding them. Though often possessing only a rudimentary education, soldiers resorted to some truly poetic descriptions, and would draw upon music as an effective source of imagery. Many of these men used simple metaphors to describe specific sounds, such as the ?singing? of bullets. Others show a remarkable degree of sophistication, employing musical images to capture the overwhelming cacophony of an entire battle. In such instances these Individual Abstracts SEM By exploring the many modes of social inclusion and exclusion framing this festival, it becomes clear that complex social and cultural issues were negotiated 26 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 at almost every stage of the festival’s planning and implementation. Seemingly insignificant choices about concert refreshments and more fundamental decisions about musical style were all important articulations of notions of music, self, and society. of members perform the Victory Dance and Scalp Dance to honor the veteransdoes this dynamic form a commemoration of traditional gender roles that may be misunderstood by outsiders? This paper will seek to answer these questions, and also to document the oral histories of members of Black Leggings as well as those of their relatives and supporters. Based on research conducted in Tehran during the summer of 2002, this work contributes to studies on expressive culture, music and gender, Iranian musics, and Muslim performers. Many publications documenting the music of Iran often present it as a male domain and rarely focus exclusively on female musicians. By examining this music festival and its multivalent symbols and meanings this paper contributes to studies that examine the relationships between gender, ethnicity and power as they are expressed in, around, and through musical performance. de la Vega , Aurelio California State University Composers on Traditional and Art Music: A Cultural Synthesis Dekaney, Elisa Macedo Syracuse University CMS Research in Ethnomusicology and Its Contribution to Music Education: Preparing Music Educators to Teach World Music Since the Tanglewood Symposium music educators from all over the United States have been making the effort to incorporate music from cultures other than American into the public school music curriculum. In an attempt to implement this need, a number of songbooks and other classroom materials were published. Some of these educational resources lacked information about the cultural context in which the featured songs were originally conceived and performed. Disappointingly, a few of these sources failed to adequately portray the music of other peoples. It has been through partnerships between music educators and ethnomusicologists that advancements in the area world music curriculum have been in fact possible. Researchers in the areas of Music Education and Ethnomusicology have collaborated in several works. Through these collaborations music educators in the United States have been presented with quality material accessible to the public school music curriculum. CMS See Torres-Santos, Raymond - Composers on Traditional and Art Music: A Cultural Synthesis deHilster, Addie University of Oklahoma SEM Victory Dance: Relevance, Roles, and Memory in the Ceremonies of the Kiowa Black Leggings Military Society The Kiowa Black Leggings Military Society is a revived descendant of the Plains warrior societies of the pre-reservation era. Today this society is made up of Kiowa veterans of the United States military, and it still shares many of the same features connected with the historical warrior society of the same name (Meadows 1995). The biannual ceremonies of the Black Leggings Society not only honor veterans and celebrate Kiowa traditions, but participate in the vital process of making and remembering oral history through activities such as the Turn Around Dance which combines the re-enactment of a battle from the nineteenth century with interpolations by the present-day members who tell their own war stories, adding them to the tribe’s cultural memory. Drawing on my interviews with members of the Society and their families, I will explore the connection between the performance of memories and the social organization of Black Leggings ceremonials in respect to gender-differentiated roles. How are female veterans honored since only males can be members of Black Leggings? Female relatives Individual Abstracts The discussion of issues such as authenticity, tradition, and culture by ethnomusicologists and music educators has opened numerous performance possibilities while performing music from various cultures. Music educators and children around the nation are now able to experience world music in a more respectful and appropriate way thanks to the scholarship in ethnomusicology and music education. Such scholarship has also made possible the redesign of undergraduate and graduate curricula in music education with a program that best helps music educators to implement the National Standards for Arts Education. It is now feasible to offer courses in world music through a Music Education perspective because of the increasing number of classroom materials available. The purpose of this paper is to examine and analyze selected literature available to music educators in the area of world music. The analysis of these resources will provide guidelines for selection of appropriate teaching material that considers 27 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 music from various cultures in their original contexts. following from Frankfurt School techniques of musical analysis, have mistakenly interpreted the genre’s musical features as homogenizing tastes and de-culturating listeners. I argue that semiotic inquiry into reception and interpretation of generic features yields a different reading – that música sertaneja enacts a critique of Brazilian approaches to modernization, and both shapes and responds to transforming urban rural relations in a fast-liberalizing Brazil. Delgado, Kevin San Diego State University SEM Folkloric Music as Simulacrum: Technical Proficiency, Authenticity, and Hyperreality in the Performance of Afro-Cuban Iyesa Music Tracing its roots back over 150 years, the Matanzas Iyesa cabildo [ritual association] is the last site of West African Ijesha culture in the Americas and is regarded as a small sub-group of the more widely-known Santeria religion. Existing as a lived tradition in this single locale, the Iyesa tradition is often characterized as old but withering and endangered. Dickinson, Stefanie C. University of Georgia Liszt's Songs: An Ongoing Quest to Meld Tone and Text CMS Although Franz Liszt is primarily thought of as a composer for piano, he was quite a prolific song composer. Throughout his career, he composed over 70 songs in at least 6 different languages. Many of these songs remain little-known even today. It should not be surprising to learn of the extent of Liszt's song repertoire, however, when one considers his compositional aesthetic. From several French philosophers of his day, Liszt adopted the idea that all forms of art are intrinsically related. This influence first became evident in his song transcriptions and later in his symphonic poems. However, his lifelong progress in merging music and literature can best be seen in his songs, many of which are revisions or recompositions of earlier songs. Musicians within the Matanzas cabildo do not participate in the Cuban folklore industry, a state sponsored system of patronage that produces a large number of well-trained musicians with a high degree of technical proficiency and versatility. In folkloric presentations of Afro-Cuban sacred music, Iyesa songs and rhythms are sometimes used for instrumental variety, reduced to a single, polished musical number. Following the work of Eco and Baudrillard, I argue that folkloric renditions of Iyesa music may be viewed as a performed simulacrum – a simulated sign (or, in my view, performance) of the real that comes to take on a “real” life of its own; a copy that becomes the original. I argue that postmodern simulation occurs in the consumption of folkloric performances and recordings of Iyesa music as the technical execution of the “copy” (folkloric) often exceeds that of the “original” (source/lived/non-folkloric). Virtuosic folkloric renditions of Iyesa music can acquire hyperreal status by making the “original” expressions of the culture disappointing by comparison for some listeners. While simulation is necessary in performances of extinct genres, what does simulation do to a tradition struggling to survive? I will argue that the more Liszt revised a text's setting, the closer he reached his ideal. This paper will examine Liszt's progress through three settings of "Was Liebe sei?" ["Whatever is Love?"]. The three versions of the short four-line poem portray the text in progressively deeper and more mature ways by altering phrase structure and presenting varying degrees of melodic and harmonic closure at cadence points. Donner, Philip International Centre of Chamber Music, Kuhmo Netcasting as a method of authoring music educational material Dent, Alex University of Chicago SEM “Love in the Country: Production, Reception, and the Structure of Brazilian música sertaneja Performance” The author presents a package of netcasting authoring tools for production of music educational study material. The presenter has developed a framework for the preparation of music education material by utilizing free of charge pieces of software provided by RealNetworks. These have been complemented with a set of utilities developed by the author. These tools are being used to train music and virtual university teachers in preparing material for distance education. The paper focuses on the knowledge construction process which seems to be a necessary Since democratization in 1985, an ultra-popular form of Brazilian Country Music employing electric instruments, romantic themes, and versions of popular American Country hits, has captured an increasing share of the national market. Interpretations of this growing popularity in both the academy and the media, Individual Abstracts ATMI 28 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 condition for the success of nationwide information society programs. curtailed. Yet under the Taliban women’s frame drums were openly sold in Kabul. So to what extent did women make music? My assessment will be based on an analysis of women’s genres, with a presentation of documented evidence from the Taliban period. Dorman, Matthew University of California, Santa Barbara SEM Timbral Mimesis and Popular Culture: A Case Study of Kurt Cobain's Voice in the Other Dreisbach, Tina Spencer Hiram College CMS Who Blew Out the Flame?: Rediscovering the Great Mildred Bailey Songbook With the 1991 release of the album Nevermind, the American grunge band Nirvana catapulted to international fame, an achievement that led to numerous awards including “best album of the 90s”(Spin Magazine), “Artist of the Decade”—Kurt Cobain (Rolling Stone Magazine), and a Grammy in 1995 for “Best Alternative Music Performance.” As a result, Nirvana’s style became a model for myriad groups in America and beyond, and Cobain’s voice served as archetype for the raspy, melancholic, detached sound of grunge. But some view as unscrupulous imitation what others call influence. To fans of rock and grunge, imitation is inauthentic, or at least subject to question, particularly if the performer is imitating somebody else’s voice. Critics of Nirvana imitators usually single out those perceived to sound like Cobain, those for whom Cobain’s voice serves not as a model to learn from, but as a sound to copy or mimic. Of the alleged imitators, Gavin Rossdale of Bush is arguably the best-known. In this paper, I compare the vocal spectra of Kurt Cobain and Gavin Rossdale, in order to correlate acoustic features to perceptual discourse. Most words and phrases that critics use to characterize Cobain’s voice constitute perceptual observation—that is, they state how the listener hears the sound. The problem is, the terminology is unclear, which often leads to vague arguments or incoherent conclusions. With this study, I seek to contribute to a small but growing body of knowledge that may be used to enhance dialogue and debate about sound in popular culture. The brilliant and neglected artist Mildred Bailey (1903-1951) was the first female big band vocalist. Hired by Paul Whiteman in 1929, she was known to millions in the 1930s and 40s when she collaborated with jazz immortals on over 200 recordings. Bailey and her husband, xylophone virtuoso Red Norvo, perfected a distinctive brand of "subtle swing" with classically-trained arrangers Eddie Sauter and Alec Wilder. This paper traces Bailey's career and details recent attention to her work. Part Coeur d'Alene, Bailey was influenced by tribal song, vaudeville, and blues. She sang in west coast speakeasies until introduced to Whiteman by her brother Al Rinker (of The Rhythm Boys) and his friend Bing Crosby. Bailey and Norvo toured with their own band from 1936 to 1938. His delicate mallet work complemented her clear, sweet tone and refined phrasing and diction. Their partnership resonated widely: they introduced producer John Hammond to the young Billie Holiday and, in 1935, hosted Benny Goodman as he formed his first small group at their house in Queens. Bailey's fame evaporated with her premature death at the dawn of the LP era, which might have kept her art before the public. Yet those she influenced—Crosby, Sinatra, Clooney, Bennett - sustained her reputation as a "singer's singer". A modest Mildred Bailey revival seems underway with the release of a major compilation of her work for Columbia Records and several recent scholarly articles. Doubleday, Veronica University of London SEM Afghan Women's Domestic Music Before and During the Taliban Perod Afghan women’s domestic music is based on singing and playing the frame drum. In times of peace their music-making was an important form of entertainment and a vehicle for the transmission of basic musicality to the next generation. It also has ritual functions connected with the marriage process. Since 1978 war, disruption and political instability have severely restricted all musical activity. Censorship of music culminated in the repressive atmosphere of the Taliban regime (1995-2001), when musical instruments were publicly destroyed and women’s rights severely Individual Abstracts 29 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 du Perron, Lalita University of London The representation and re-interpretation of thumri Dueck, Byron University of Chicago SEM Music for the Royal Fireworks: First Nations Performance at the Visit of Elizabeth II to Winnipeg SEM Thumri is one of the most popular vocal genres of North Indian (Hindustani) art music. Its origin and historical development remain the subject of some debate, but it is widely documented to have reached its peak at the nineteenth-century court of Wajid Ali Shah of Lucknow. As the political and musical milieu of India changed when India moved into the twentieth century and towards modernity, thumri found itself in a new performance environment. Although in earlier times thumri was the genre favoured by courtesans, it is now performed as well as patronised by the middle classes. Music for the Royal Fireworks: First Nations Performance at the Visit of Elizabeth II to Winnipeg Dujunco, Mercedes New York University Chaoyu Gequ: An Unpopular Chinese Popular Music As economic and political reforms took off and ushered in an era of unprecedented economic growth and cultural liberalism in China in the 1990s, a space opened up for music that has wide appeal and that would bring in profits to cash-starved government-run and independent record production companies. A few truly homegrown and innovative popular song styles sprang up during this period, but for the most part, mainland Chinese popular music basically consisted of imitations of Gangtai yinyue -- easy listening, middle-of the-road style popular music from Hong Kong and Taiwan. Of the local imitations besides those in Mandarin Chinese, those from the Cantonese-speaking city of Guangzhou in Guangdong Province and the Minnan-speaking cities of Xiamen and Quanzhou in southern Fujian were the most successful. Thumri texts tend to be romantic, and the genre is more accessible than other classical forms. This accessibility conceals the skill and experience needed to render thumri with appropriate pathos and emotionalism. The genre’s persisting association with the courtesan culture of days gone by remains problematic. Contemporary performers either avoid singing thumri, or explore its emotional potential with the justification that the love story implicit in the text is actually about the divine lovers Radha and Krishna. The long-existing ambiguities between the erotic and the divine in Indian art tend to be overlooked in favour of a more solidly devotional interpretation. My paper traces the changes in the performance context of thumri with the help of video material, and shows how the lyrics of the genre have been updated to reflect its new performance status. The modern and revised representation of the genre no doubt holds the key to its continuing popularity. In Chaozhou in eastern Guangdong, a local version of Gangtai yinyue called Chaoyu gequ came into being in the 1990s but has remained far less well-known. It is a form of tongsu yinyue or popularized music in that it was produced and developed with substantial government support and disseminated by means of the government-controlled media instead of naturally catching on among the public (cf. Jones 1992). However, musics that are categorically classed as tongsu yinyue are not necessarily unpopular and some have turned out to be quite well-liked by a lot of people. But this was not the case with Chaoyu gequ within the Chaozhou region where the audience preferred the popular music of neighboring southern Fujian. This paper explores the possible reasons why Chaoyu gequ was unsuccessful and focuses on how the language of song lyrics combines with music to create authenticity and thereby could “make” or “break” a popular music style, thus realizing or undermining the agenda of its proponents. Dudley , Shannon University of Washington, Seattle CMS Teaching Trinidad Carnival Music: Cross-cultural Encounters Between Ethnomusicology and Music Education See Fung, Victor C. - Teaching Trinidad Carnival Music: Cross-cultural Encounters Between Ethnomusicology and Music Education Individual Abstracts SEM 30 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 Duling, Ed University of Oklahoma Scenes from an Interview: Dramatizations and Workshop Emberly, Andrea University of Washington Can You Tell Me How to Get to Sesame Street? CMS See Barry, Nancy - Scenes from an Interview: Dramatizations and Workshop Dundas, Robert B. Florida International University Weaving the Musical Tapestry of Miami In this paper I will explore the global entity of pop culture as it is manifested in the lives of children, focusing on television programming which integrates music, dance, and entertainment and targets an audience of preschool children. Specifically, I will consider the global popular music sensation of Sesame Street as an example of children’s programming that use the pretence of multiculturalism as a platform for the global broadcast of a universal children’s culture. Exploring the use of music within the program, I will present how Sesame Street both influences distant locals while at the same time itself is influenced globally as it integrates elements of multiculturalism into its programming. My main focus will be on the global vision of syncretism created by the producers of the program, the Children’s Television Workshop (CTW). I will examine how music is used as a central element in the series, and how music becomes a focus in the CTW’s syncretic formula that relies upon the idea of a universality of children’s needs, that children (no matter culture or ethnicity) all need the same basic education. Examining the CTW’s construction of a believed universality of children’s culture, I will explore how music is used as a tool to bind children in a multicultural pop culture. Sesame Street, as it is broadcast worldwide in hundreds of languages and formats, is the hub of children’s pop culture and represents what researchers, marketers, and even parents, believe children need to succeed in the rapidly developing global village. CMS See Fulton, Carolyn J. - Weaving the Musical Tapestry of Miami Eberle Fink, Katherine The University of Iowa Video Conference Technology ATMI The presentation introduces Video Conferencing as a technology for the transmission of music in formal teaching settings. The presenter will describe video conferencing, equipment needs, internet connections, personnel requirements, list advantages and disadvantages of this technology versus older distance learning technologies. Ideas for schools to locate other music educators will also be provided. Emberg Purse, Lynn Duquesne University Craft and Creativity: Developing a Pedagogy of Music Technology ATMI Emoff, Ron Ohio State University SEM "Negritude" on Marie-Glante: The sub-surreal and looking back on an outof-the-way place When teaching complex technological tools in an arts program, there is a tendency to let the acquisition of technical skills drive the curriculum while neglecting the artistic training that the tools are meant to support. A profile of the core courses in Duquesne University's Music Technology degree program illustrates a pedagogical approach that embraces both craft and creativity, with an emphasis in the acquisition of sophisticated technological skill sets as a means to an artistic end. The underlying concepts and strategies of this approach, including course design and assessment, will be presented through a profile of core Music Technology courses as well as examples of student work. Individual Abstracts SEM On Marie-Galante, a small island in the French Antilles, there are two pervasive modes of public musical performance. One such practice, gwo ka drumming, bears clear resemblance to post-slavery era drumming in the French Antilles. The other practice, kadril, is an accordion-based dance music highly replicative in part of colonial-style dance parties. Through each of these musical practices, MarieGalantais enact, discuss, and display often heated sentiments about the slave era, their imagination and longing for (or desire to disconnect themselves from) Africa, current French “citizenship,” and other issues important to them. Histories of these musical practices on the island themselves are often contested among musicians and others. 31 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 Epstein, Susan Miami-Dade College The Many Facets of Community College Music Education Aimé Césaire, in beautifully surrealist terms, has written of “négritude” to convey something of bemg Black in a diasporic milieu. This presentation concerns ways in which people on the French département Marie-Galante imaginatively perform their engagement (and sometimes their refusal to engage) with global events, histories, and conflicts. Marie-Galantais express both overtly and in more dramatically encoded ways that they inhabit, and have long inhabited, an almost surreal domain of their own—a postcolonial non-nation. See Bowker, Barbara E. - The Many Facets of Community College Music Education Everett, William University of Missouri - Kansas City CMS What You Can Do with a Career in Music: Career Options Outside of Music Teaching and Performance Eppink, Joseph A. The College of Saint Rose CMS Web-Based Portfolios: Research in Reflective Thinking, Semester Growth in Learning, and the Effect on Student Attitudes See Lamkin, Kathleen - What You Can Do with a Career in Music: Career Options Outside of Music Teaching and Performance Do web-based portfolios promote reflective thinking? Can students discuss their growth over a semester via the web-based portfolio? Moreover, can reflective thinking be used as a strategy for a more holistic assessment and does it affect the attitudes of students in a music course? Reflective thinking encourages the examination of coursework in order to recognize patterns and connections in learning. The ability to reflect upon progress and learning is central to student success. The purpose of this session is to examine a research study that used student created web-based portfolios. The study examined the effect on attitudes and selfperceived growth in music learning. Participating students were non-music majors enrolled in the course, Basic Music for the Elementary Classroom Educator. Fabrique, Martha Our Lady of the Lake University SEM A Virtual Museum: The Graciela Gutierrez world Instrument Collection Graciela Gutierrez, a native of the small town of Benavidez, Texas, had an unusually adventurous spirit. She lived most of her adult life in Madrid, Spain, from whence she traveled to over 150 other countries (including parts of Africa, the Middle East, South Asia, East Asia, Indonesia, South America, the Caribbean, Mexico, the Soviet Union, and many parts of Europe). Her passion for music, shown by her lifelong profession as a music teacher (BME, OLLU, 1949), prompted her to collect local instruments from the various places she visited. As a young, Hispanic woman in the 1960s, such extensive travel was certainly extraordinary and offers a strong role model for young women today. The instrument collection of this remarkable individual is currently housed in the OLLU Music Department, where it has been catalogued as a virtual museum and thus is available as an online resource. This poster session will present a computer laptop slideshow of the virtual museum including biographical information, views of the instruments with Graciela’s notes as well as my own research, and sound examples of instruments. In addition, documentation of the technological process used to catalogue the collection in this virtual format will be presented. The quasi-experimental study employed both quantitative and qualitative research. Pre- and post-test surveys were administered in addition to a final discussion interview between the student and researcher. Students in the control group were evaluated through traditional methods including paper-pencil exams. Students in the treatment group were assessed through alternative assessment strategies including rubrics, reflective thinking, and the construction of a web-based portfolio. This session will include a discussion of the web-based portfolios. Examples of these student web-based portfolios will be presented. Responses from the discussion between the student and researcher will be examined illustrating a significant difference. Individual Abstracts CMS 32 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 Falkenau, Anna Wesleyan University SEM WESLEYAN THESES AND DISSERTATIONS ON SOUTH INDIAN KARNATAK TALA: REFERENCES AND CROSS-REFERENCES WITHIN A UNIQUE BODY OF SCHOLARSHIP sonic tourism of commercial world music. In some places, ethnomusicological research is explicitly utilized by State folklore efforts to promote cultural tourism. Using the case study of Chincha, Peru (and other international examples), I will discuss the impact of ethnomusicological tourism on specific local music and dance traditions and the people who perform them. In the late 1970s, rural Chincha was visited by numerous travelers—including artists, ethnographers, folklorists, and ethnomusicologists—interested in finding the so-called “back regions” of Afro-Peruvian music. The work of these scholars and artists paved the way for the development of Chincha as a site for the construction of both national memory and the tourist trade. Today, Chincha has become a staged authenticity stop for cultural tourists en route from Lima to Machu Picchu, and the community’s music and dance traditions are the major cultural commodity. I will conclude with some reflections about the possibility of sustainable ethnomusicological tourism. Indian Karnatak Tala. These studies were influenced, inspired and shaped by two distinguished South Indian percussionists, T. Ranganathan (Artist-in-Residence at Wesleyan University 1963-1970; 1975-1987) and V. Raghavan (Artist-inResidence at Wesleyan University 1970-75; 1987-2001) and by the great South Indian flutist T. Viswanathan (Artist-in-Residence and later Adjunct Professor of Music at Wesleyan University 1966-2002). As a whole, these works represent a unique body of literature since they are the most substantial and coherent contribution on this subject to emerge from a single Western academic institution. In my presentation I will focus on the development of the understanding of the concept of mora (cadential cross-rhythmic design) in order to demonstrate how these studies influenced each other over time. All were written at Wesleyan University under the guidance of three ‘gurus’. This raises the interesting issue of the creation of graduate documents as a ‘gurukula’ (understood in a wider sense as lineage). As I will show, the result of this is an intricate web of references, cross-references and influences. My critique thereof will illuminate a fascinating process of cross-fertilization in the thinking and understanding of South Indian rhythmic theory between student and student and student and teacher. I will also discuss how research methodology changed from an emphasis on an individual musician to an attempt to widen the research context. Feldman, Heidi San Diego State University Ethnomusicology and Cultural Tourism: Cause and Effect? Fenn, John Texas A&M Now It Has A Name: Americana and the Creation of Genre To look at the popularization of a music is often to look at factors contributing to the rise of a style or genre within certain social, cultural, and historical contexts. In this paper I take a slightly different approach in order to examine a contemporary musical category: Americana. Introduced—and trademarked—as a radio format/airplay chart in 1994 by industry trade magazine The Gavin Report, Americana instantaneously took on important meanings as a genre of popular music. These meanings arose in the interaction between discourses of roots authenticity and market building, and served to establish Americana as a genre home for misfits from mainstream formats such as Country or Adult Contemporary. Crossover success of many artists aside, Americana came to symbolize an alternative to Top 40 slickness while it enabled Top 40 sales. SEM Do ethnomusicologists unknowingly create cultural tourism in our research locales? If ethnomusicologists do create cultural tourism, what are our responsibilities to the communities we transform into tourist sights and sounds? The multiple styles of roots-based musics falling under the Americana rubric had pre-existed the format by years, even decades. However, the new format provided a brand name, and an economically promising one at that. I will investigate Americana as a particular instance of genre emerging around pre-existing musical styles, with emphasis on understanding the aesthetic construct, cultural contextualization, and marketing viability that genre labels carry. A central issue I will consider is the slippery conceptual connection between the radio format facet and the musical genre facet of Americana, looking specifically at how one informs In the 1980s, after a decade of describing the harmful impact of tourism on developing communities, anthropologists reluctantly began to admit their uneasy kinship with (and similarity to) tourists. In fact, anthropology creates, preserves, and mobilizes many tourist sights such as archeological monuments and culturally distinctive locales. A similar relationship exists between ethnomusicology and the Individual Abstracts SEM 33 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 of the occupation. The second genre, sometimes termed ch’angjak kugak, is newly composed music derived from traditional music. Contemporary music specialists strive for ch’angjak kugak’s incorporation into Koreans’ everyday lives through discourse, promotion, and image. Although sin minyo appealed to the aesthetic tastes of the time, ch’angjak kugak requires listeners to suspend their existing musical preferences and support the music out of cultural pride. the other and the ways that relationships between the two facets delineate popularization of a music or, in this case, set of musics. Fikentscher, Kai Ramapo College "House Music": The Most Popular Music in America?" SEM Despite its acceptance and adaptation into general popular culture in Europe (and elsewhere), house music has, more or less consistently since its emergence in the mid- 1 980s, been consistently relegated to the margins of the American popular music scene. With a strong “sub cultural’ followings in certain urban locales, especially on the part of gay communities, house music in the U.S. continues to be ignored by the main media outlets, such as television, radio, and the major recording companies, and meets with consistent opposition by local and national political and legal parties. Participants in the house music scene have adapted to this dire scenario, and put in the place tightly woven networks serving the interests of independent recording companies, DJs, promoters, vinyl pressing plants and distributors, journalists, retailers and dancers. This paper summarizes a decade-plus of participant-observer fieldwork in the house scene of New York City, examining how local politics, global economics, and culture-specific dynamics have contributed to currently constitute what has been described as a full-blown crisis or a struggle for survival. Audio examples will be included. This paper aims to examine the significance of rhetoric in the construction of a musical genre. The genres in question emerged at times of great change and uncertainty in South Korea, answering a call for a distinct expression of Korean sentiment while offering a sonic link to Korean roots. Fischer, Martha University of Wisconsin-Madison American Art Song: Our Strength is Our Diversity See Fulmer, Mimmi - American Art Song: Our Strength is Our Diversity Flavin, Philip University of California, Berkeley Ryûha: The construction of tradition in Japanese music SEM Ryûha as a concept in the traditional Japanese arts, particularly the performing arts, has a long and venerated history, and many of today's established performers lay claims to their art, and hence authenticity, through their membership to specific ryûha. In spite of the emergence of new performing traditions, particularly in sôkyoku-jiuta, none of these new "schools" have been given the name of ryû. Some, such as the Seiha Hogakkai or Miyagi group, acknowledge their derivation from earlier traditions, while others, such as the Sawai Sôkyoku-in, apparently have no immediate affiliation with a particular tradition. Why should this be? What does the term "ryûha" mean? What are the implications of belonging to a specific ryûha and how does this clarify our present understanding of the term? Finchum-Sung, Hilary University of California, Berkeley SEM "Channeling 'Popular' Sentinment Through Music? A Korean Case Study" Changes in Korea relegated indigenous music to a cultural inconsequentiality. Despite this, some believed that a Korean essence (uri ch4 ngso) or spirit (uri ch4 ngsin) could be expressed only through court or folk music idioms, and this has inspired the emergence of new genres. This paper looks at two genres of music that developed at separate times in South Korea’s modern history and for diverse reasons. Both genres look/ed to folk or court music for structural or thematic inspiration, and both sought (or still seek) popular acceptance as expressions of a Korean spirit. The first of these, sin minyo (new folk song), appeared in the 1930s and offered the public an indigenous popular music distinct from Japanese enka. It struck a nostalgic chord through use of minyo (folk song) style and provided a means for escape from the harsh realities Individual Abstracts CMS I will explore the concept of ryûha from the indigenous Japanese perspective, with careful explanations of the different terms used by the Japanese in their discussions of different performing traditions as well as the social and musical implications of the terms. The meaning of ryû, for example, normally designates as specific body of musical works seen as the foundation of the specific tradition; for the koto, a group of pieces commonly referred to as kumiuta and tsukemono, and for the 34 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 shamisen, shamisen kumiuta. The term kei has geographical connotations, and in spite of having a distinct musical style, the Kyûshû musicians are never referred to as a specific ryûha, but as the Kyûshû-kei. How do the newer "schools" define themselves in relationship to the established ryû and what terms do they use in doing so? embellishment. A discussion of the context of developed motive forms in relation to Hildegard's prose follows. Fournier, Karen University of Wisconsin Oshkosh CMS Criticism, Conformity, and Change: Disciplinary Revision in Light of the Structure and Strictures of Academia Follet, Diane Muhlenberg College CMS What You Can Do with a Career in Music: Career Options Outside of Music Teaching and Performance In his recent text, Decentering Music (2003), Kevin Korsyn argues that the field of music is in a state of crisis, born both from the polarization that exists in the competing areas of music theory and musicology and from internal squabbles in both disciplines about the "proper" approach to the study of music. Korsyn's description of music scholarship, similar to that articulated by Joseph Kerman almost two decades ago, posits a set of scholarly camps that differ radically in their conception of musical meaning and in their approaches to its discovery. Motivated by their drive to demonstrate the superiority of their perspective on musical meaning, scholars have constructed elaborate models and idiosyncratic lexicons designed, according to Korsyn, to add a scholarly "air" (and thereby a legitimacy) to their work. Korsyn's observations about music scholarship find their parallel in studies of the academy undertaken in other scholarly arenas (notably in sociology, literary theory, and history to name just a few), where various models have been constructed to represent the structure of the scholarly community. The most convincing of these, in the author's view, conceives scholarship as a form of "commodity" that must be sold by its creator and purchased by the scholarly community to ensure scholarly success. This Marxist model of scholarship, advanced by the sociologist Robert K. Merton, will form the basis for the current paper, which will examine the state of music scholarship with the following questions in mind: How do we practice our work and why? What truly motivates us in our question for musical understanding? And (a question not tackled by Korsyn), how does academia evolve, given the limitations it imposes on its participants? See Lamkin, Kathleen - What You Can Do with a Career in Music: Career Options Outside of Music Teaching and Performance Forrester, Sheila Mississippi State University CMS Identifying Motives by their Syllables and Neumes in Hildegard's Ave Maria The twelfth-century collection of seventy-seven chants that comprise Hildegard's Symphonia employ intricate motivic manipulations, many of which are hidden, obtained only through analysis. When the cycle first became the object of study in 1870, musicologists began codifying melodic motives, a practice that would become the norm. While some theorists regard the music as patchwork or centonate in construction (Bronarski, 1922), others consider it formulaic (Bent, 1980; Cogan, 1990), or derivative, as in contrafactum (Fassler, 1998). What all seem to bear in common is the idea that the melodic motive is the single most important generative element in Hildegard's compositions. Drawing upon the hexachordal research of Gaston Allaire (1972) and Andrew Hughes, (2000; 1972), the approach taken here contrasts with the modal research of Pfau (1990) and the motivic approach of Bronarski and Cogan. Many questions about Hildegard's compositional process and the extent to which motives function in the construction of melody remain, as does the criteria for determining "root" from developed motives. This paper begins to address these questions and utilizes a technique that identifies apparent motives from their neumes and by their solmization syllables. The scandicus and clivis are shown to constitute a motive in the facsimiles of Hildegard's responsory Ave Maria. By tracking these neumes and their solmization syllables, one discovers a number of sophisticated variations: transposition, retrograde, mirror inversion and Individual Abstracts Fox, Julie University of Central Florida Aires Tropicales, by Paquito DeRivera CMS See Koons, Keith - Aires Tropicales by Paquito DeRivera 35 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 Frazier, Bruce H. Western Carolina University Computer Resources for Film Composers: Catching the Hits! ATMI tact that gods do not generally grant interviews to ethnographers, what kind of access ca we have to such worlds? How do we retrieve ways of being—in—the—world so radically different from our own horizons? This paper offers one possibility of understanding such nodal existences. a way in—between the modes of being—there and being— away, a place where the flesh of the spirit is made manifest in the rhythm of the crossroads, an ancient rhyme of West Africa. . .. . . .. Fry, Andrew University of California, San Diego SEM Jack à l'Opéra: "Jazz" in Interwar France In this hands-on session, participants will use MoTU's Digital Performer sequencing software to synchronize music to digital video. Tutorial activities include importing movies, spotting hits, creating markers, searching tempos, and building a tempo and meter map. Frazier, Bruce H. Western Carolina University Getting Started with Digital Video using iMovie ATMI When the Paris Opéra needed some jazz in 1931, Jack Hylton’s British band was the obvious choice. Re-embodying, then assimilating, Paul Whiteman records, this new “King of Jazz” and “His Boys” had toured Europe to great acclaim — a success lost to recent scholarship focussing on (black) jazz as a site of primitivism. Mistaken for Americans, however, the band’s popularity began to wane as resistance to US dominance mounted. Now they were often criticised for their “standardization” of a “dehumanised” musical “formula.” A beginner's tutorial for creating a digital movie using Apple's iMovie. Topics in this demonstration session include video and audio capture, basic video editing techniques, adding transitions and titles, working with audio, and exporting the completed movie. Frego, David Ohio State University Preparing the Next Generation of K-6 Music Teachers See Trinka, Jill - Preparing the Next Generation of K-6 Music Teachers Friedson, Steven M University of North Texas Where Divine Horsemen Ride: The Rhythm of the Crossroads CMS Two seemingly paradoxical alternatives conspired to dethrone Hylton. On the one hand, bands such as Ray Ventura et ses collégiens offered a “national” jazz with great nostalgic appeal. On the other, African-American performers found support from the influential historian Hughes Panassié and his more or less racial distinction between “hot” (black) and “straight” (white) jazz. Audiences learned to perceive in both new models a depth and authenticity in contradistinction from the Hylton “product”: an ironic turn given his constant shadowy presence as musical influence or commercial facilitator. SEM In the Brekete shrines of West Africa ancient rhythms move bodies in spectacular ways. The power of repetition inscribed in a soundscape of welcome and praise calls northern gods to posses their devotees. These divine horsemen, so goes the trope, ride their mounts. In the blink of an eye a person can become seized. Captured by their capacity to he taken, those possessed never know they are being ridden. They are no longer aware of their bodily existence for they are no longer themselves. It is not they who dance hut Kunde the hunter, or Ablewa his wife, Sanya the first—born, or Bangle the soldier. Embodiments of virtuosity, these gods are virtuosos of being—there. Costumed in swirl dig saturated colors, they (lance themselves into existence. And as long as the gods are there someone must always he leaving. What is a being-there for a deity is always already a being-away for a devotee. My paper considers these events as an early moment in the global circulation of recorded music, borrowing a model from Bruno Latour to understand its influence as neither all pervasive nor altogether resistible. I also look again at distinctions between “black” and “white”, “folk” and “commercial” musics, whose origins may lie in a critical blindness to actual production circumstances. In the process, I argue for a jazz history that is more complicated — more multi layered — than we sometimes wish it to be. If the people having such experiences can tell us nothing about it, and given the Individual Abstracts 36 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 Fulmer, Mimmi University of Wisconsin-Madison American Art Song: Our Strength is Our Diversity CMS will take place by students during the Survey of World Music class (spring 2003 term) at Florida International University creating a primary research web-based project for this panel presentation. "Musical Cross-Currents: The Caribbean Connection" American radio, commonly present in remote island homes stretching across the Caribbean, were frequently "tuned-in" to the sounds emanating from the United States. Aspiring young Caribbean artists frequently wanted to "hear" and then assimilate the new sounds into their local musical scene. The romance and exoticism of the Caribbean, where the rhythmically intense African and melodically inspired European "musics" first collided and then blended, also inspired composers of classical, popular and jazz genre as well as performers "up north" to incorporate musical ideas and motives from "down in the islands" culminating in the cross-flow and interchange of ideas. An eminent researcher and scholar of Caribbean music and literature will present a historical perspective on this cross-flow of ideas. Composer William Bolcom was quoted as saying that " . . . some quintessential American style has yet to be distilled . . . I figure we're still finding the DNA that makes our culture ours. . . ." The objective of this presentation is to explore what we mean by the term American art song, and to discuss whether defining a quintessential style is possible or even desirable. The diversity of culture on which Americans pride themselves leads to a sprawling range of artistic endeavor. This makes it a challenge for performers to market American music, since the listener has not way to be sure what to expect. Without a central unifying style, is American art song doomed to be a past without a future? Is it a loose canon? In this presentation, we will briefly discuss styles associated with American composers, and the issues involved in assuring that the best of American music assumes a secure place in the musical future. We will then perform songs of Foster, Flanagan, Barber, Dubiel, Cage, Babbitt, Bosch, and Hoiby. "Mana-Zucca-Giselle Zukerman: Her Jewish-Influenced Compositions and Children's Songs" Called a "fixture of Miami culture," (1887-1981) and pillar of the Jewish community, Zuckerman studied with Feruccio Busoni. Her works include concertos, symphonies, chamber music, and vocal music which were performed by all of the great concert artists of her time. She is, however, perhaps best remembered through her Jewish-inspired vocal music and songs expressly written for children. Excerpts will be discussed and performed. We wish to suggest as a metaphor for American style a number of varying acts all happening under a sheltering big tent, with room for all. Better yet, why not a series of small tents, all close enough for the interested listener to stroll from one to another? Perhaps what listeners can expect is that the essence of American music is its diversity. Fulton, Carolyn J. Florida International University Weaving the Musical Tapestry of Miami Fung , C. Victor Bowling Green State University CMS Teaching Trinidad Carnival Music: Cross-Cultural Encounters Between Ethnomusicology and Music Education CMS This presentation explores both the tensions and the common ground that unfolded when an ethnomusicologist and a music educator collaborated on a book project. The ethnomusicologist wrote the book, Carnival music of Trinidad, based on fieldwork and participation in Trinidadian musical culture. The music educator designed an accompanying manual with activities appropriate for music classes of various age levels, based on pedagogical considerations and national standards in music education. The activities in the educator's manual were designed to promote learning of general musical concepts as well as specific characteristics of carnival music in Trinidad. This led to a dialogue between the two authors about how best to reconcile their priorities. Issues of concern included transcription (the representation of musical sound in written notation), "adult" content, and the need Miami is a restless, steaming, sprawling multicultural milieu with "humanly organized sounds" emanating across the sub-tropical city from countries and cultures of every continent. Each newly arriving immigrant culture struggles to maintain and preserve the musical and cultural traditions from the homeland while resisting the merging of the musical present and contributing to musical future of the cities soundscape. "Mapping the Miami Soundscape" Borrowing the term "Soundscape," from Shelemay, a macro mapping of Miami's cultures, traditions, and annual festivals Individual Abstracts 37 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 Gaunt, Kyra New York University SEM Uprocking at the Dollar Jam: Spinning an Alternative Record of Hip-Hop in Brooklyn to create tools for teachers who may not be familiar with Trinidadian musical idioms. The two presenters will share their perspectives on what these negotiations revealed about the relationship between ethnomusicology and music education, and will model selected teaching exercises to demonstrate the issues at stake. In Hip Hop America Nelson George writes that the South Bronx "was a cauldron of vibrant, unnoticed, and quite visionary creativity born of its racial mix and its relative isolation. It was within its boundaries that the expressions we associate with hip-hop -- graffiti art, break dancing, MCing, and mixing -- all have roots (1998, 10). Many are familiar with the mid-1970s alliance between DJs and b-boys in the Boogie Down Bronx, but few have heard of a concurrent alliance between DJs and uprockers in Brooklyn. DJ and dancer Ralph Casanova aka DJ King Uprock and others from Brooklyn tell a story of hip-hop in Brooklyn that revolves around a dance known as uprocking dating back to 1968. It developed from a combination of salsa, the hustle, freestyling, burns and jerks and its elements can be found in the South Bronx practice of breakdancing, according to King Uprock. Along with his former crew The Dynasty Rockers, Casanova teaches and regularly throws a Dollar Jam with the Greater Ridgewood Youth Council in Queens. Their February 22, 2003 Jam flyer read: "Battles start at 5pm." At the Dollar Jam, youth, young adults, and veterans participate in a communal form of hip-hop practice that is an antidote to the dominant consumptive modes surrounding contemporary hiphop. This paper explores the musical and social play between simultaneous "records" of hip-hop where the Bronx (on the one) and Brooklyn (on turntable two) spin a mix of hip-hop historiography or a politics of music, representation, and place. Fuson, Tim Abdellah University of California, Berkeley SEM Slavery's Past in the Musical Present: Ritual and memory in the Moroccan Gnawa lila In this paper, I will examine the way music gives form to the memory of a historical past in the Moroccan Gnawa lila ceremony. The practices of the Gnawa are recognized by Moroccans to be among the most effective for the treatment of spirit-related illnesses. A distinguishing factor in this efficacy is the fact that the Gnawa’s spiritual and genealogical forbears were slaves of West African origin. The experiences of slavery, abduction, and the breaking of family and community ties, while having passed out of the Gnawa’s living memory, are brought back into the present through song, music and dance in the lila. Feelings of uprootedness, disempowerment, and being taken by forces beyond one’s control, are as familiar to today’s Gnawa as they were to their slave forbears. The songs that express these feelings connect people across time and space. Ritual studies scholar Catherine Bell has written that the process of ritualization allows participants to develop a degree of “ritual mastery”, a full inculcation of the symbolic schemes that structure the ritual field. Because, as I will show, musicking (singing, playing, dancing and hearing) is the primary experiential modality of the lila, I suggest that the Gnawa’s ritual mastery is achieved by developing a musical competence. The lila, then, opens a musical space in which the Gnawa remember and ritualize the sense of rupture left by slavery. By reappropriating the memory of slavery in a ritual context, the Gnawa make that experience meaningful and empowering in the musical present. Garcia, Nora Lee University of Central Florida Aires Tropicales, by Paquito DeRivera Gay, Leslie University of Tennessee SEM The concept of rytmisk musik: African American music, discursive practices, and Danish identity Same as above Geers, Douglas University of Minnesota Turnstile CMS See Koons, Keith - Aires Tropicales by Paquito DeRivera Individual Abstracts CMS Turnstile is a work for violin with computer-generated sounds which contrasts moments of "interior" and "exterior" experience, plunging the listener into an auditory environment of samples which have been abstracted to varying degrees 38 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 Gigante Klingenstein, Beth Valley City State University Digital Portfolios for Faculty Evaluation, Tenure, and Promotion and contrasting supple melodic lines and soft textures with boisterous rhythms and crunchy sound colors. The piece juxtaposes and connects musical moments, immersing the solo violin in a dreamlike accompaniment of processed samples. Written for Maja Cerar, 1999. ATMI SEM This Poster Session will demonstrate the creation of a digital portfolio for purposes of faculty evaluation, tenure and promotion. The presenter is a faculty member of a nationally recognized leader in the use of technology, which now requires faculty to submit all tenure and promotion requests in digital form. African American filmmakers have envisioned cinema as a vehicle for exposing social ills, imparting cultural knowledge, and providing representations of African Americans that help dispel one-dimensional, stereotypical images. These filmmakers also have recognized music as a significant element of African American culture and have understood the power of music as a communicative device. A primary theme in my courses is that music in film not only imparts cultural knowledge, but it also may reflect and reinforce socio-political issues found in the film narrative. The presenter will share her recent tenure evaluation, which was submitted in a CD ROM format. The CD includes digital information on Employment Data, Effectiveness of Instruction and Primary Responsibilities, Professional Growth and Scholarly Activities, Service to the University and Community, Attitude towards Students, and Professional Goals. The CD format allows a great deal of information to be accessed in a fashion, which is logical and easy to navigate. The digital format is particularly effective for use in evaluations of music faculty since audio-visual representations of performances, ensemble work, and conducting can easily be incorporated. Gibson, Gloria Indiana University "The Empowering Voice of Music in African American Cinema" This paper will examine three films: Spike Lee’s Do the Right Thing (1986), Haile Gerima’s Bush Mama (1976), and Michelle Parkerson’s Gotta Make this Journey: Sweet Honey in the Rock (1983). These films address issues pertaining to women’s identity, social displacement, and political awareness within the context of the cultural history of African Americans. Music, in each of these films, whether narrative or documentary, serves a vital role in articulating socio-political perspective. For example, Spike Lee’s thematic infrastructure evokes culturespecific images through a synthesis of folk and contemporary elements derived from everyday experiences. Lee uses African American music as a communicative device that reveals aspects of historic and contemporary experiences of African Americans and their political reactions to those experiences. Giles, James Northwestern University CMS New Piano Music by Stephen Hough, Lowell Liebermann, and Augusta Read Thomas These three works, which were written for and premiered by James Giles last spring, are important additions to the solo piano repertoire. A comparison reveals vastly different styles from three musicians of the same generation (they are each around 40 years old). For many composers of this generation, the pendulum has swung decidedly back to a music that is more accessible, although not necessarily tonal. The gestures of virtuoso piano writing and the methods of motivic development place these works in the tradition of Romantic piano music. This assertion is borne out by the conventional forms: Hough has written a suite, Liebermann a sonata, and Thomas two etudes. Yet when used imaginatively, these structures still have currency for composers in the early twenty-first century. Through an analysis of scenes from Lee, Gerima and Parkerson’s films, this paper illustrates the role of music in African American film as a voice that frames and examines crucial issues within African American communities. In discussing the respective compositional approaches it is instructive to note the contexts in which they write. Hough is a busy concert pianist who writes transcriptions and delightful salon music for his own use; Liebermann is one of the most often commissioned composers today and has never held a teaching post; and Thomas is the composer-in-residence for the Chicago Symphony and a professor Individual Abstracts 39 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 at Northwestern University. A composer's institutional affiliation or lack thereof does not determine their style, but there may be a correlation between composers' styles and whether they ultimately enter academia or not. advantage for selling Gypsy musical products. Packaged with a flair of amateur anthropology” reminiscent of the era of Victorian explorers, recent films and musical records have problematized the epistemological interest in the geographical roots of the Gypsies by further othering “the others from within” (Pettan 2001). Gilman, Lisa Texas A&M SEM "Coerced to Praise": Women's Dancing and Dictatorial Politics in Malawi (1964-1994)" Using fieldwork experience as the manager for Divana” (a group of Rajasthani musicians featured in Latcho Dram), and through a close look at the different Gypsy commercial musical anthologies available. I will examine the impact of the industry’s sudden interest in the repertoire of Rajasthani communities on these very musicians. In addition to shedding light on the mechanics of the world music industry’s appropriation of an epistemological discourse and its packaging for public consumption, this paper also raises questions pertinent to applied ethnomusicology such as representation and mediation. After Malawi attainted independence from British colonial rule in 1964, Dr. Hastings Kamuzu Banda imposed a single party totalitarian system of government. All people of “African origin” were required to belong to the Malawi Congress Party (MCP) and as members were required to participate in party activities. One of the more salient aspects of the political culture that evolved during his rule (through 1994) were the frequent orchestrations of party functions at the national, regional, and district levels. As MCP members, all women in Malawi were required to participate in these events as dancers and singers of praise for the party and its leader. Each woman was forced to own a uniform made of fabric decorated with images of the president's face, attend regular rehearsals, and perform at functions that occurred in their locales or sometimes at regional or national centers. The coerced use of women as praise singers and dancers effectively created a hegemonic political culture shrouded in a climate of fear. Based in ethnographic and archival research, this paper examines how the Banda government exploited women’s dancing bodies as a strategy to establish and sustain authoritarian control. In ensuring that all women were regularly prepared to perform praise, the party effectively exercised control of women’s voices, bodies, mobility, and ultimately even their personal relationships all within rhetoric about the promotion of “traditional culture.” Givan, Ben Yale University SEM The South-Grappelli Recordings of the Bach Double Violin Concerto Among the earliest known jazz interpretations of Bach’s music are two 1937 recordings of the Concerto for Two Violins in D minor featuring the American Eddie South and the Frenchman Stéphane Grappelli as soloists. Recorded in Paris with accompaniment by guitarist Django Reinhardt, the discs represent not only an intersection of musical genres, but furthennore an encounter between performers of diverse nationalities and ethnicities. Girgis, Mina University of California, Santa Barbara SEM "Did You Hear? They are from India!" The Problem With The Gypsy Origin in World Music A classically-trained Aflican-American artist who turned to jazz out of economic necessity, South continued to occasionally perform classical works, often presenting them while adopting a consciously exoticized “gypsy” persona. Reinhardt’s cultural trajectory was in some respects the reverse of South’s; the guitarist was a Manouche gypsy who gravitated toward American jazz, only rarely acknowledging his own ethnic identity explicitly, though it was reflected in his musical language. World music’ is a Western commercial genre defined by the “otherness” of its musical actors (Erlmann 1993, 1996; Feld 2000; Frith 2000). The incorporation of Roma groups in world music circuits has been used to introduce additional exotic aspects. In adopting the linguistic theory of the Gypsies Indian origin, I claim that the world music’ industry relies on the quality of otherness as a competitive The Bach recordings were planned and overseen by the record producer and jazz critic Charles Delaunay, son of the post-cubist painter Robert Delaunay and raised among France’s elite high-art community during the inter-war period. In this intellectual milieu, Bach’s music was the focus of two distinct aesthetic ideologies (Taruskin 1993), both of which, I argue, are manifested by the South-Grappelli Individual Abstracts 40 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 Gorlinski, Gini Ohio University SEM Pekalai Kancet! ("Learn to Dance!"): An Instructional Video Project in Sarawak, Malaysia recordings. At one level, the recordings present an artisanal Bach whose music can readily be assimilated into vernacular musical idioms like jazz or European gypsy music. But at the same time, they reflect a conception of Bach’s art as a transcendent, universal site where disparate other musical traditions could be engaged on neutral terms. Glasser, Jonathan University of Michigan, Ann Arbor Phenomenology and Transcription Multi-cultural education has become a global buzz word, as more and more institutions strive to diversify the content of their arts programs and curricula. However, educators -- whether at the primary, secondary, or post-secondary levels -- continue to struggle with a lack of adequate, ethnographically accurate, and sensitive introductory teaching materials, especially for practical instruction. As a contribution to the multi-cultural pool of teaching aids focusing on artistic production, as opposed merely to provision of documentary information, this poster session presents the results of a collaborative effort in Sarawak. Malaysia, with Kenyah dancer, Rose Awing Belaré. The intention of the collaboration was to create an instructional dance package that would he suitable for use in educational settings, both in Malaysia and abroad. The core component of the package is a DVD (VCD for Southeast Asia) featuring a 5-minute solo dance, an 11-minute group dance, a brief explanation of the occasions for dance, as well as detailed demonstrations of nine basic dance movements. Supplementary materials include a booklet offering an ethnographic overview of the Kenyah peoples of Malaysian and Indonesian Borneo, a description of the contexts and styles of Kenyah dance, photographs, a bibliography and discography, suggested exercises and activities, and additional directions for executing the steps. The final element of the package is a music CD, approximately 30 minutes in length, for dance practice. All of the materials in the poster session will be displayed alongside other contributions from the Applied Ethnomusicology Section of SEM. SEM Transcription has had a long and varied life within ethnomusicology: a central practice for much of the discipline’s history, transcription is today viewed by many as an antiquated research tool made nearly obsolete by recording technology and the turn away from analyses of musical structure. Although transcription is no longer de rigueur in ethnomusicological studies, the debates surrounding it since the 1950’s offer an important resource for exploring our understanding of music and perception. Using recent conceptualizations of the hearing process as an interplay between the acoustic and perceptual worlds, we can discern some of the limits of the earlier transcription debates:advocates of automatic transcription have tended to emphasize the acoustic world over the perceptual world in which the concept of music resides, while advocates of aural transcription have at times held to a reified notion of musical essence, ignoring the highly variable ways of hearing between people, places, and periods of time. Some discussions of transcription have begun to recognize, celebrate, and explore this subjective character and potential. When the transcription process is fully acknowledged as a part and reflection of the perceptual world, it can be an important and communicable tool not only in exploring the individual listening process within culture, but also in exploring questions of spatialization of time, visualization of sound, and other aspects of intersense modalities. A phenomenological approach to transcription may well play a valuable and practical part in understanding relationships between music and cognition Gonzalez-Palmer, Barbara The State University of New Jersey Performing Contemporary Music Graham, Sandra University of California, Davis SEM What’s the Score? Interpreting Theodore Seward’s Transcriptions of the Fisk Jubilee Spirituals One of the obvious pitfalls in doing historical ethnomusicology is relying on score analysis as an aid for imagining how the music sounded. This is especially true with regard to early transcriptions of folk spirituals in America, which were often made by either amateur musicians or by trained musicians unfamiliar with folk music. Theodore Seward, a church musician who was hired in 1872 to transcribe the spirituals as sung by the Fisk Jubilee Singers (Nashville, Tennessee), has been criticized by modern scholars such as Dena Epstein as well as contemporaneous auditors for his failure to faithfully reproduce the sound of the spirituals. Despite CMS See Helton, Jonathan - Performing Contemporary Music Individual Abstracts 41 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 Grasse, Jonathon University of California, Los Angeles Four Essential Topic Areas in World Music Theory for Musicians this failure, I argue that a close analysis of Seward’s transcriptions reveals stylistic connections to folk song, as well as interesting information about what a white, middle-class audience would have found novel about this music in 1872. In considering Seward’s transcriptions of the Jubilee Songs as a representation of his training and ideology, as well as a strategy for creating an ideology about the spirituals, I demonstrate ways in which such scores might be repositories of useful ethnographic knowledge. Grasmick, David Cal Poly University, Pomona Digital Video Editing and DVD Authoring Including aspects of non-Western music systems in a college music theory course is an idea best approached with methodology designed in consideration of all constituents - student, teacher, and musical traditions alike. Specific dimensions of a limited number of music cultures made relevant for music majors and presented by an instructor capable of handling the materials are minimum requirements. Importantly, there is no single textbook adequate for the task, though attempts have been made. In view of the author's curricular development at UCLA's Department of Ethnomusicology, this presentation delivers four essential topic areas designed to assist in meeting the needs of student, teacher, and the required respect for diverse music traditions. Tuning theory, improvisation, formal structure, and organology create a collective web of topics connecting with a trained musician's curiosity about global music traditions. Clarifying aspects of each of these four areas act toward dispelling erroneous myths and prejudices, encouraging intellectual consideration of musical cultures, and offering a broader scope of historical, theoretical, and practical concerns for music students. ATMI Wouldn’t it be great to learn how to take a set of VHS tapes that you or your school already own and digitize just the sections of those tapes that you use in class to a DVD or CD so you could go to any section of them with just a touch of a button. While you’re at it why not add pictures and digital audio to enhance those sections of the VHS tape with your own or other materials. Believe it or not this isn’t that difficult with iMovie and iDVD. Grasse, Jonathon University of California, Los Angeles Four Essential Topic Areas in World Music Theory Gray, Lila Ellen Duke University SEM Memories of empire, mythologies of the soul: fado performance and the shaping of saudade SEM Including aspects of non-Western music systems in a college music theory course is an idea best approached with methodology designed in consideration of all constituents - student, teacher, and musical traditions alike. Specific dimensions of a limited number of music cultures made relevant for music majors and presented by an instructor capable of handling the materials are minimum requirements. Importantly, there is no single textbook adequate for the task, though attempts have been made. In view of the author’s curricular development at UCLA’s Department of Ethnomusicology, this presentation delivers four essential topic areas designed to assist in meeting the needs of student, teacher, and the required respect for diverse music traditions. Tuning theory, improvisation, formal structure, and organology create a collective web of topics connecting with a trained musician’s curiosity about global music traditions. Clarifying aspects of each of these four areas act toward dispelling erroneous myths and prejudices, encouraging intellectual consideration of musical cultures, and offering a broader scope of historical, theoretical, and practical concerns for music students. Individual Abstracts CMS In the early 1800's fado developed in Lisbon as an expressive sung lament with originary narratives linked to prostitution, the traffic in slaves, the musical legacy of the Arabs and the colonial "Discoveries." Currently, on the world music market and in local Portuguese contexts, fado is often represented as the "voice" of Portugal or the "soul" of Lisbon. Fado (fate) is intimately linked to the sentiment of saudade (sweet longing which hurts). In the world of fado aficionados and singers in Lisbon, to sing fado, to feel saudade, is to belong through creative remembrance and soulful hearing. Drawing on materials collected during eighteen months of field research in Lisbon, and by foregrounding the process through which one learns to be a singer and a listener, I examine the relationship between contemporary fado performance and the shaping of saudade, thus forging links between musical expression, the shaping of memory and place and ideas of authenticity or "soul." I ask what it means to participate in a genre whose ethos depends on imaginaries of a soul which is intimately bound to a particular place and the densely woven fabric of histories, memories and national myths which call 42 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 Greene, Lara Florida State University SEM Pa' que Sepa la Yuma Entera (So that the Whole World Knows): Cuban Popular Dance Music and the Process of Globalization that place into being. I link fado sounds, lyrics and styles to the remembering of Lisbon geographies and to post-colonial desires which recall an empire lost. Finally, I examine some of the trasformations of the poetics of saudade which occur when via the world music market, fado travels as Lisbon's soul and Portugal's memory. Globalization is well recognized among ethnomusicologists as a potent agent for musical change. While earlier considerations of this phenomenon elicited doubt and warnings of “cultural greyout” (Lomax 1968), newer research has celebrated the variety of hybrid genres shaped by increased global ties and recognized the significance they take on at the local level (Guilbault 1993; Averill 1997; Cooley 2001). In this paper, I ask what is involved when such music is groomed for consumption at the international level. Is it simply re-absorbed by the genres from which it borrows and to which it is akin, or is there a place for it in the global landscape? Green, Jonathan Sweet Briar College CMS What You Can Do with a Career in Music: Career Options Outside of Music Teaching and Performance See Lamkin, Kathleen - What You Can Do with a Career in Music: Career Options Outside of Music Teaching and Performance Green, Richard Pennsylvania State University The Professor As Administrator Timba is popular dance music from Cuba that emerged in the later 1980s as a fusion of son, funk, jazz, and rock. International in scope but decidedly Cuban in style, this music is broadly popular on the island, largely due to a number of elements that are distinctly local in character. Thus far, timba has a small following outside Cuba, as its musicians have limited access to promotion and touring opportunities. Many timba musicians have left Cuba to pursue international exposure more actively, and a number of them have settled in Miami. After a brief introduction to the music, I will examine the activities of timba musicians in Miami as they work to connect with new audiences at local and international levels. CMS At some point in our lives as music professors we will all be asked to assume administrative responsibilities, perhaps as a department chair or in a similarly challenging position. None of us has been trained personally or professionally to meet these stressful challenges. This session is intended for those members who are currently in administrative positions and for those who are contemplating assuming such a role. Through the discussion of case studies, we will address some of the issues that often cause consternation among administrators, such as the management of difficult but necessary conversations with faculty, the setting priorities and reaching consensus, and the care a feeding of adjunct faculty. Grunland, Thomas H. University of California, Santa Barbara We hear ya talkin': Audience-artist dynamics in jazz performance While contemporary jazz ethnography (Berliner, 1994; Monson, 1996; Such, 1981) has done a commendable job of relating sociocultural aspects of jazz to its specific musical manifestations, unfortunately much of this fieldwork has focused on musicians and their improvised ‘art’-ifacts at the expense of ‘significant others’–the audience. Green, Richard Pennsylvania State University CMS CMS Advocacy Committee Panel: Advocating Music Theory, Musicology, and Ethnomusicology See Harding, Tayloe - CMS Advocacy Committee Panel: Advocating Music Theory, Musicology, and Ethnomusicology Individual Abstracts SEM In this paper, based on six months of fieldwork in New York City, I reorient the ethnographic lens towards activities taking place on the other side of the microphones. Akin to Racy’s ecstatic feedback model (1991), I suggest that active listeners are an integral and indispensable component of jazz performance. Focusing on the ‘parlor jazz’ scene hosted by Marjorie Eliot in her home on Sugar 43 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 Hill, Harlem, where an intimate and noncommercial atmosphere attracts a loyal and enthusiastic group of jazz ‘ears,’ I present evidence–collected through numerous formal and informal interviews with Marjorie, her musicians, and regular attendees–of a tight-knit, symbiotic microcommunity deeply immersed in musical and social dialogue. subjugation. One commentator maintains that the song’s history--including its translation and use as a Japanese military song during W.W.II; and its disparagement under Chiang Kai-shek’s Nationalist government-- mirrors the plight of the Taiwanese people. Music plays a vital role in Taiwanese electoral politics. While politicians sometimes commission new songs, old Taiwanese songs are frequently employed. In this paper, I take “Flowers in the Rain Night” as a starting point for my investigation of the invocation through song of nostalgia and tragic memory in contemporary Taiwanese politics. I argue that audience-performer interactions are crucial for enabling an atmosphere of transcendence and communitas (Turner, 1969) in the ritual enactment of jazz. By ‘breaking the fourth wall’ to include the audience as participants and coperformers, I hope to offer a more encompassing and meaningful way to interpret improvised musical performance. Listening to the listeners ultimately challenges ethnomusicologists in particular and social scientists in general to critically reexamine our roles as actors and as audience when we take to the stage of fieldwork. Gutnik, Tatiana Durham, North Carolina Music Theory Pedagogy: An International Perspective Ha, Ju-Yong City University of New York The Grand and Majestic: Ujo in P'ansori Performance One of the most challenging terms to understand in p’ansori performance is the term jo. The challenge comes out of multiple layers of meaning and various usages of the term among traditional Korean musicians and scholars. Beyond the complexity of its usage, jo can most comprehensively be explained as a collection of “melodic ideas.” Of the various types of jo in p’ansori performance, however, ujo presents the greatest challenge. I will argue that the best way to begin to understand the theoretical principles created and developed by musicians is to examine ways in which these principles are exemplified in actual practice, thus defining ujo from the perspective of performance practice. The research for this paper is based on fieldwork in Seoul, Korea, during the summers of 2001 and 2002. Interviews were conducted with p’ansori singers who represented younger performers and mature professionals, including Shin Young-hee, Park Song-hee and Song Sun-seop, distinguished and honored as Intangible Cultural Assets. CMS See Neff, Severine - Music Theory Pedagogy: An International Perspective Guy, Nancy University of California, San Diego SEM "Invoking a Tragic Past: Old Taiwanese Songs in the Service of Contemporary Election Politics" At the close of a rally held on the eve of the December 2002 Taipei mayoral election, former President Lee Teng-hui led a crowed of 20,000 in singing “Flowers in the Rainy Night.” The lyrics, told from the perspective of a fallen young woman, are somber and fatalistic: “Flowers in the rainy night. . . fall to the ground blown by wind and rain... Once the flowers have fallen, they cannot be revived.. . my future has lost its brightness and promise. . .“ As widely predicted, the Taiwan-born candidate for whom the former President campaigned lost the election to the Hong Kong-born incumbent. The plan of this paper is to consider three crucial respects in which ujo differs from the other primary mode, namely kyemyonjo, used in p’ansori. These are ujokil, an anhemitonic pentatonic mode; sikimsae, the performance practice subtleties such as melodic ornamentation, flexibility of pitch and vibrato; and sung’um, a term that encompasses natural vocal talent and technique, aesthetic expression, and appropriateness, including jo itself. These three respects are interconnected and interdependent, and focus on imyon, the “picture within” or the dramatic situation, and how that is interpreted in p’ansori performance. Multiple levels of meaning of jo and ujo, as well as their interrelationships, are all uniquely observable in the performance of p’ansori, whose performers achieve the “ultimate voice” or tugum. Composed in 1934 during Taiwan’s Japanese colonial period, “Flowers in the Rainy Night,” like many “old Taiwanese songs” (lao Taiyu ge), is typically experienced as tragic. Appearing shortly after the election, several writings suggest that through this song, Taiwanese remember and “feel” their common history of Individual Abstracts SEM 44 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 Habib, Kenneth University of California, Santa Barbara SEM From Beneath This Cedar of Lebanon: The Music of Fairuz in America marbles and / piracies and it's / spring / when the world is puddle-wonderful / the queer / old balloonman whistles / far and wee / and bettyandisbel come dancing / from hop-scotch and jump-rope and / it's / spring / and / the / goat-footed / balloonMan whistles / far / and / wee / Tumbling-hair / Tumbling-hair picker of buttercups / violets / dandelions / And the big bullying daisies / through the field wonderful w / ith eyes a little sorry / Another comes / also picking flowers / l(a / l(a / le / af / fa / ll / s) / one / l / iness / who(is?are)who / who(is?are)who / (two faces at a dark / window)this father and his / child are watching snowflakes / (falling & falling & falling) / eyes eyes / looking(alw / ays)while / earth and sky grow / one with won / der until(see / the)with the / bigger much than biggest / (little is)now(dancing yes for)white / ly(joy!joy!joy!)and whiteliest all / wonderings are silence is becom / ing each / truebeautifully / more-than-thing ( / & falling &) / EverychildfatheringOne The music of the superstar singer, Fairuz, has been a vital means for many ArabAmericans to maintain, negotiate and reconstruct their relationships with their ancestral homes in the Middle East. Fairuz has been a powerful musical and social force in her native Lebanon and the larger Arab world for some fifty years. As Arabs have immigrated to the United States, her role in defining identity for them to varying degrees has evolved with the adaptation of this music culture to their new home. Directly coupled with this development is the purposeful orientation of certain Fairuz albums toward different Arab audiences in the Middle East and the United States. In cooperation, she and her fans have fostered a symbiotic cultural relationship whereby Fairuz has become a vehicle for the assertion of identity and tradition. In addition, since many within these diaspora communities maintain close ties with family and friends “back home,” there has been a complex cultural exchange between the United States, Lebanon and other Arab nations via the conduit of the Arab-American diaspora. This paper analyzes the production and consumption of Fairuz’s music in the United States and examines the ways in which this music factors into the construction of home. In this light, it investigates the special musical significance of two particularly important albums: The Arabs’ Ambassador and Fairuz in America. Further, it elucidates issues of cultural interconnectedness through music and addresses the interaction of local and global forces in the negotiation of cultural identity. Habib, Kenneth University of California, Santa Barbara four poems of e. e. cummings (1993-1994) Haefer, J. Richard Arizona State University Re-Presenting George Herzog's study of Piman Indian Music SEM While a student of Franz Boas at Columbia University, George Herzog spent the summers of 1927 and 1929 in central Arizona working with Thomas Vanyiko as his major Piman informant. A summary of this field material formed the Piman basis of his dissertation comparing Pueblo and Piman music styles. Although best known for his Amerind music studies, his work with Piman language materials and cultural concepts concerning music are far more innovative and important. In addition to recording songs on wax cylinders, Herzog wrote phonetic transliterations of most song texts with occasional spoken versions, and for most of them what he terms a “meaning” or an “explanation” as well. CMS After much anticipation of composing a song cycle of poems by E. E. Cummings (1894-1962), I delved into the Cummings anthology and was drawn deeply into the unique and evocative style. I was particularly taken with the depth of expression achieved, in part, through the highly visual approach to text arrangement and the great freedom toward the creation, combination and reformation of words. I have endeavored to reflect these characteristics in measure and bring out musical features inherent to the poems, which appear below as Cummings wrote and arranged them. Now nearly a century later it is possible to review his materials diachronically (through over a century of documented Piman song research) and synchronically (across a wide spectrum of Piman song genres). I focus my re–study on some 150 songs found within the Piman “Creation Myth” examining Piman “song language,” the intertextuality of deriving song texts from the texts of the myth itself, and the hypertextuality of producing “pairs of songs” within the myth cycle. in Just- / in Just- / spring when the world is mud- luscious the little / lame balloonman / whistles far and wee / and eddieandbill come / running from Individual Abstracts 45 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 Hagedorn, Katherine Pomona College SEM "Deep Knowledge" and "Tourist Rhythms": The Politics of Representing Afro-Cuban Drumming in Post-Revolutionary Cuba Hagen, Sara L. Valley City State University ATMI Tracing the Development of a Required CD ROM Portfolio: Issues of Philosophy, Integration, Product, and Assessment In Santería, as in many other Afro-Caribbean religious traditions, musical performance is essential to communicating with deities, known as orichas. Each oricha "owns" particular songs, dances, and rhythms that are used to call it to earth in the context of a toque de santo, or sacred drumming ceremony. I am particularly interested in the batá drumming associated with Santería ceremonies, as the batá rhythms are said to "speak" to the orichas in their own language. But in postRevolutionary Cuba, where some aspects of Afro-Cuban religious performance have been transformed into folkloric spectacle, and other are being recontextualized for use in performing arts schools, how does the repertoire of rhythms change from one context to another? Who determines the repertoire in each case, and what factors motivate those choices? For one drummer, the patterns taught to students in performing arts contexts are nothing more than "tourist rhythms"—easy to play and learn. For another, ritually significant batá drumming is performed only during toques de santo, because that is the sole context that requires the "deep knowledge" and more complicated rhythms of the orichas. For the same drummer, folkloric drumming is evocative but not ritually powerful or complex because the drums aren't speaking to the orichas. I will rely on recent fieldwork conducted in Havana and Los Angeles with batá drummers from all three contexts to examine the politics of representing batá drumming in postRevolutionary Cuba. Since Valley City State University became a laptop university in 1996, the faculty has worked to create discipline specific applications for the use of technology. The presenters will discuss their creative use of technology throughout the music curriculum, including Music History projects utilizing composing and digital notation, creating PowerPoint and web page presentations, developing a partially on-line class through the use of Blackboard, and using the internet for class research projects. Also of interest will be the philosophical underpinnings of a required CD ROM portfolio, its structure, requirements, and assessment procedures, as well as faculty development and preparation to meet this challenge. Hahn, Tomie Renseleer Polytechnic Arousing Nostalga - moving interviews During interviews an interesting conflation of time transpires in which an informant’s past experiences are ushered forward into the present. I find that, on occasion, interviewing is a process of guiding informants through memories of past experiences—arousing nostalgia. To illustrate how nostalgia emerges during an interview I will draw upon two contrasting contexts—interviews within a Japanese dance setting and interviews with American composer Pauline Oliveros. Nostalgia reveals itself in audible and visible ways in both settings. In the Japanese dance field site, memories recalled are deeply physical: recovering embodied dance movements, drawing upon emotional memory to articulate gestures, and the memories of teachers within the dance lineage. Kinetic nostalgia is intertwined with dance narratives and embodied memories. Hagen, Sara L. Valley City State University ATMI A Demonstration of Completed Student CD ROM Portfolios in Music Since Valley City State University became a laptop university in 1996, the faculty has worked to create discipline specific applications for the use of technology. Students are now required to complete a digital CD ROM portfolio to graduate, which must pass assessment procedures. This poster session will demonstrate students' work with technology throughout the music curriculum in completed CD ROM portfolios, including Music History projects utilizing composing and digital notation, creating PowerPoint and web page presentations, mentoring junior high school students in the preparation of original opera, and using the internet for class research projects. Individual Abstracts SEM When seventy-year old Oliveros recounts stories from her past, her demeanor, voice, and gestures reveal images and experiences from an earlier time unfurled in the present. In a sense, she performs nostalgia through storytelling. The sensibilities of the sentimental not only inform the present, they reflect and reshape the past from the vantage point of her current life. I have noticed that as Oliveros recalls moments from early childhood, such as performing accordion at rodeos in Texas, she links these memories with her current Deep Listening practice. 46 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 When nostalgia arises it problematizes some aspects of the interview process—how does an ethnographer engage with this visceral, sentimental state? How is nostalgia interpreted? Once an interview elicits sensitive, emotional, and deeply psychological issues, what are the ethnographer’s responsibilities? theorists, musicologists, and ethnomusicologists and teachers of each might help to more efficiently sustain music through a more comprehensive knowledge of the study of their sub-disciplines. Harnish, David Bowling Green State University SEM Wayang Sasak, the Shadowplay of Lombok, Indonesia: Music, Performance, and Negotiations with Religion and Modernity Hainsworth, David The University of Texas at Austin ATMI Also on panel: Brian Heller Minneapolis College, Perpich Center Arts High School and Minneapolis College of Arts & Design; Daniel Hosken California State University, Northridge; John Lamar - Berklee College of Music; Charles Paul Menoche Central Connecticut State University Managing Music Technology Computer Labs: Models, Problems, Challenges, and Strategies for Finding Solutions The history, story content and music elements of wayang Sasak, the shadow puppet theatre of Lombok, have been contested over the past few decades. Originally popularized to help spread an early form of Islam in the 18th century, it later became problemized as a distraction from Islam due to its depicted images, preIslamic ritual practices, and associated alcohol consumption. While Lombok has become increasingly Islamic and leaders have scrutinized the performing arts, the regional government has sought to control and direct the arts to achieve an Indonesian standard and empower the national. Meanwhile, citizens in Lombok have gradually modernized and become media-savvy, and traditional arts like wayang Sasak have had trouble finding audiences. Puppeteers and musicians have thus had to negotiate pressure from Islamic leaders (who decry the ritualistic elements), conditional support from the government (which wants to manipulate the form), and decreasing audiences who view the arts today solely as a source for leisure and entertainment. This panel will address many of the unique challenges facing music technology professionals, in instructional or staff positions, whose duties include managing multi-user and multi-purpose music technology labs. Rather than focus on the establishment of such facilities (e.g., grants, budgets, and setup), which has been covered in earlier presentations and publications, the discussion will concentrate on the related to keeping a lab successfully running after it has been created and its doors opened. As such labs have become the norm rather than the exception in recent years, these issues are of great importance to instructors, computer professionals, and music schools and departments responsible for their current and future success. This presentation will explore how the current environment has developed and how practitioners have responded to this series of pressures. It will also explicate the aesthetic elements—music, puppet characterization, performance processes, etc.—and the role of migrant Balinese to illustrate how wayang Sasak has combined Javanese and Balinese influences into a unique realization of Sasak ethnicity that is now undergoing transition and re-negotiation. The presented topics are based on new research; apart from Judith Ecklund, the regional government, and myself, little work has been conducted on wayang Sasak. Harding, Taylor Valdosta State University CMS CMS Advocacy Panel: Advocating Music Theory, Musicology, and Ethnomusicology The College Music Society's Advocacy Committee will present a Panel discussion that will feature representatives of these three vital music sub-disciplines. This collection of panelists will include: (1) a music theorist, Kristin Wendland; (2)a musicologist, Richard Green; (3) an ethno- musicologist, Ricardo Trimillos; and (4) a member of the Society's national Committee on Advocacy that is versed in the year 2000 music discipline advocacy reports, chair and moderator, Tayloe Harding. The primary objectives of the panel will be to illuminate the specific concerns held about professors of Music theory, musicology, and ethnomusicology more succinctly for the membership of the Society, and then to reveal ways that Individual Abstracts 47 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 Harnish, David Bowling Green State University CMS The Latino Connection: Community Partnerships between Latino Musicians and Academe (e) Scope of Exclusive Rights in Nondramatic Musical Works: Compulsory License for Sampling Sound Recordings.” See O'Hagin, Isabel - The Latino Connection: Community Partnerships between Latino Musicians and Academe Harris, Rachel University of London SEM The Troublesome Tämbur Technique of Nur Mämät Tursun: playing it like the Gypsy Kings, playing it like the Chinese. Harringon, Michael Belmont University CMS Copyright Abuse And Un-Fair Use In Contemporary World Music, Hip Hop, and R and B: How New Legal Rulings Are Changing The Rules Of Rap Working with exile Uyghur musicians - hailing from both the former Soviet states and from the Uyghur homeland of Chinese Xinjiang - at the Smithsonian Silk Road festival in July 2002, I was party to some spirited exchanges between the musicians on the subject of what was and what was not ‘Uyghur music’. The influential Xinjiang-based musician Nur Mämät Tursun and the new virtuoso style he has promoted on the tämbur lute formed one memorable topic of conversation. Uyghur musicians from Kazakhstan held that his style had been ‘polluted’ by the techniques of the Chinese pipa. Musicians from Xinjiang refuted this argument. Nur Mämät, they argued, had borrowed flamenco guitar techniques which he had learned by listening to recordings by the Gypsy Kings. On December 17, 1991, Judge Kevin Thomas Duffy ruled that rapper Biz Markie’s unauthorized use of samples from the music of Gilbert O’Sullivan constituted copyright infringement. Duffy’s decision cast a chilling effect on the development of rap and sampling, but may have been inevitable especially in light of the defendants’ ill conceived two-pronged rationalization for Biz Markie’s borrowing that O’Sullivan did not own copyright in his song, “Alone Again (Naturally),” and, failing a successful outcome of that argument, that it was common practice in the late 80’s/early 90’s music industry to simply sample without permission. Based on recent fieldwork in Xinjiang and Kazakhstan, this paper discusses attitudes to, and trends in musical change amongst the Uyghur diaspora. The study of diaspora is very much at the forefront of contemporary ethnomusicology (Schulze, Stokes, & Campbell 1996; Shelemay 1998). One recent study discusses the anxieties of the Tibetan exile community about the ‘musical pollution’ of Tibetan traditions within Tibet under Chinese rule (Diehl 2002). Similarly, I will argue, amongst Uyghur exiles, stylistic developments are hotly debated and resisted, and these debates are inextricably interlinked with the current political situation. This presentation will discuss the troublesome, but improving, state of affairs in rap/hip hop and sampling in both the U. S. and internationally, describe the similarities and differences between the copyright of a musical composition versus the copyright in the sound recording, how these differences have evolved with respect to past historical borrowings, paraphrasing, interpolations and infringements, how fair use is and should be employed in determining whether the copyright of one composition or recording infringes another, and present a balanced means and model of assessing issues of infringement, interpolation, parody, quotation and fair use/fair dealing. In addition, the presentation will examine recent legal rulings involving George Clinton, the Beastie Boys, NWA and others, and outline strategies in dealing with the litigational and transactional issues pertinent to contemporary hip hop and R & B and put forth solutions to the sampling, licensing and fair use conundrums that presently exist. Finally, the presenter, a music expert witness recognized in United States federal court, and experienced in copyright infringement matters involving artists such as Lauryn Hill & The Fugees, Mystikal, George Clinton, 2 Live Crew, the Dixie Chicks and others, will outline his proposal for a new compulsory license for sampling sound recordings amendment to addition to the U. S. Copyright Act - “17 U. S. C. ß 115 Individual Abstracts Harrison, Klisala York University SEM "Rarely Heard Voices: Music, Gender and Violence in Intercultural Theatre" First Nations theatre company Urban Ink Productions commissioned the play Rare Earth Arias in 2002. Urban Ink asked six women living on Vancouver, Canada’s economically depressed Downtown Eastside to each write “spoken word arias,” which were then workshopped and performed by twelve other women. Musician Katherine Harris composed and performed vocal music; one of the writers, Leith 48 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 Harris, created lyrics. limits and possibilities of voice. Nan-kuan vocals pull single syllables across long musical phrases, in effect rendering the lyrics unintelligible, while foregrounding the voice as the medium of an authentic and efficacious sentiment (ch’ing). In comparison, popular religious practices on Taiwan tend to render language and other symbolic media unintelligible, the better to extend relationships through contagious means. The use of nan-kuan in Taiwanese popular religious practices thus suggests that musical form itself serves to make specific models of social relationships durable and compelling, pointing out new directions for research on Chinese musics and religious practice. The resultant production combines operatic singing and gendered (often stereotypic) concepts of opera with Taiwanese, South African and African American vernacular song. The goal? To give voice to what Urban Ink’s director, Marie Clements, calls “the rare voice”—in other words, to express perspectives that are heard rarely or usually are not part of hegemonic discourses. Rare Earth Arias deals with perspectives of women (including Native women) living in poverty on Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside, particularly in light of missing women and numerous murders. This paper is a dialogue between seven women who created Rare Earth Arias, whom I interviewed, and myself: an ethnomusicologist and Classical musician who finds certain rare voices inside of her. Our conversation addresses tensions of representing the rare voice using culturally diverse vernacular songs together with opera in the play. Hawkins, Sherwood University of Central Florida Aires Tropicales, by Paquito DeRivera CMS See Koons, Keith - Aires Tropicales by Paquito DeRivera I argue that the ways in which rarely heard voices are presented, particularly how marginality and privilege intersect in the presentation, have implications for whether and how the perspectives are heard by society. This paper offers a unique contribution to ethnomusicology. Music in theatre that addresses gender and violence has been little studied. Hast, Dorothea Eastern Connecticut State University Lilt a Tune, Dance a Reel: Irish Traditional Music in the Classroom Hedden, Debra Gordon University of Northern Iowa InTime Technology Project: Enhancing Music Teacher Preparation The InTime project is a federally-funded collaborative effort by the 25 institutions in the Renaissance Schools to undertake the establishment and development of the InTime Technology Project, one that provides a veritable library of preK-12 online videos demonstrating the use of technology in the classroom. InTime consists of resources that are illustrations of theory into practice, presenting real teachers in real classrooms teaching real children. These videos are used to guide preservice teachers through observations of the following: (a) a variety of lesson plan examples; (b) specific content; (c) classroom management; (d) teacher behavior; (e) student behavior; (f) student and teacher interaction; (g) use of technology in the classroom; (h) appropriateness of classroom activities; (i) active classroom learning; (j) quality of instruction; (k) teacher modeling; (l) teacher directives; and (m) comparisons of lessons, teaching quality, and student learning. The InTime Project includes a view of the conceptual model, particularly the integration of the INTASC Standards, as well as the links to teacher planning, delivery, and curricular inclusions for preK-12 students with respect to those standards. Through the use of a video, a demonstration will provide a model of instruction for preservice teachers in terms of particular observation guides, questions guiding subsequent discussion, the level of adaptation for future classrooms, and the specific manner in which it has been successfully utilized in methods courses. The CMS See McCarthy, Marie - Lilt a Tune, Dance a Reel: Irish Traditional Music in the Classroom Hatfield, DJ The College of William and Mary SEM Contagious voices: nan-kuan and a chinese popular religious imagination This essay considers how musical form may constitute important dimensions of a Chinese popular religious imagination. While the relationship between Chinese music and popular religious life has long attracted scholarly attention, most of this work has either examined the role of theater in the dissemination of hagiography or the use of music in framing and providing the tempo for ritual. I examine nankuan, a southeast Fujianese / Taiwanese musical genre for voice accompanied by a small ensemble of string and woodwind instruments. Nan-kuan explores both the Individual Abstracts CMS 49 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 session is designed to serve as a model of instruction in music education courses that can be utilized in a variety of ways at a variety of levels. examines the ways private and staged performance is used in articulating personal, group, and collective identities among Gypsy groups in Uzhhorod. Based on fieldwork among Gypsy musicians and dancers in the Uzhhorod National Roma Theater and among Gypsy television and festival performers in Uzhhorod, this study analyzes the relationship between musical practices and the political mobilizations of Gypsies in Uzhhorod and looks at the role that international NGOs have begun to take on in promoting local Gypsy culture and a “new Roma identity” in Ukraine. Consideration is given to the ways in which regionalized Gypsy ideologies converge and attempt to be converted into an institutionalized “Roma culture” and a meaningful Roma identity in a post-Soviet system. Heimarck, Brita Renee University of Calgary SEM Music Editions Based on Oral Traditions: Issues of Authenticity and Representation Western tradition has prioritized literacy, even in the field of music. This has created a strong impetus for ethnomusicologists to transcribe non-Western music studied in oral traditions. While debate about transcription methods has been an ongoing part of the discipline (Ellingson in Myers, 1992), scholarly editions of non-Western music are still relatively rare. In this paper, I will investigate some of the crucial issues that arise when a scholar attempts to consolidate the many versions that may exist in an oral tradition into a useful, scholarly edition. First, one must question whether this kind of representation is appropriate or beneficial, and if so, for whom? Another issue is that of making a critical edition from multiple versions of a given piece. Over the years master musicians may develop or alter their repertoire. If the transcriber has access to multiple versions of certain pieces, how does she decide which version to publish in its entirety, and which to include only as variants? How best to indicate places where notes, phrases, harmonies, or embellishments might occur in different ways? Additional issues include different tunings, special acoustical properties, mallet techniques, and pentatonic vs. chromatic scales. In this exploration of authenticity and representation in music editions I will investigate these concerns, using Balinese shadow play music as a case study. As a broader spectrum of Western society becomes interested in listening to, studying, and performing world music, music editions of non-Western traditions may become a more important focus of the discipline of ethnomusicology. Helton, Jonathan University of Florida Performing Contemporary Music CMS The performance of contemporary music is not embraced by the majority of professional performing musicians today. It is, however, the art of our time that speaks to us perhaps most insightfully. This session will include the performance of two contemporary works for saxophone and piano: Holy Roller by Libby Larsen, and the Sonata for alto saxophone and piano by William Albright. The performance, along with introductory comments and demonstrations, will (1) illustrate the extreme difficulty found in much contemporary concert music, (2) reveal some of the challenges faced by performers, (3) make reference to the influence of jazz in contemporary concert music, and (4) raise questions regarding the relevance of contemporary concert music to today's audiences. The proposed works, both standard contemporary repertoire for the saxophone, provide ample material with which to demonstrate these points. The individual parts are very challenging; the ensemble difficulties are many; both works include elements of jazz in a contemporary context. Helbig, Adriana Columbia University SEM "On Being Roma in Ukraine: Musical Identity in a Transcarpathian Gypsy Community" Hemmasi, Farzi Columbia University SEM Feeling The Music: Movement, Embodiment, and House Music at Bang The Party. The post-communist socioeconomic transformation has had a dramatic effect on the lives of Gypsies in Uzhhorod, the administrative capital of Transcarpathia, Ukraine. This presentation focuses on the diachronic construction of Gypsy identity in Uzhhorod both under Soviet rule and later in independent Ukraine and Bang the Party (BTP), a “party” or club night in Brooklyn, New York, is a weekly house music event that features an extremely diverse group of attendees, who perform a variety of popular dances and movement styles. I combine a discussion of origins of, and connections between, music and dance styles encountered at Individual Abstracts 50 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 BTP, investigating links between rhythm and dance as observed at the party as the expressive, externalized embodiment of sound. While other authors on “club cultures” (e.g. Gilbert and Pearson 2000 and Malbon 2001) and related topics (such as capoeira, c.f. Downey 2002) have commented on issues relating to music and movement, this paper contributes to the study of contemporary urban social dance by focusing on specific practices and voices from the dance floor and the participants’ connections to related genres and aesthetics of disco and hip-hop, as contextualized within the local histories of New York City. Through dance and discourse on the subject, party participants raise a complicated set of issues connecting rhythmaticity, (sub-)cultural affinity, and racialized notions of dancing ability. Based on several years of participation in, and observation of BTP, this essay also explores the ways dancers differently transmute musical sound and texts into performances of culturally informed identity and memory. present to contemporary ethnomusicologists to consider this interface. Henry, Warren University of North Texas CMS Preparing Doctoral Students for their Roles as Teachers in Higher Education An extraordinary number of DMA and Ph.D. music graduates begin new appointments at colleges and universities without ever having received any instruction in how to teach. This fact belies a common assumption that good teachers are born, not made. Furthermore, it reinforces the assumption that, in collegiate institutions, good teaching is limited to transmission of content, relying solely on intellectual or performance skills. Courses in music pedagogy do exist, but these are normally devoted to specific instrumental or vocal techniques and the repertoire that employs those techniques. Accountability for student understanding is seldom a consideration. Henderson, Clara Indiana University SEM ‘[And] dance for God’s sake...:’ Dance Scholarship Within the First Thirty Years of the Society for Ethnomusicology This panel brings together professors who have developed courses aimed specifically at DMA and Ph.D. students, offering opportunities to think critically about teaching in higher education and to respect teaching as an art that can be developed and improved. The goals of the session are to: Dance scholarship holds a somewhat enigmatic position in the academy drifting and finding a home among various disciplines under which it tends to become subsumed. Within the field of ethnomusicology in the United States, for example, dance scholarship has been called a “step-child” (Hanna 1992: 315), and its presence in the SEM Journal has been variously described as both “family member,” and “honored guest” (Nettl 2001: 4). It is because of their conviction of the interdependence of dance and music, that some members of the Society for Ethnomusicology have influenced the incorporation of dance scholarship into the heart of ethnomusicological discourse. Despite their efforts dance scholarship continues to occupy a rather marginal position within the SEM even though the dance and ethnomusicology connection has been periodically discussed in journal articles and conference papers since the inception of the Society. In this paper I use material gleaned from SEM board minutes, early Newsletters and Journal articles, and the writings of select ethnomusicologists, to investigate the interdependence of dance and music in ethnomusicological discourse and in SEM publications during the first thirty years of the Society’s history (approximately 1953-1983) and at specific moments thereafter. I also briefly consider the influence of institutional relationships and conferences in bringing together ethnomusicological and dance scholarship. Finally, I discuss the perspectives particular SEM members bring to the notion of the interdependence of music and dance and the challenge they Individual Abstracts -Discuss the benefits to doctoral students of formal instruction in how to teach -Demonstrate ways in which learning to teach at the collegiate level might be accomplished -Focus on preparing future faculty for the campuses of tomorrow, including dealing with student diversity, using technology to enhance instruction, assessment strategies, and employing active and collaborative means of instruction. -While research and creative work are important facets in the careers of music professors, teaching (and the concomitant responsibility for student understanding) retains a central place in the professor's daily activities. Doctoral programs must acknowledge the centrality of teaching in higher education and fulfill their responsibilities to ensure that students are prepared for the full range of work in higher education as scholars, performers, and teachers. 51 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 Hesselink, Nathan Illinois State University SEM Lee Seng Kang's The Song of Hope: Music and Identity Politics in Contemporary South Korea so much, I quickly read nearly all of her published poems, including these three, which are all from her book, The Darkness In My Pockets. Lillian's Chair, the frontpiece to the book, is a poem Ms. Cabral wrote after the death of a close friend. The second song is a setting of a single line from House of the Poet. The last song is a setting of Poem of Wednesday, which includes some of my favorite lines from all of Ms. Cabral's poetry; lines that conjure up film noir and Raymond Chandler, but applied to quite a different world; lines like, "Wednesday when the week sags like a wet washline/ Wednesday with its clocks always turned to the walls." Released in 1998, Lee Seng Kang’s [Yi Saenggang] CD The Song of Hope was as bold in its stated goals as it was in its multiple underlying themes. An officially recognized master of the taegûm, or Korean transverse bamboo flute, Lee has since the 1970s also been at the forefront of collaborative efforts with musicians and styles outside of the traditional realm. This CD continues in this vein, celebrated in the program notes as giving new meaning to the idea of “Korean music” in the late twentieth century. The release represented the first recorded example of the fusion of Korean traditional music, Western jazz, and Korean popular songs. The “hope” here was for a broader, more inclusive approach to Korean-ness that flew in the face of official academic and governmental policies. Heuser, David University of Texas at San Antonio The Way of the Animal Powers The Way of the Animal Powers is for six percussionists, all playing instruments with skin heads. I wanted to create a unified percussion ensemble where the kinds of instruments played by the group would be made of the same material. The Way of the Animal Powers is part of a trio of percussion sextets which operate under this principle. The other two works are for all wood instruments, and all metal instruments. Musically the piece deals with issues of mythology and ritual, which have influenced my music from time to time for some time now. I find these influences difficult to portray in strictly instrumental works, particularly since I wish also to remain true to other artistic instincts which I think are important (and perhaps necessary) for my music. That being said, writing for percussion gives one probably the easiest ensemble with which to evoke feelings of ritual, mythology and all their correlating concepts. To further complicate matters, however, the featured Korean popular songs were from the ppongjjak (teuroteu) repertoire that hail from a colonial past. While today such music may be viewed by the general populace with an unproblematic nostalgia, the songs’ historical and musical materials are nonetheless very much rooted in the Japanese occupation of the early twentieth century (an awareness Lee hints at with his choice of album title, a liberation song popular in the colonial period). This paper will address the musically creative strategies employed by Lee in his struggle to accommodate the “foreign” (i.e., the Euro-American and Japanese) while at the same time safely asserting a distinctively older Korean identity. Heuser, David University of Texas at San Antonio Straight Talk on New Notes: Composers and Performers Together CMS Higgins, Niko Columbia University SEM Freedom, Jump Arts, and Practice Theory: What is Free about Free Jazz? See Zaimont, Judith Lang - Straight Talk on New Notes: Composers and Performers Together Heuser, David University of Texas at San Antonio The Darkness In My Pockets The trope of “freedom” permeates American and African American history, ideology, and musical practice, and is especially pervasive in jazz and free jazz. Based on fieldwork with Jump Arts, a New York City musician-run organization devoted to the performance of multidisciplinary improvisation, my paper analyzes how freedom operates in the practice of free jazz improvisation, most specifically how it relates to the interaction between the individual and ensemble. Free jazz improvisers are concerned with a type of “free” agency as it relates to different musical and social structures, such as musical form (harmonic, melodic, metric CMS I met the work of poet Olga Cabral while looking for words for a women's choir piece, and the text I chose for that piece, her poem Woman Ironing, appealed to me Individual Abstracts CMS 52 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 form) and social interaction (within the Jump community and “mainstream” music culture). As recent studies on jazz in ethnomusicology have shown, improvisation is not just the voice of individual agency, but also a more collective and interactive form of agency. How is the ideology of freedom imagined and practiced by free jazz musicians? What is free about free jazz? Using the theoretical framework of practice theory, specifically the work of anthropologist Sherry Ortner, I unravel ideas that show how freedom exists as the ideological link between individual and collective, and agency and structure, and how practice theory is a useful ethnomusicological tool for conceptualizing the social aspects of musical improvisation. I show how musicians are invested in the constructed idea of freedom and how free jazz and this freedom ideology mutually sustain one another through performance. making music, they do not explain why the Nazis insisted that the Jewish Culture League perform only Jewish music when, in the rest of Germany, Jewish music was considered undesirable. Based on examination of statements, letters, and essays by ideologues of the Nazi regime, I propose that this apparent contradiction in Nazi policy stems from the Nazis’ search for authenticity, making their objection not that Jews played music, but that they degraded “German” music, rendering it inauthentic. In this way, Nazi Germany serves as a shocking example of the dangers inherent in the multivalency of the concept of cultural appropriation. Hirshfield, Russell Western Connecticute State University The Evolution of Olivier Messiaen's Musical Style, 1929-1944 The piano works of Olivier Messiaen (1908-1992) are an enormous contribution to the literature for the instrument. By the close of the Second World War Messiaen emerges as the leading French composer of his time. The innovations in his piano music result, in part, from the adaptation of many different characteristics ? Debussy's music, Hindu rhythms, birdsong, modal harmony and religious symbolism ? that develop into a unique compositional language. Hill, Twyla J. Wichita State University CMS The Effects of Music Education on Family Dynamics and Economics in Hong Kong Culture: A Survey on Private Music Instruction in the Western Classical Tradition See Oi Yan Yau, Eugenia - The Effects of Music Education on Family Dynamics and Economics in Hong Kong Culture: A Survey on Private Music Instruction in the Western Classical Tradition An exploration and presentation of the diverse influences that inspired Messiaen during his formative years will aid in the analysis of selected piano works from the time period which encompasses his earlier, major efforts, 1929-1944. The evolution of Messiaen's musical style is traced through analysis of excerpts from selected Preludes (1929), and movements from the Vingt Regards sur l'EnfantJésus (1944), works that highlight the innovations in harmony, rhythm, timbre and form. Although they are less significant contributions to the literature, excerpts from Fantasie Burlesque (1932) and Pièce pour le Tombeau de Paul Dukas (1935) and Rondeau (1943) are reviewed in order to increase our understanding of the composer's continuing advances. Messiaen's changing historical position, from a post-impressionist to a leader of the avant-garde is illustrated through the study and performance of his compositions in a lecture-recital. The focus of the investigation leads to a greater understanding of Messiaen's influential role as the leading French composer in the generation following Debussy. Hirsch, Lily Duke University SEM The Search for Authenticity in Nazi Germany: The Jewish Culture League and the "Dangers" of Cultural Appropriation The purging of Jews from Germany’s musical life was predicated on the Nazi truism that the music of the “Nordic race” was superior to that of the Jews and that the continued influence of music deemed “Jewish” would somehow pollute the music of the true German people. However, after a series of debates, the Jews were allowed to continue making music within their own separate organization, the Jüdischer Kulturbund or Jewish Culture League, provided that the choice of music for the Jewish audiences of the League was “Jewish,” or a composition by a Jewish composer. The question this paper addresses concerns the motivation for the Nazis’ support of the Jewish Culture League. Although authors such as Erik Levi, Michael Kater, Michael Meyer, and Martin Goldschmidt cite propaganda and potential unrest as motivating factors in the Nazis’ decision to allow Jews to continue Individual Abstracts CMS 53 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 Hisama, Ellie City University of New York SEM All the way from the slums of Shaolin: East Asiaphilia in African American Hip-Hop participants continue to embrace the teachings of the Drum and criticize the music made by these female musicians. Many issues are inherent in the debate about the role of women in powwow music, such as the definitions of “tradition” and gender roles, and how these are applied to contemporary events. In this paper I explore the teachings around powwow music to identify the primary reasons for the restriction of female participation in music-making, and I highlight the ways in which people are contesting these teachings. Drawing from fieldwork interviews with male and female powwow musicians, argue that the traditional roles assigned to women in Native society are changing, forcing a reconsideration of what constitutes “tradition” in Native American powwow practices. This paper examines the widespread fascination with East Asian culture in recent hip-hop by African Americans. The Wu-Tang Clan, a rap group comprising nine African American men from Staten Island, has built a phenomenally successful career over the last decade by forging an identity based on Orientalist views of East Asia. Incorporating sonic samples from martial arts films and quotes from centuries-old texts on Asian war strategy, the Wu-Tang Clan has led the way for other black rappers in representing the Orient. In the Wu-Tang Clan’s song “Protect Ya Neck” (1993), the projects of Staten Island become “the slums of Shaolin.” Over the past decade, male and female rappers such as Jeru the Damaja, Foxy Brown, Afu-Ra, and Cappadonna have integrated elements of East Asian culture into their music, CD covers, videos, and lyrics, manufacturing an Asiaphilic trend in hip-hop to which a sizeable segment of black consumers responds. Hoekman, Timothy The University of Florida Straight Talk on New Notes: Composers and Performers Together See Zaimont, Judith Lang - Straight Talk on New Notes: Composers and Performers Together This desire for a mysterious Orient in these examples can be related to Orientalist trends in pop and postmodern music of the 1980s, in which the Orient is represented as a traditionally passive and mystical force (Hisama 2000). Yet it also diverges from these earlier models by tapping into a stream of East Asiaphilia evident in black popular culture at large. This paper argues for the complexity of black Orientalist musical expressions in American hip hop, ranging from a benign interest in learning about the Oriental Other to a virulent anti-Asian racism. Hoefnagels, Anna Augustana University Women and Powwow Music: Tradition and innovation Hood, Kathleen Independent Scholar "Radio Sawa: Winning Arab Hearts and Minds?" SEM Radio Sawa’s news director, Mouafac Harb, reportedly told the Los Angeles Times that “winning hearts and minds cannot happen before winning ears” (Efron, Sonni. 2002. “Reaching Arabs via Airwaves.” Los Angeles Times. Aug. 26. A1, A6). Radio Sawa began broadcasting in March 2003 in various Arab countries. It is also available via satellite and streams live on the internet at www.ibb.gov/radiosawa. Like the Voice of America broadcasts, Radio Sawa is produced by the Broadcasting Board of Governors, an arm of the United States government. This new radio station is on the vanguard of American cultural imperialism, attacking the Arab world on two fronts: first, it tries to win the hearts of young Arabs with its seductive alternation of Arab and Western pop tunes; second, it attempts to win their minds with news broadcasts dismissed by some as US propaganda. SEM Many traditional practices are evident at Native American powwows, including the gender-specific dance categories and stylized dancing, and the male-dominated musical performances. According to some powwow musicians and teachers of Native culture, women are restricted from striking the big drum used at powwows, and may only sing in a supportive capacity to the male performers, and at specific places in the songs. Various explanations are cited for these restrictions, with people primarily indicating that “tradition” dictates these rules. However, some gender-based conventions in powwow music practices are being challenged through the creation of mixed-sex Drums and all-women Drums (Hatton, 986). Yet despite the progress made by female powwow musicians, many powwow Individual Abstracts CMS This paper will investigate the phenomenon of cultural imperialism, specifically “media imperialism” (Boyd-Barrett 1977). It also looks at cultural politics as practiced by the US government in its relationship with the Arab world. In particular, this paper is informed by Timothy Mitchell’s Colonizing Egypt (1988), which examines the effectiveness of colonizing powers as being directly related to 54 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 Howard, Keith University of London Performers as Researchers: Exploring Partnership the successful separation and control of body and mind. Radio Sawa can be seen in this light, as a tool in the US government’s attempt at controlling the Arab mind via music, which goes hand in hand with their proposed efforts to control Iraqi Arabs physically by warfare. This paper explores strategies for empowering performers as researchers, focusing on recent collaborative work with three Zimbabwean, Iranian, and Nepalese musicians. These represent distinct traditions, but have much in common: they have international reputations as performers, they live and work primarily in Europe, and none has a PhD. The project, undertaken within the AHRB Research Centre for Cross-Cultural Music and Dance Performance, addresses the distinction increasingly made in Britain between teaching and research in funding in which, put simply, academics are expected to research but performers to teach. This approach has a number of dangers, not least that performance, as a primary location of ethnomusicological research, becomes relegated to a second-rate position in the academy. Hooker, Lynn Indiana University SEM Authentic / Exotic / Erotic: Gypsiness and Gender in the Hungarian Folkdance Revival In the Hungarian folk revival known as the táncház [dancehouse] movement, Hungarian Roma (Gypsies) are both privileged informants and exotic Others. The (mostly male) musicians of the revival rely on rural Rom musicians, especially those from Transylvania, as preservers of traditional Hungarian repertoire and style. Although táncház rhetoric centers on tropes of authenticity and nationality, its musical informants’ Otherness only magnifies their masculine authority. How can performers work as equal partners in the research endeavour? In this project, each performer chose repertory to record and publish. Chartwell Dutiro, an expert Shona mbira player, trained European and American musicians, Toraj Kiaras, a classical singer, worked with Iranian musicians resident in Europe, and Yarjung Gurung selected fellow Nepalese ritualists to work with. Graduate students and ethnomusicologists were then invited to work alongside the three, building accounts that analyse and document the materials. In my report, I will assess what has happened so far, and suggest potential developments. The project is ongoing, forming a central part of the Research Centre, which is in itself a collaborative project between SOAS University of London, the University of Surrey, and Roehampton University of Surrey, and is funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Board. A particularly potent case study for the racial contradictions of the táncház is the tsingarlas [Gypsy csárdás], the only táncház dance dialect with women’s solo parts. In appropriating the tsingarlas, non-Rom women enact female Gypsiness through erotic and exotic stereotypes of emotional and bodily abandon, liberating themselves from the male lead through this masquerade (see Butler 1990, Tonkin 1992). The Gypsy mystique, including its erotic elements, is crucial to the commodification of Rom music and musicians not only within the táncház but also on stage and on the international concert circuit. Yet the fluid interactions between Rom and Hungarian, musicians and dancers, local tradition and transnational scene constantly undermine that commodity. Drawing on fieldwork in Hungary and North America, in this paper I first examine the authentic/exotic/erotic signification of Gypsiness in the táncház and on stage. Second, I discuss how Rom musicians both affirm the táncház’s aesthetic of authenticity and challenge it through their musical borrowings, both local and global. Finally, I focus on two choreographers, a Hungarian man and a Rom woman, who place the tsingarlas in a transnational spectrum of “classical” Gypsy dance. Individual Abstracts SEM Humphreys, Paul University of California, Los Angeles SEM Panpipes as an Instrument of Learning: Broadening the Cultural Praxis of 'Music Fundamentals' Panpipes are found in many regions of the world and fashioned from a variety of materials, principally bamboo, wood, and clay. The science of chemistry has contributed yet another viable and widely available medium for the cottage manufacture of these instruments: polyethylene tubing, available at finer hardware stores everywhere. Panpipes (easily constructed from a basic kit of materials consisting of cut lengths of PETE tubing, wooden dowels, cross brace, and yarn) 55 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 Iddrisu, Habib Bowling Green State University SEM Singing Baamaya: The Role of the Praise Singer in Traditional Dagbamba Music are especially useful in the context of a "music fundamentals" class insofar as they allow ordered pitch collections not only to be played, but to be visually represented. Theoretical topics such as interval and melodic inversion--well reinforced through performing and composing varisa exercises as employed in the vocal pedagogy of South Asia--are thus realized in the process of their presentation. Moveable plugs, moreover, allow for the discovery and exploration of intervals and scales that fall outside the tempered system. In this paper, I draw upon these and other examples from my own teaching experience to show that the activity of building and playing panpipes provides a tactile point of reference for students of music fundamentals. This allows them to acquire broad-based theoretical and practical musical knowledge while also gaining preliminary acquaintance with culturally distinct repertoires of music. In the Dagbamba dance genre known as baamaya, the work of a praise drummer (lung-a) is often paralleled by that of a praise singer (baanga). As with the lung-a, the baanga’s art lies in his ability to present the many proverbs and family histories of his community in a musical and cogent fashion. Baanga recitations are generally delivered in a chant or rap-like way that, while based in Dagbon singing styles, is melodically short of full-blown song. Only occasionally will the baanga use a known melody. Within baamaya, from before midnight until dawn, the baanga is expected to motivate dancers by singing – sometimes to them alone, at other times to the community at large – of important events in the dancers’ various family lineages. Through the course of an evening the baanga may praise the same dancer a dozen or more times. In each instance he must say something new. Hurley-Glowa, Susan Franklin & Marshall College SEM Authenticity, Representation, and Blackface Minstrel Shows in an Adirondack Foothills Hamlet It is well documented that blackface minstrel shows survived in isolated, rural, white communities until well into the 20th century. Musicologist Charles Hamm has written about such shows in Upstate Vermont within recent memory. In this paper, I will explore the minstrel show tradition in a small town in far upstate New York. Blackface minstrelsy was extremely popular through the early decades of the 20th century in this lumbertown, but gradually lost favor in the 1940s. Recent research suggests that a young urban music teacher with good intentions and an interest in local history deliberately revived the minstrel show tradition in the mid1950s, drawing on the ‘authentic” experiences of community elders who took part in earlier shows in an historical reconstruction. These revived shows prospered until the mid-1970s as an annual community variety show event, although they were no longer performed in blackface. While blackface shows are always hurtful and demeaning, numerous scholars in recent years have explained that racism alone does not explain the minstrel show’s popularity; they have served a variety of functions to their white audiences. Foremost amongst these is the concept that putting on blackface enables actors to reflect and comment on their own culture, in this case, in what seems to be a time-honored (or even authentic) manner. Based on ethnographic interviews with living participants in combination with a study of existing scripts, scores, and photographs, I intend to explore the meaning, structure, and function of these shows in the context of Adirondack community life. Individual Abstracts Building from recently conducted interviews and my own experience growing up as a baamaya dancer in the Tamale area, this paper investigates the baanga tradition. I discuss notions of baanga training and presentation. By exploring text, I demonstrate the means by which the baanga uses his knowledge of family histories in order to inspire his dancers to give their best. Finally, I discuss how the baanga uses these histories to build a bridge between the performers and audience. Isaacson, Eric Indiana University Enhancing College Teaching with The Digital Music Library CMS Variations2: The Indiana University Digital Music Library project is a major research initiative being carried out under a four-year NSF grant. Its goal is to establish a second-generation digital library testbed system for music, which will provide on-demand audio; high-resolution scanned score images; symbolically encoded score files; and tools to enable music instructors to use these resources to enhance classroom teaching and student activities, and to support distance learning. The project is multidisciplinary, involving researchers from music, information science, law, computer science, university libraries, and information technology 56 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 services. This presentation focuses, however, on how Variations2 can enhance teaching and learning. Olivier Messiaen. A performance of the complete Rain Tree Sketches will follow the lecture. The origin of the Rain Tree Sketches traces back to Takemitsu's percussion trio Rain Tree (1981), which was based on a description of a raintree in Kenzaburo Oe's short novel "Clever Rain Tree" (1980). The two artists inspired one another and eventually each created their own Rain Tree series in their medium. Rain Tree is used as a metaphor of water circulating in the cosmos, and Takemitsu employed Messiaen's modes of limited transposition in order to construct the pitch collections evocative of cosmic imagery. Instructional uses are supported through an application that integrates a number of functions currently available only in separate programs: media player score image viewer, capable of synchronizing with audio music notation editor Takemitsu's goal as an artist was to expand the possibilities of music and express himself through creation of a universal musical language. This lecture recital shows how this expressive goal is realized in the Rain Tree Sketches. digital timeliner for creating form diagrams tools for annotating scores, notation, and diagrams with text, analytical symbols (e,g., figured bass, roman numerals), and shapes (circles, boxes, lines) Jacobson, Marion New York University SEM All I want for Christmas is My Tiger ' Combo 'Cordion : Competition and Accommodation with Rock and Roll At the End the Accordion's Golden Age in America templates for posing questions and evaluating answers the ability to save, retrieve, share, and submit lessons Use of Variations2 will (1) enhance students' active engagement with music by making it easier to practice critical listening skills and by integrating visual, aural, and tactile activities, and (2) enhance teaching by putting music library resources at the instructor?s fingertips and providing tools to access and use them to facilitate, rather than frustrate, effective face-to-face teaching. The presentation will describe and demonstrate both aspects of the project. Isshiki, Tomoko Fort Lee, New Jersey The Cosmic Metaphor of Toru Takemitsu's Rain Tree Sketches The piano accordion succeeded in becoming the most popular of musical instruments in America of the 1940s, 50s, and 60, spreading to local communities through the “accordion studio system” (a national network of instrument manufacturers, teachers, and small-businesspeople). As rock and roll climbed to commercial success, the accordion industry fought back. Threatened by the Beatles’ ominous appearance on the Ed Sullivan Show and the skyrocketing sales of guitars and keyboard instruments, accordion instructors refused to teach their students rock, dismissing its artistic value and positing that it was a fad. CMS Despite these views, some accordion industry leaders were aware of the significance of rock as a musical genre. Not only did they advocate appropriating rock into the accordion repertoire, but one manufacturer/promoter of accordion playing seized opportunity to improve the instrument and encourage more dynamic and popular performances. Resulting from this effort was the Tiger Combo ‘Cordion, designed manufactured by the Pancordion Co. in Long Island City, Queens. I present the Tiger Combo along with other innovations in the “accordion world” as a response to the cultural takeover, rupture and reappropriations of rock and roll in white ethnic culture. The accordion—long situated at the crossroads of One of the most influential Japanese composers in the late twentieth century, Toru Takemitsu (1930-1996) created a unique musical language by integrating the disparate musical traditions of East and West. This lecture/recital will investigate the metaphor behind Takemitsu's last two solo piano pieces, Rain Tree Sketch (1982) and Rain Tree Sketch II (1992). The lecture explores the interaction of ideas between Takemitsu and his novelist friend Kenzaburo Oe, the Nobel Prize winning author whom inspired Takemitsu to composer the Rain Tree series. An analytic overview of the piano pieces will also be given which indicates the influence of Individual Abstracts 57 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 genres— offers a unique window into an little-understood cultural juncture that occurred in the process of making and popularizing rock music at mid century. scope, I then examine the ramifications and the role of this Otherness in structuring authenticities while writing jazz history and its effect on the space between the French and American jazz scenes by drawing on my own fieldwork in Paris in 2002. Jacoby, Marc VanderCook College of Music ATMI Using Macromedia's Director and SequenceXtra to create interactive educational material for the web Jankowsky, Richard C. University of Chicago Music, Possession and the Racialized Body in Tunisia Macromedia's Director is a popular development tool useful for building user interactivity complete with animation, audio and graphics. Until recently its ability to handle MIDI data was limited to output through QuickTime and some input features that were platform dependent. Now with SequenceXtra, the multimedia developer has the tools available to control all aspects of MIDI input and output and develop applications for internet delivery. This is powerful for music educators and developers who would like to take full advantage of the strengths MIDI has to offer. Marc Jacoby will demonstrate the use of these tools in the context of on-line content development and the special requirements of internet delivery. For centuries, North Africa has been a destination for countless displaced sub—Saharan Africans, most of whom were captured slaves forced across the Sahara. In Tunisia, the sub—Saharan body has signified a distinct and powerful otherness, whether in the supposed societal threat, the black community posed in the eyes of certain Tunisian elites, or in the potency its members were assumed to have in their workings with the spirit world. In this paper, I explore the performance of stambeli, the trance and spirit possession music of the black community in Tunisia. Stambeli fuses local Tunisian beliefs with those imported from sub— Sahara, invoking without apparent contradiction a remarkable diversity of personalities, ranging from sub— Saharan spirits and North African Muslim saints to the Prophet Mohammed, his muezzin (caller to prayer) Bilal, and, above all, God. Based on fieldwork in Tunis in 201 and 2002, this paper explores what it means to be a trancing or possessed stambeli body in Tunisia. Such bodies have been construed as a problem in Tunisian society, not only through the debate over the tolerance for the performing (sub— Saharan ) African, body, but also through its supposed corruption of the white, Arab bodies that also participate. Stambeli practitioners, like the black spirits in their pantheon, are ascribed a variable amount of both sameness and difference, a relationship they must continually negotiate through performance. At a broader level, I suggest that the performance of stambeli encouraged simultaneously the integration AND marginalization of the subSaharan body vis-á-vis Tunisian society. James, Donald University of Chicago SEM After Django: French Jazz Historiography and the American Jazz Narrative With some notable exceptions - Django Reinhardt, Stephane Grappelli, and Michel Petrucciani - it has historically proven quite difficult for French jazz musicians to crack the American scene and, as a result, forge themselves a spot in jazz history. Moreover, the musicians who have made their way into the great narrative ofjazz history (Pierre Michelot, for instance) have performed at the margins of the American scene, known only as sidemen. This paper seeks to address the reasons for the exclusion of French musicians from the jazz canon using Django Reinhardt’s American career as a comparative model. Using nationalisms and authenticities as theoretical guideposts, I argue that the Exotic in Reinhardt’ s Roma heritage as well as his “outsidership” as a guitarist paradoxically afforded him “différance”, in the full Derridean sense, that defined his career in America and allowed access to commercial venues inaccessible to the “more traditional” French musicians. Jones, Jaime University of Chicago The Aesthetics of Spectacle in Hindi Film SEM The phenomenal popularity of Hindi films throughout India and the South Asian diaspora is matched by a near-complete disavowal of the form by India’s educated elite, and a concomitant tendency, among Western scholars, to condemn its ubiquitous music-scenes as too Westernized, too commercial, too conventional. I plan to draw specifically on French jazz histories written by André Hodeir and Ludovic Tournés and also some correspondence of French jazz critic Charles Delaunay to identify the specifities behind Reinhardt’ s successes. Broadening the Individual Abstracts SEM 58 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 In this paper, utilizing Richard Dyer’s formulation of musical-as-utopia as well as more recent work that expands JL Austin’s concept of performativity, I examine the very conventions that tend to delimit the structure, placement, and content of film songs, and I attempt to locate not only how but what these songs/scenes perform. I suggest that the accumulation of metaphor through image, sound, and movement which characterizes the conventional-spectacular music scene of “Bollywood” cinema leaves the gap between utopian fantasy and modern reality open, recognizable. Something more can be communicated via the breaking out and through of the actual conventions which allow such metaphors to do their work. Through close analysis, I seek to reveal the individual aspects that comprise the aesthetic excess of the music-scene. I attempt to provide not only a reading of a particular film or song, but also a framework for the investigation of any multivalent, heavily consumed medium. revolutionary contribution to 20th century Korean popular culture. Seo’s music is not a simple appropriation of rap as it is known in the U.S, where it often addresses racial, political, and economic marginality. Seo’s rap deals with a different kind of marginality: the cultural struggles of Korean youth against a repressive government educational system supported by the “older generation” (gisungsedae). While the older generation stressed that becoming academically superior was the only way to survive in a competitive modern world, it is ironic that the pressure to succeed at any cost drove some students to despair, depression, and even suicide. Based on interviews with audiences and analyses of sound, text, and video--including the provocative 1994 song “Kyosil Idea” (“Classroom Ideology”)--I will discuss the new generation’s cultural ideology as it is embedded in late 20th century Korean culture. My study is informed by the careful study of numerous Hindi films produced over the past twenty-five years (although my paper will focus on no more than two), and by preliminary fieldwork which I plan to conduct in Pune and Mumbai over the summer of 2003. Kajikawa, Loren University of California, Los Angeles Playing Out: Jazz/Creative Music and the Afro-Asian Connection Jorgensen, Estelle Indiana University Transforming Music Education: Creating Alternatives SEM The expression “playing out” refers to the jazz practice of organizing solos and/or compositions without regard to traditional chord changes or scales. In “playing out” musicians refuse conventional ideas about the way music is supposed to go, substituting instead alternative forms of organizing sound and, consequently, of embodying identity. This paper explores some the contexts in which African American and Asian American jazz musicians have chosen to “play out.” CMS See Reichling, Mary - Transforming Music Education: Creating Alternatives In this paper, I examine the ways in which popular music articulated the rise of a “new generation” (shinsedae) in Korea during the 1990s. This generation, comprising those born after 1970, found its representative voice in Seo Taiji, who succeeded in adapting rap music to Korean culture. For about two decades now, the San Francisco bay area has been home to a group of Asian American jazz musicians. Originally inspired by the black-nationalist movements of the 1960s, they sought to make audible a uniquely Asian American approach to music. While their approaches to music making are varied, one aspect that cuts across generation, cultural background and taste has been a sustained interest in collaborating with musicians from the Association for the Advancement of Creative Music (AACM). AACM musicians, many of who have pursued Eastern spiritual and musical concepts, have reciprocated this interest enthusiastically. In 1992, Seo organized the group “Seo Taiji and Boys” and released his first album, “Nan Arayo” (“I Know”), which instantly shifted mainstream popular music away from slow, sentimental ballad music toward faster, dance-oriented genres including rap. Seo’s stylistic mixing and sampling techniques, sensational visual presentation, and persuasive lyrics have been viewed by many as the most These musicians display a desire to transgress racial boundaries, to break free of the stereotypes that are mapped onto their performing bodies. While African American musicians struggle against a canonized version of black masculinity propagated by jazz traditionalists, Asian American artists create their music against the void of cultural invisibility. Yet, how aware have these groups been of one Jung, Eun-Young University of Pittsburg SEM Korean Hip-Hop for a "New Generation": SEO Taiji's "classroom idoleogy Individual Abstracts 59 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 another’s predicaments? By what criteria can we evaluate their accomplishments? This paper combines ethnography, anecdotal writing and music criticism to address these and other questions. Kamstra, Darin Aurora Borealis University of Illinois Palestine, Atlas reached international attention through the polyglot musical practices of the early technopop collective Transglobal Underground. Though Atlas’ singing in Arabic is one of the elements that had most connected her to the group’s ideological interest in a transglobal, unified world, her extroverted bellydancing on stage was also an element of spectacle that has continued to provide for much continued recognition of her music in the world music market. Beyond the issue of how she uses dance to deploy her gender, her engagement with an Arabic cultural heritage is fundamental to Atlas’ project. This employment of Arab cultural markers is meant to signify a political discourse. Atlas sees herself as embodying an effort to reverse, close, and heal a false division between Arabic and Jewish cultural practice—a division that opened due to historical circumstances.Judgments about the value of her appropriations depend on the position of the listener. Her attempts to elide political differences by way of cultural and spiritual transcendence can be read by some as liberatory, or even as contemporary liberal hybridity’s well-meaning yet ultimately poor cultural stereotyping. But by others, it can be seen also as merely an example of cultural trespass or crude striptease. CMS I had the pleasure of viewing the northern lights twice while growing up and attending college in eastern Washington State. Aurora Borealis was inspired by my desire to aurally represent this breathtaking spectacle. The two occurrences of the northern lights that I witnessed were completely different; four sections in Aurora Borealis portray these separate events. The first section represents the beginnings of the phenomenon, which gradually develops across the sky. Various sources of white noise represent a broad spectrum of light: bass drum played with swirled brushes, ocean drum, sandpaper blocks, sizzle cymbal, and shaker. The second section symbolizes the first type of display that I witnessed: what would best be described as curtains of multi-colored light seemed to pulsate and shift along the northern horizon. To portray this, a group of metal instruments alternates with a group of wooden instruments, each with its own pulsating and shifting pattern. This material returns in the fourth section, which fades away rather quickly at the end, much like the northern lights themselves. Katz, Mark Peabody Conservatory Discourse and "Disc"course in the Hip-Hop DJ Battle DJ battles are competitions in which turntablists—hip-hop musicians who use phonographs and mixers as musical instruments—showcase their physical and rhetorical virtuosity. The third section simulates the other form of the northern lights that I witnessed: a moving stream of white light. This stream began on the northeast horizon and gradually increased in length. In time, the stream passed almost directly overhead, flowed off towards the northwest horizon, and ultimately formed a continuous band across the sky. The music simulates this phenomenon by passing an everlengthening line of notes from one player to another through the ensemble. Physical virtuosity is demonstrated through the complexity and novelty of the turntablist’s moves, which fall into two main categories: scratching and beat juggling. Scratching involves changing the speed and direction of the disc and fading the sound on and off. Beat juggling requires DJs to isolate and repeat discrete passages on different discs, alternating between multiple turntables. Both practices may be accompanied by “body tricks,” which impose an added level of difficulty. Examples include spinning (oneself) in between beats, or moving discs with the hands behind the back or with other body parts. Karl, Brian Columbia University SEM Popluar Music of the Arabic World? Iconicity, Intention, and Reception in the Cultural Appropriations of Natacha Atlas Rhetorical virtuosity is displayed by the manipulation of pre-recorded vocal fragments into a discourse about themselves and their competitors. In an extension of signifying, a mode of discourse rooted in African-American oral culture, performers mine the vast body of rap records to locate their own names or Aspects of kitsch, exoticism, and nostalgia inform the public image of Natacha Atlas, a musical performer of complicated geo-cultural origins. Born in Belgium to a Jewish father who traces his own roots to Egypt and Morocco by way of Individual Abstracts SEM 60 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 monikers as well as appropriate phrases, juxtaposing them so as to tout their own skills or “dis” the other DJs (i.e., own name + boast or competitor’s name + insult). Keebaugh, Aaron University of Florida Drum and Bugle Corps: Lacunae in American Musical History This paper will explore how battling turntablists use the technologies of sound reproduction to make music and, in the words of renowned DJ Rob Swift, “prepare for combat” (Rob Swift, interview with author, 2001). Audio examples and video clips from battles will supplement the discussion. Drum and Bugle Corps was born in church basements, American Legion posts, and Veterans of Foreign Wars (VFW) halls in post-World War II America. Throughout its short yet expansive history, this unique activity has been a source of musical entertainment and enlightenment for several generations of spectators. Drawing from numerous articles, interviews, and field research; this paper will focus on the historical developments of corps activity as well as the social constructs of the participants and audience members. Furthermore, I will show how the Drum and Bugle Corps evolved due to socio-economic pressures, media relations, popular tastes, and the effects on the governing principles and organization at large. Kaye, Andrew Albright College SEM Jazz for Breakfast, Ie-ie-ie for Lunch and Funk for Dinner: Antropophagia in the Modern Brazilian Cinematic Soundtrack Brazilian musics, like most American musics, are based on long-term processes of fusion and assimilation of diverse multicultural elements. At least since Oswald de Andrade’s manifesto of 1928, Brazilian cultural criticism has liked to refer to this process as antropophagia--literally, cannibalism, but metaphorically suggesting self-renovation through the consumption of cultural differences. Longterm historical analysis of Brazilian music helps illuminate the real and fascinating trajectories of anthropophagic process, and the author has already demonstrated, in a previous paper, how print sources such as the Jornal do Brasil can help us trace these processes decade-by-decade, and even year-by-year. In this paper, the author will focus on changes in the Brazilian cinematic soundtrack from the 1950s to the present, in an attempt to show how soundtrack history reifies the broader changes suggested in other kinds of historical sources, such as Brazilian newspapers and magazines (for example, Veja), and data from recorded music sales over time. These sources show the progressive impact made by Englishlanguage popular musical idioms, which are palpable by the mid-1960s, and increasingly reflected in the Brazilian musical diet of the subsequent decades. Can similar changes be noted in film soundtracks over time? The author will discuss soundtrack trends in general, and focus on three well-known films from the period under consideration: Orfeu Negro (1959), Bye Bye Brazil (1979) and Cidade de Deus (2002). Individual Abstracts SEM A large bulk of the literature dedicated to the Drum and Bugle Corps activity has, until recently, been concerned only with the pedagogical and performance values. While the corps’ evolution and productive ethos has had significant influence on high school and college-level marching bands, the study of such a musical phenomenon should not only be limited this single perspective. It is my greatest hope, therefore, that the historical, sociological, and functional aspects will serve as avenues for future research into this unique genre that has for too long been neglected in American musical history. Keenan, Elizabeth Columbia University SEM Courtney, Kurt, and the Authorship of Live Through This: Representations of Gender in the Construction of Rock Music Authenticity The debate surrounding the authorship of Hole’s Live Through This – which began shortly after the album was released in 1994 and continues today in discussions about the band and its singer, Courtney Love – presents an opportunity to examine the role of gender in discussions of rock music authenticity. Live Through This, a successful major-label album, challenged some of the roles for women in rock music by positing that women could be both commercial stars and still maintain rock music authenticity. In the case of Hole, however, journalists and fans have constructed a counter-discourse of Hole’s inauthenticity, based on the behavior of Hole singer Courtney Love, that has become the accepted version of the story. This discourse relies on the assumption that authenticity and authorship are fundamentally connected, and that Courtney Love and Hole – despite receiving 61 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 writing credits for the album – were not responsible for its authorship, but that Courtney Love’s husband Kurt Cobain wrote the music. associations with religious practices have greater resonance with Westerners than do current musical practices in the source country. The idea of “authenticity” has been a key concept in both academic and journalistic accounts of popular music, especially within the discussion of rock music. Rock music – even when commercially successful – is often defined as “authentic,” subcultural, and artistic, but women have seldom been seen as bearers of authenticity in the genre of rock music. Through the case of Hole, this paper examines the ways music industry executives, the band itself, journalists, and fans all participate in the representation of rock music authenticity and the ways these discourses of authenticity are inherently gendered. Keyes, Cheryl L University of California, Los Angeles Rhyme and Reason: The Art of Freestyle Rap This paper will examine an aspect of hip-hop verbal culture called “freestyle.” Freestyle or freestylin’ can be defined as an extemporaneous recitation of unrehearsed or improvised rhymes performed in a live context. As a vibrant part of the underground rap music scene, freestyle sessions unfold as either open mike verbal battles between dueling emcees or as “cyphers,” a semi-to-full circle of three or more rappers who “feed off’ of the momentum of each other’s rhymes. Artists who perform freestyle assert that the art of this practice is not measured by one’s ability to recite rhymes in a fluent manner but to rhyme about an immediate situation in the most coherent, unique yet stylized poetic manner. When an artist masters freestyle rap, s/he garners distinction, merit, and above all street credibility in the underground world of hip-hop. Keister, Jay University of Colorado SEM The Shakuhachi as Spiritual Tool: A Japanese Buddhist Instrument in America The Japanese shakuhachi flute currently leads a dual existence. Presently, the shakuhachi functions as an important mainstay of Japanese traditional music in solo and ensemble performances alongside the koto (zither) and the shamisen (lute). Unlike these other instruments, the shakuhachi has a historical association with Zen Buddhism made famous by monks of the now defunct Fuke sect who once used the instrument as an aid to meditation. While the Buddhist associations with the instrument are implicit and relegated to history in Japan, many North American players who have appropriated the instrument consciously use the shakuhachi as a tool of meditation and as a way of articulating Buddhist philosophy. While there has been much scholarly work on rap music and various regional and international hip-hop music scenes, there is still minimal study of underground hiphop music, particularly the art of freestylin’. With such well-known freestyle venues from coast-to-coast including Washington Square Park and the itinerant Lyricist Lounge open mike sessions of New York City and Project Blowed of South Central Los Angeles, this paper presents a synthesis of fieldwork data from similar live contexts. As such, the discussion will draw specifically from feedback interviews with artists and excerpts from video documentation in examining the learning process and aesthetics of improvised rhymes. This paper examines how the shakuhachi is being recontextualized in the West in a way that reifies its Buddhist background and articulates differences between musical and religious practice. This use of shakuhachi as a meditation device for “blowing Zen” has raised debate among players and teachers in the West about the proper interpretation of the Japanese tradition. While some remain skeptical and assert that the shakuhachi is first and foremost a musical instrument (gakki), some players go so far as to reject its “entertainment” function and call for a return to its “original” function as a spiritual instrument (hoki). This study demonstrates to ethnomusicologists the kinds of transformations that can occur in Western appropriations of Asian musical instruments. In this case, the instruments historical Individual Abstracts SEM Khalil, Alexander University of California, San Diego Escape from Eden: "Liu Qi- Chao and the Power of Names" SEM Since immigrating to the United States in 1984, Chinese multi-instrumentalist Liu Qi-Chao has changed the Chinese character he uses to represent his stage name, pronounced “Qi”, three times. An examination of the conditions under which Liu changed his stage name, and his reasons for doing so, reveal his personal struggle against the boundaries, both hostile and protective, that surround him as a “world musician” living in the United States. During a series of interviews, Liu explained 62 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 to me how, through his stage names, he identified himself first as a keeper of tradition for the Chinese immigrant community, then as a jazz improviser filled with the mystical power of the Orient, and finally as a unique individual. Using his unique strategy of renaming, or “re-characterizing” himself, Liu has managed to negotiate and re-negotiate his identity in such a way that he can live not between, but within more than one musical world. In Liu’s experience, concepts of authenticity do not afford him the opportunity to adapt to, or be influenced by, his musical surroundings. Instead, they demand that he remain a true representative of his own musical tradition. In this paper I challenge this concept of authenticity. I liken the situation of immigrant musicians to that of being in a Garden of Eden; they may not partake of certain types of knowledge without losing their privileged status. This study is vital towards understanding the dynamic nature of hybridization in music and aims to develop a broader, more inclusive concept of authenticity. Khannanov, Ildar Oklahoma City, Oklahoma Music Theory Pedagogy: An International Perspective development. By locating the study in the genre of praise songs prevalent among lyre and lute communities as well as herders and nomads I will first outlining two parameters of defining music and suggest two approaches to anthologizing the history of African indigenous music. Finally, I will highlight the advantages and constraints of using methodologies rooted in historical musicology and music ethnography in presenting the history of African music and/or the history of music in Africa. Kilstofte, Mark Furman University A Past Persistence A Past Persistence was commissioned by the Aurora Brass Quintet for its performances at the Sixth International Festival of Brass in Verona, Italy. Clearly a throwback to the music of the Renaissance, the work's stylistic appropriations are further betrayed by a notational preference for long note values, the near-absence of ties and, in the initial phrases, the lack of bar lines. CMS See Neff, Severine - Music Theory Pedagogy: An International Perspective The piece begins with an extensive introduction during which the material forming the basis of the composition slowly unfolds. Following this prolonged (and intensified) clausula vera, the ensemble dives headlong into a rhythmic romp inspired by chanson in general and musique mesurée à l'antiquein particular. Notable throughout are the many pauses designed to exploit the resonance of the halls in which the premiere performances took place. This homophony is interrupted by the hoquet-ishness [sic] of the central section, another confluence of the antiquated and modern. Here pulse is maintained by a variety of special effects such as foot shuffling and mute clanging. The "hiccups" build to a unison climax and a return to the opening where, in conclusion, the introductory fragments are retooled to fit the mood and tempo of the dance. The work is dedicated to friend and colleague, Gary Malvern. Kidula, Jean SEM History of African music and the history of music in Africa: Historical musicology or/and musicological ethnography. Ethnomusicologists have traditionally written ethnographies on the music of Africa and historians on African use music reports as primary sources for cultural histories. More recent ly, attempts have been made to document the history of music in Africa by moving away from studies reported in the ethnographic present or by studying popular and other music genres that have counterparts in the rest of the world. Very few anthologies exist that document the development of style in African music. This lack presents interesting problems for researchers and teachers of indigenous musics of Africa, which have impacted other genres that intersect with international styles in terms of the historical identity of the pieces. Kisliuk, Michelle University of Virginia SEM "Pygmy Song" and BaAka Lives: the impact of a globally imagined iconicity One response is to examine the purpose and /or place of music and/in history. This paper will therefore examine the concept of music and/or song as a carrier of historical event, against the notion of music and song as representatives of stylistic Individual Abstracts CMS Central African “pygmies” and their music have been icons of a dialectical antiquity/modernity, and of either a utopian or a “savage” nostalgia in many spheres (see Kisliuk 1991, Bradford and Blume 1992, Feld 1996) including 63 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 Klingenstein, Beth Gigante Valley City State University ATMI Tracing the Development of a Required CD ROM Portfolio: Issues of Philosophy, Integration, Product, and Assessment popular film, music (e.g. Herbie Hancock, Zap Mama, Deep Forest), in the minds of missionaries, as well as for scholars, writers, and adventurers (e.g. Cohn Turnbull, Jean-Pierre Hallet, Louis Sarno, Alan Lomax, Robert Farris Thompson). This paper explores the implications of this iconicity in the lives of particular BaAka, using as a primary example a troupe of a BaAka invited in 2001 to “collaborate” with Alonzo King’s Lines Ballet based in San Francisco (I accompanied the performers and their non-BaAka managers on part of the tour). A second example focuses on an extended family of BaAka from a relatively isolated area in the northern Republic of the Congo (whom I last visited in 2001), and the impact of a missionary who “earns stripes” by ostensibly converting BaAka to evangelical Christianity. I describe the lived details as well as the rhetoric that surrounds and contextualizes these examples. The paper concludes by questioning the implications of researching with, teaching the song forms of, and writing about the lives and music of “forest people” under the cloak of such a heavy global imaginary which continually reinscribes an edenic (or a “savage”) nostalgia. Klemenc, Mari Arko University of California, Berkeley Arranging the Nation in Slovenian Musical Practices Since Valley City State University became a laptop university in 1996, the faculty has worked to create discipline specific applications for the use of technology. The presenters will discuss their creative use of technology throughout the music curriculum, including Music History projects utilizing composing and digital notation, creating PowerPoint and web page presentations, developing a partially on-line class through the use of Blackboard, and using the internet for class research projects. Also of interest will be the philosophical underpinnings of a required CD ROM portfolio, its structure, requirements, and assessment procedures, as well as faculty development and preparation to meet this challenge. Koons, Keith University of Central Florida CMS What You Can Do with a Career in Music: Career Options Outside of Music Teaching and Performance SEM See Lamkin, Kathleen - What You Can Do with a Career in Music: Career Options Outside of Music Teaching and Performance Today there are many manifestations of Slovenian music popularly considered “folk” or “national” (ljudska or narodna), from revival groups who perform on historically reconstructed instruments to Alpine dance music ensembles. However, vocal music occupies a special place in the repertoire of Slovenian music. In the tiny population of 2 million, there are over 2,000 organized choirs. At the core of this contemporary Slovenian choral repertoire are arrangements of folk songs, the composition and performance of which date back to the late 19th century. Koons, Keith University of Central Florida Aires Tropicales, by Paquito DeRivera Born in Havana, Cuba, clarinetist/alto saxophonist/composer Paquito DeRivera has become one of the most well known crossover artists in the music field today. His numerous appearances as classical clarinet soloist with symphony orchestras, rave reviews as a jazz and Latin artist on both clarinet and saxophone, and appearances on the David Letterman, Regis and Kathie Lee, and Sunday Morning shows are just part of his diverse experience in the music field. Since his defection from Cuba in 1980, DeRivera has taken command of his role as cross cultural ambassador, creating and promoting a multinational style that moves from Mozart to bebop to Latin. He has served as co-director of the United Nation Orchestra, a post formerly held by his mentor, Dizzy Gillespie, as well as touring with his own quintet and coleading the “Caribbean Jazz Project” with Dave Samuels and Andy Narell. This paper presents Slovenian choral singing and the central position granted to folk song arrangements in light of early Slovenian ethnomusicology. Based on archival and field research, I examine the forces which directed the organized collection of Slovenian folk songs beginning in the late 19th century, the motivations for creating choral arrangements of these folk songs particularly in the early 20th century, and the process of forming a national canon of folk song arrangements. I show that these forerunners of Slovenian ethnomusicology had a profound effect on current Slovenian musical practices as well as national perception – issues of mounting importance in the young independent state. Individual Abstracts CMS 64 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 Aires Tropicales, a seven-movement work for quintet, was commissioned by the Aspen Quintet and premiered in New York City in 1994. The movements are as follows: Alborada, a slow introduction; Son with an ostinato Latin bass line in the bassoon and horn; Habanera, a trio movement for oboe, clarinet and bassoon in the style of Ravel; Vals Venezolano, a lively Venezuelan waltz; Dizzyness, an homage to the late, great Dizzy Gillespie; Afro, which begins with a flute solo, followed by an energetic, rhythmic six-eight dance over an African ostinato; and Contradanza, an upbeat Cuban dance honoring Ernesto Lecuona. Performance by the Pegasus Wind Quintet (University of Central Florida) Kreiter, Maria Pennsylvania State University, Conshohoken SEM The Musical Quilt: Connecting Cultural Resources of the School community to the Music Classroom Historically, school music programs have selected cultural musics derived from the major groups identified in basal series resources and MENC publications. Individual schools and instructors often ignore the ethnic enclaves found within the greater school community as a source for possible classroom instruction. The creative teacher stretches to draw upon regional resources and community groups to design a cultural immersion project which seeks to identify cultures within an individual community and examine the influence it has on other cultures regarding its history in the community. Such a project teaches students about the identified culture from a variety of instructional, critical and musical perspectives. Kopplin, David California State Polytechnic University - Pomona CMS What You Can Do with a Career in Music: Career Options Outside of Music Teaching and Performance See Lamkin, Kathleen - What You Can Do with a Career in Music: Career Options Outside of Music Teaching and Performance Kramer, Timothy Cycles and Myths Trinity University As a model, this project’s intent is to showcase not only a written summary of the project through action research, but also disclose a more detailed description of the various components used in music, history and integrated arts. Included in these curricular activities are lessons for the music instructor based upon researched resources, data-driven evidence of student learning and examples of studentcentered cultural quilts. CMS Cycles and Myths was commissioned by the SOLI chamber ensemble and premiered in March of 1996 in San Antonio. This piece presents a number of cyclic ideas that occur with literal and varied repetition. Connections are made between the individual players of the ensemble through similarities of timbre and gesture. A driving, rhythmic theme begins the work and coordinates all the motives assigned to each player in each cycle. The myths, which occur between cycles, are essentially character variations where each soloist stakes their own musical territory and presents material specifically assigned to their instrument. In this way, connections are made between repetition (cycles) and development (myths), between recognition and contrast. This work also contains many references - both through quotation and imitation - to other works with this instrumentation. These distinct musical styles are heard against the backdrop of cycles of similarity. In conclusion, within each school and community lies a wealth of cultural resources to be identified and brought into the formal music classroom. Such innovative instructional techniques may challenge the traditional structure of music (and classroom) curricula, however, defining the role of indigenous musics in the music classroom and teaching the music and artistic culture of the ethnically diverse populations demand creativity. Kreiter, Maria Pondish Pennsylvania State University, Conshohoken SEM Teaching with a Socially Responsible Curriculum: the Consequences of Public School Politics" Multicultural education enables students to function competently within the myriad cultures of a society. Such a definition implies the study of diverse cultures for the purposes of understanding and tolerance. Multicultural education can also be a process, strategy or perspective that, in its fullest expression, implies a complete Individual Abstracts 65 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 reformation of an educational system to give all students, regardless of background or ability, a full and complete education.’ Communal Lands. Performed on field tapes by children aged three to seven, the songs come through aural tradition, passed down for at least five generations. Before European education was imposed on Shona-speaking society, singing games served as the core curriculum for children’s enculturation, imparting values and survival skills. Included are counting and naming games for memory, dexterity games for kinesthetic development, choosing and chasing games for building community relationships. Teachers who embrace multiculturalism in their classrooms are inherently sensitive to the demographics of home school climate, providing meaningful musical experiences to children in a comfortable, familiar manner. These educators: (1) encourage social cohesion through skilled teamwork, ensemble work and scholastic challenges; (2) respect diversity through a broad lens, educating students and the community with carefully selected holistic pedagogy, planting seeds of tolerance while under public scrutiny; and (3) challenge students to think critically about their own music education and promote transferable learning to their other academic subjects and their lives in general. Krishtal, Mikhail Durham, North Carolina Music Theory Pedagogy: An International Perspective CMS See Neff, Severine - Music Theory Pedagogy: An International Perspective Despite a teacher’s best efforts to craft the science of teaching a socially responsible pedagogy, there remains no guarantee that music-making will generate mass public cultural understanding. Subsequently, music educators should seek a path to teach to multiculturalism, being careful to address the needs of the music program while serving as the public outreach program for the school. Kreutzer, Natalie University of Idaho Children's Singing Games from Zimbabwe--a DVD Kun, Qi Chinese University of Hong Kong SEM Social Division Re-presented in Ceremonial Music of Huizhou: A Historical approach in Ethnomusicology Huizhou prefecture is an area bordering three provinces: Jiangxi, Zhejiang and Anhui. Impressed by the rich lineage culture, I visited Huizhou five times (July 1999 - August 2000). A rich and populated area south of the Yangtze River, Huizhou has developed a highly sophisticated lineage culture. Such a development has created a system of lineage subdivisions that differentiates between “big surnames” and “small surnames.” Since 1999, I launched the project “The Interaction of Class and Ceremonial Music in Huizhou’s Lineage Culture (1911 to 1949).” SEM A 15-minute introduction and 45-minute guided tour of a DVD of 19 children’s games for use by music and multicultural education teachers at pre-school and primary level. Each song includes: (1) a narrative of cultural context; (2) video footage of children performing the games, without commentary; (3) video footage of the games with voice-over instructions and commentary; (4) Shona text spoken by a native speaker, (5) transcription of song in Western notation with audio performance by native speakers. The project evolved from my comparisons of childhood education in the United States and in Zimbabwe. In the States, movement is a marginal aspect of curricula. The physical response to music prevalent in Zimbabwe culture is not reinforced for many children of European descent. Recent neurobiological discoveries reflected in the literature on cognition point to movement as an important component of brain development. Singing games emerge as elegant remedial education for children in the United States. My paper is an attempt to illustrate the interaction between big and small surnames social subdivisions and ceremonial music in Huizhou. I will focus on the music culture in sacrificial ceremonies from early 20th Century to 1949. Rather than approaching the music from a structural perspective, I pay more attention to the cultural symbolism of music and stress its significance as a transmitter of social, political, dialectal, religious and cultural meanings. As part of the ritual performance, ceremonial music in Huizhou not only re-presents the subdivisions and differences within the community, but also exerts a strong influence upon its clan and kinship system. The songs, collected during my 1992-93 fieldwork on children’s song acquisition, come from the pre-colonial “pasichigare” repertoire of the central Nharira Individual Abstracts 66 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 In short, to interpret music in history and to interpret history through music, both have become meaningful tasks in ethnomusicological investigation. In the course of analyzing the interaction between ceremonial music and social division in local history, I also attempt to re-present local history through music. music fandom by scholars (Herlyn and Overdick 2002). Mix tapes could be defined as anthologies of recorded pieces of music made by individuals on recordable carriers (cassette tapes, CD-R’s, MP3’s, etc.). Also known as “compilations,” these anthologies typically reflect their compiler’s tastes, interests, moods, etc. As such, mix tapes form an important part of the compiler’s biography, being a statement of lifestyle (Chaney 1996) and, thus, a means by which compilers present themselves to others. They can also act as a communication tool between individuals belonging to what could be described as “compilation communities”. Within such communities, the art of producing and comparing mix tapes constitutes a form of cultural capital (Bourdieu 1984). The proposed paper will present the results of a preliminary study on these “phonographic anthologies”. The research involved both ethnographic work, notably, interviews and analysis of web sites, and musicological analysis. One objective of the project is to measure the extent to which the selection of songs, and their actual sounds relate to users’ description of the music and of its effects. Approached from the theoretical angle of polytextuality, these preliminary results should point to the importance of studying a practice that is neglected despite its social significance. Kwon, Donna Lee University of California, Berkeley SEM Ppongjjak and the Culture of Korean Folk Music and Dance Transmission Centers This paper investigates the seemingly incongruous but welcome practice of singing ppongjjak songs at regional transmission centers of Korean folk expressive culture. Called “junsoogwan” or “transmission buildings,” these centers were established as part of the government’s system of cultural preservation set in motion in the early 1960’s. Junsoogwan are usually built in the village or locality that a given style is believed to have been developed. As a result, going to the junsoogwan for a week-long training session is just as much about learning specific rhythms or dance movements as it is about immersing oneself in a realm where the landscape, sights, sounds and smells of “folk” life are felt to be more authentic and real. It can be said that the participants of these junsoogwan have created a unique culture where, in general, items or customs that are considered “native” or “folk” are encouraged while that which is considered “foreign” are not. Though not part of the official curriculum of the junsoogwans I visited from 1999 to 2002, the enthusiastic singing of popular songs such as ppongjjak is perplexing not only because it is considered a “popular” as opposed to “folk” genre but because it is widely acknowledged as having Japanese colonial origins. In examining how to interpret this unusual practice of ppongjjak, I will explore its role as “play” within the structure of the training session and, more specifically, as part of the process of “orientation” through which points of commonality and “otherness” are negotiated and “played” out. Lacasse, Serge Universite Laval Phonographic Anthologies: Mix Tapes, Memory, and Nostalgia Laird, Tracey Agnes Scott College SEM A Voice to Explode the Heads of Aliens: Slim Whitman, Webb Pierce, and Other Lost Aesthetics of Country Music in 1952 In the 1996 science fiction comedy Mars Attacks, a boy stumbles upon the only viable weapon against the devastating onslaught of alien invaders—the soaring falsetto of Slim Whitman singing “Indian Love Call.” Whitman first recorded “Indian Love Call” in 1952 at the Shreveport radio station KWKH after hours, reinterpreting a tune from the 1920s operetta Rose Marie, and highlighting the “shooting star” technique of his steel guitarist, Hoot Rains. Singing style, accompanimental gesture, choice of material, and even recording locale, belong to an era of country music when aesthetics were open-ended. SEM Webb Pierce’s vocal style also translates only with effort across the decades to ears attuned to a more modern country sensibility. In other words, Mars Attacks might have amused as well if Pierce’s sharp honky-tonk voice, supported by another innovative steel guitarist, Bud Isaacs, had protected Earth’s inhabitants. The potential for amusement springs from a disjuncture between certain qualities in the music and a modern aesthetic sensibility. It may be this disjuncture that accounts for the delay in official recognition of Webb Pierce as a critical player in country As illustrated by Nick Hornby’s High Fidelity (1995) and the release of its cinematographic adaptation (Frears 2000), the practice of assembling personal collections of music (“mix tapes”) is now a prominent activity among music fans around the world. However, there has been very little interest in this aspect of Individual Abstracts 67 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 Lamkin, Kathleen University of La Verne CMS What You Can Do with a Career in Music: Career Options Outside of Music Teaching and Performance music history: Pierce was not memorialized as a member of the Country Music Hall of Fame until 2001, a decade after his death, despite the fact that the 1952 recording of “Wondering” began a string of successful releases that make him the eminent country music recording artist of the 1950s. Both Webb Pierce and Slim Whitman represent an aesthetic of 1950s country music that is now lost. For musicians of the 21st century are the traditional career paths offered by the musical academy too narrowly focused? Who are the music students who would benefit from a broader variety of career choices? How can faculty mentor these students into careers outside the traditional fields of music? How can our institutions assist students in finding out about career options? What are the answers - career placement and counseling services, internships and or service learning, guest speakers, curriculum changes? A panel of CMS Regional Chapter Presidents presenting views from their regional meetings this past spring will address these questions and others. Following the reports from the regional chapters there will be time for questions from the audience and further discussion. Lamb, Roberta Queen's University SEM 'Sounding Apart Together': Ruth Crawford Seeger & Charles Seeger; American Music Education & Ethnomusicology Charles Seeger's music composition treatise (1923, 1930, 1994) outlines his principles of "dissonant counterpoint," characterized as "sounding apart together." I explore the "sounding apart together" of Ruth Crawford Seeger and Charles Seeger in music education, which appears to follow a complementary pattern similar to that found in their music theory and composition (Greer, 1999; Nicholls, 1990; Rao, 1997; Strauss, 1995; Tick, 1990) and their theories of singing style/transcription (Tick 1999). Ruth apparently influenced Charles in music education. The cooperation among progressive educators and musicologists formed another "sounding apart together" during the 1940s-1950s. While Ruth taught music and made folk song collections, Charles, other musicologists, and folklorists advocated for the inclusion of American folk music and non-European musics in American education, 1940-1953 (the years when Charles Seeger headed the Music Division of the Pan American Union and the years during which music education was central to that division). The Seegers' pursuit of a living folk music tradition was a subtle blending of modernism and folk idiom, recognizing what the folk idiom had to offer modernist values in music and education. Locating their interests on the edges of musicology, music theory, and music education, I identify a social "dissonant counterpoint" that becomes logical and meaningful in the context of "sounding apart together." This subtlety may have been lost in scholarship accentuating the differences between the ultra modernist music and folk music traditions. I trace the Seegers' ideas and attempt to demonstrate the value of this subtle "dissonant counterpoint" for ethnomusicology and music education. Individual Abstracts Lamkin, Kathleen (University of La Verne), moderator and CMS Regional Chapter Presidents: Mark Alburger (Vacaville, California), Pacific Central; Barry Bilderback (Linnfield College), Pacific Northwest; Sam Magrill (University of Central Oklahoma) South Central; William Everett (University of Missouri Kansas City), Great Plains; Diane Follet (Muhlenberg College), Northeast; Jonathan Green (Sweet Briar College), Mid-Atlantic; Keith Koons (University of Central Florida), Southern; David Kopplin (California State Polytechnic University - Pomona), Pacific Southern; James Perone (Mount Union College), Great Lakes; and Elizabeth Schauer (Alamosa College), Rocky Mountain Lapidus, Benjamin City University of New York SEM ¡Lo tuyo no rima na’!: Current Trends in Salsa Vocal Improvisation This paper presents some of the creative developments in soneos, the vocal improvisation techniques for Afro-Cuban son-based musics, commercially referred to as salsa. Scholars such as Peter Manuel and Christopher Washburne have outlined the basic premises of vocal improvisation in salsa, both stressing phrasing that adheres to clave and use of recurring and stock motifs. Recent recordings and live performances feature competitive dueling vocal improvisations that do no not adhere solely to Latin American poetic structures such as décimas or coplas. Instead singers use both short and long-forms, complex melodies, tongue twisters, and vocalized percussion, all seamlessly blended with laid-back phrasing and clever insults. Strict adherence to clave-based phrasing is often jettisoned and the 68 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 Lechner, Ethan University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill SEM Colin McPhee’s Tabuh-tabuhan as Modernist Interpretation of Balinese Gamelan singer can’t repeat stock phrases; paramount in such exchanges is the unspoken law of not repeating oneself. Calling himself “El dueño del soneo” (the boss of vocal improvisation), the Puerto Rican singer, Carlos “Cano” Estremera, remains at the forefront of such innovations. As he is always up for a good duel, the results have been recorded both legally and illegally and spread throughout the world by salsa fans. Using video footage and audio examples from El Cano’s “matches” in Puerto Rico and examples from Cuba and New York, this paper will outline specific techniques and concepts used by the best vocal improvisers in today’s salsa as well as examine how they prepare themselves and what they see as valuable qualities for a successful vocal improviser in the genre. As a composer and writer, Colin McPhee acted as an ambassador of Balinese culture to the West. After living in Bali during the first few years of the 1930s, McPhee returned to the United States in 1935 and composed his celebrated Tabuhtabuhan, a showpiece of gamelan idioms in the guise of a concerto for two pianos. I interpret McPhee’s musical description of Bali as part of a larger project to present the island as a home of values corresponding to those contemporary among many Western composers. His article “The Absolute Music of Bali,” from the same years as Tabuh-tabuhan, makes some fairly explicit connections between Balinese aesthetics and American ones of the 1930s, for instance the impersonal nature of expression, an emphasis on “pure form,” and on the central importance of rhythm. I read Tabuh-tabuhan as a similar effort to connect Bali and the US, with the sounds of gamelan transmitted as peculiarly Modern. The cultural doubleness of the work is apparent, for instance, in its juxtaposition of dissimilar blocks of material, evocative of both a technique associated with Stravinsky and the Kebyar style of gamelan; and in its polyrhythms, which are simultaneous features of gamelan, Modernism, and Jazz (as McPhee himself remarks in his notes to the 1960 score). This paper discusses McPhee’s presentation of a combined Modernist and Balinese style and ideology for insight on Tabuh-tabuhan itself and as a proposed method of analyzing other hybrid compositions. Largey, Michael Michigan State University SEM Ethnographic Transcription and Music Ideology: The Politics of Cultural Representation in Haitian Art Music In the period after the U.S. occupation of Haiti from 1915 to 1934, Haitian composer and amateur ethnographer Werner Anton Jaegerhuber's (1900-1953) interest in the songs of the Haitian peasantry was part of a larger debate about the utility of peasant culture to the Haitian nation. By transforming the rough hewn music of Haitian farmers into a product suitable for the piano parlor, Jaegerhuber sought connections with the peasantry that would transform not only the peasants' social and economic relationships with Haitian elite classes, but also Haiti's political relationships with foreign powers, especially the United States. As a cultural worker on the forefront of the burgeoning tourism industry in the 1940s, Jaegerhuber found an outlet for his compositions that could demonstrate the value of Haitian peasant culture to Haitian audiences and would pique the interest of foreign tourists during their brief visits to the "pearl of the Antilles." Lee, Byong Won University of Hawaii, Manoa SEM From Nightingale to Crow: The Change of Vocal Timbre of the Contemporary Popular Song Singers in South Korea In this paper, I draw upon Bambi Schieffelin's and Rachel Doucet's work on "language ideology" in which they claim that a language's orthography is the result of competing ideologies of power vying for control through different representations of language. Similarly, the transcription of musical sound into a visual format is a potent venue for debates about Haitian national identity and reflects different political positions of competitive ideological groups within Haitian society. Jagerhuber's "music ideology" was clearly expressed through his ethnographic transcriptions of Haitian peasant song in which African and European cultural influences were assigned specific musical notations. Individual Abstracts The emergence of the contemporary popular song began during the Japanese annexation (1910- 45), which brought a new dimension to vocal style in Korea. The melodic contour, rhythm, expression and the vocal quality of these early popular songs were strongly influenced by the Japanese popular songs of that time. The prevailing vocal quality was clear, slightly nasalized and polished voice, which is still strong in present Japanese enka and kayokyoku singing. The early popular song singers in Korea adopted the Japanese style of vocal quality as well as other aspects of Japanese popular songs, and this vocal quality dominated in South Korea until the mid-1960s. 69 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 Currently, most of the old Japanese-influenced elements, except vocal timbre, continue in that early style of popular song genre called ppongjjak. But conspicuous change in vocal timbre from the polished to the strong husky quality began in the mid-1960s. This period coincides with the return from the United States of the Korea-born Las Vegas entertainer Patty Kim, who was one of the leading popular song singers in South Korea at that time. Her rich and powerful husky voice impressed many popular song singers in South Korea, and at present the majority of Korean popular song singers stress this strong husky quality. A few singers with polished vocal quality occasionally surface, but their fame quickly disappears. This paper presents a historical survey of the vocal timbre in ppongjjak, and examines how it is related to the strong, raspy, buzzing or husky timbre of Korean traditional music. Lee, Chinchun Chi-sun Tampa, Florida THGIRBLA .W more recent electroacoustic and computer music, not to mention Hollywood American composer Henry Brant to more recent electroacoustic and computer music, not to mention Hollywood’s preoccupation with “surround sound.” Shortly after the advent of electronic music in the late nineteenth century came tools for projecting sound into space around audiences: consider Pierre Schaeffer’s Potentiometre d’Espace, for example, which allowed players to point their arms in the direction from which sound should be heard in a concert hall. More recent advances in this area include attempts to graphically draw spatial trajectories of sound on a computer and to dynamically control such trajectories in real time with various controllers. Lentini, James Wayne State University Montage, for piano trio CMS Montage is a three-movement composition that highlights the capabilities of the piano trio ensemble, in addition to providing virtuosic solo passages for each of the instruments. The first movement (Moderato con forza) begins with an aggressive introduction from which most of the musical materials that follow are derived. The second movement (Larghetto espressivo) is lyrical in nature, offering many solo passages beginning with the violin followed by the cello and piano. These passages are then combined and developed for the remainder of the movement. The final movement (Allegro con fuoco) utilizes two main themes (one accented and intense, the other melodic) which recur in varied forms that are expanded and developed for the duration of the piece. This composition is in memoriam of my mentor, Professor William Albright. He was a great composer, organist and teacher. His works have been performed and commissioned worldwide. It was a great pleasure and joy to be his student at the University of Michigan. Unfortunately, he passed away on September 17, 1998 at the age of 54. His death is definitely a great loss in music world. The piece starts with the East Asian restraint that symbolizes the sadness upon his death, while also alluding to the meditative and mysterious side of the man himself. The middle section reflects his outer personality and his signature compositional style - interesting, spectacular and unpredictable! The music develops through both smooth and contrasting moments. The ending recapitulates the sadness from the beginning; this represents the shock of suddenly loosing someone so important. P.S. The title is the retrograde of W. Albright. Representing the unpredictability of life! Leider, Colby University of Miami Surrounded by Sound: Multidimensional Control of Musical Space While Montage would not be considered a tonal work in the traditional sense, there are clear pitch centers, scales, and harmonies which serve as structural pillars for the piece. Much of the harmonic and melodic material in the first movement is based on a six-note scale (rhythmically a sextuplet) first played by the violin and cello (the notes A, Bb, C, D, Eb, and F). Permutations of the sextuplet group appear throughout the first movement, yielding several other important motives. CMS The second movement offers contrast from the outer movements with its lyric character, and by its pseudo-tonal harmonic structure. It begins with a modal scale played by the violin (phrygian on C# with a missing A), by quickly shifts to a more non-traditional set of pitches. The juxtaposition of modal and non-modal tonalities characterizes the movement, which presents a struggle between the two harmonic The musical potential inherent in enveloping audiences in virtual acoustical spaces has engaged composers and musicians for centuries, from before the antiphony of Gabrieli to the complex spatial textures of American composer Henry Brant to Individual Abstracts CMS 70 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 Lim, Susie University of California, Berkeley Finding the "Flow": The Ryu Canon and New Ryu backgrounds. The source material for the final movement is primarily derived from an octatonic scale, which is symmetrical eight-note pattern of alternating hole and half steps (the notes C, D, Eb, F, F#, G#, A, and B, for example). The interval of a minor sixth (the first two notes played by the piano) also plays an important role in this movement, as do several other short, accented motives. The placement of sanjo (solo instrumental genre) into the academy in 1959 changed the practice of Korean instrumental music forever. Lifted from its low association with the kisaeng (women entertainers), sanjo was established as an "Intangible Cultural Asset" by the Korean government in the 1960s. As is widely recognized, its elevation in status was a domestic response to multiple factors for the need to preserve the traditional arts in the immediate post-Japanese colonial and post-Korean War period. Some aspects of the materials described above appear in all three movements, unifying the musical language of the work as a whole. The title is a reference to the rapid shifts in character and motive interplay that exemplify the compositional process utilized in this piece. For example, some sections introduce brief motives in succession, mush like the technique used in film where several pictures or images are flashed quickly on the screen. These brief musical ideas serve as a basis for development and structure, and in the essence determine the over all form of each movement. In this paper I shall explore the musical effects of the elevation of sanjo and responses of musicians to the inevitable tension between the need for preservation and desire for individual creativity. I will draw on my field research (2001) to consider the management of variant styles of articulating the form and the gradual process of the canonization of sanjo as a musical genre. The paper will have two focuses: terminology (Sino characters ryu, or “flow,” and ryup'a, or “branch-flow”) by which the styles and performers have been identified since the 1960s, and performers themselves. Primary attention will be paid to Hwang Byungki (or Hwang Byongki), a renown kayagum (12-stringed zither) performer and composer for the instrument, to comment on the process of validation of change in an ever-hardening system instituted for preservation and its implications for the future of Koran traditional music. Montage was commissioned for the Essex Trio by arts patron James Persons. Leon , Tania City University of New York Composers on Traditional and Art Music: a cultural synthesis SEM CMS See Torres-Santos, Raymond - Composers on Traditional and Art Music: A Cultural Synthesis Lindman, Carolynn San Francisco State University CMS Fifty Years of an International Perspective Through the International Society for Music Education Lifchitz, Max State University at Albany CMS Music by Cuban Composers: Works by Orlando Garcia and Aurelio de la Vega See Oliva, Giacomo - Fifty Years of an International Perspective Through the International Society for Music Education See Wilson, Kathleen - Music by Cuban Composers: Works by Orlando Garcia and Aurelio de la Vega Individual Abstracts 71 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 Locke, David Tufts University SEM Musical Relations Between Dance and Percussion Ensemble Music in Dagbamba Performance Arts communication to relativize the work concept that has been at the foundation of musicological research for over a century. Musicians regularly use vocal and gestural communication to clarify and supplement a notation that can neither fully nor unambiguously represent musical sound. Contrary to the work concept, which elevates composers as creative musicians and views performers as re-creators, this ethnography demonstrates how the ambiguities and biases of notation require that performers be intensely creative musicians simply to read and respond to notated music. It reveals that the assumptions and values of the work concept misrepresent the actual practices sustaining the nineteenth-century orchestral repertory – the repertory with which the concept is understood to have developed. As a result, it urges us to question further the work concept’s application to culturally and chronologically distant repertories and traditions – whether within ethnomusicology, “new” musicology, or the long-standing repertories of historical musicology (Stock 1998, Randel 1992). Moreover, it encourages musicologists in particular to exercise greater reflexivity, as it exposes the validity of the knowledge and values gained through their performance training but often separated from their research by the institutional requirements of the discipline I will argue that analytic insight is gained by considering the musical features of dance in relation to percussion ensemble music. My discussion of the subject will address the following topics. - aesthetic value—stylish public performance of personality (the self) within a community setting (family, group) and with cognizance of tradition (relationship of present and past) - genre and form—group dances: sections, like a medley or suite (Takai, Tora, Baamaya), and individual dances: episodes, several minutes of individual display (Salma, Nakohiwaa) phrases—movement sequences, i.e., basic steps, linked to musical passages, i.e., basic themes - meter—equi-durational units within time span; multiple simultaneous meters; displaced meters Lubet, Alex University of Minnesota CMS The Social Model Theory of Disability in the Case of Composer Richard Wagner - polyrhythm—multiple rhythms in dance movements (such as center-of-gravity, path-in-space, transference-of-weight, gestures of extremities and torso), in relation to parts in the percussion ensemble (specifically, sayelum rattle, support and leading gung-gong bass drums, support and leading lunga squeeze drum) Among interdisciplines which explore identity and Otherness, Disability Studies is among the newest and most provocative. Its central theoretical premise is that disability is a social construction emanating from biological impairment, analogous to gender and sexual anatomy. Disability is understood primarily as a sociocultural liability to be addressed via social policy and cultural transformation, rather than an individual's malady to be corrected medically. While the idea that societies bear principal responsibility for the inequities of the lives of the racial and/or sexual Other is largely a given, the idea that this also true of people with disabilities has been slow to gain acceptance, even among many " Progressives", unable to imagine that accommodations in policy and technology may be a more appropriate address of the problems of biological impairment than often futile and overly heroic " cures". - accent—interaction of moments of emphasis in dance and percussion Lohman, Laura American Research Center in Egypt SEM Creativity and the Work Concept: An Ethnographic Reassessment from the Rehearsal Room While ethnographic methods have been applied to Western classical music most notably through the broad study of representative institutions (Kingsbury 1988, Nettl 1995), numerous benefits emerge from their use in a more focused way to examine a recurring event within those institutions. Based on an ethnographic study of orchestral rehearsal, this paper uses close analysis of musicians’ Individual Abstracts Disability studies in music are in their infancy; ethnomusicology is their natural location. My presentation will introduce an ethnomusicology of disability through 72 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 a consideration of composer Richard Wagner: I will demonstrate this symbiosis of great potential: the value of musical ethnography to the understanding of the social construction of disability and the application of social model disability theory to the understanding of music. Critical issues will be the encoding of race and gender in Wagner's music dramas as manifestations of contemporaneous German thought and the composer's historical position vis-à-vis the idea of Modernism. I will conclude by addressing the application of disability theory to the study of popular musical culture. Lucas, Ann University of California, Los Angeles America so Beautiful: The Politics of Popular Music in Irangeles composers and contemporary music, Argentine composer Alicia Terzian has written over seventy compositions, including orchestral and stage works, choral and chamber music, songs and piano pieces. In addition, she has created several electronic works involving dancers and/or actors and compositions for various instruments and tape. Terzian has been awarded the Mozart Medal of 1995, as well as prizes from the French and Armenian governments. Following in the path of her renowned teacher, Alberto Ginastera, Terzian’s musical style and development has encompassed the nationalistic idioms of her native country as well as the experimental trends of our time. Mixed media works and those incorporating Argentine dance rhythms share significant places in her oeuvre. SEM Aspects of kitsch, exoticism, and nostalgia inform the public image of Natacha Atlas, a musical performer of complicated geo-cultural origins. Born in Belgium to a Jewish father who traces his own roots to Egypt and Morocco by way of Palestine, Atlas reached international attention through the polyglot musical practices of the early technopop collective Transglobal Underground. Though Atlas’ singing in Arabic is one of the elements that had most connected her to the group’s ideological interest in a transglobal, unified world, her extroverted bellydancing on stage was also an element of spectacle that has continued to provide for much continued recognition of her music in the world music market. Beyond the issue of how she uses dance to deploy her gender, her engagement with an Arabic cultural heritage is fundamental to Atlas’ project. This employment of Arab cultural markers is meant to signify a political discourse. Atlas sees herself as embodying an effort to reverse, close, and heal a false division between Arabic and Jewish cultural practice—a division that opened due to historical circumstances.Judgments about the value of her appropriations depend on the position of the listener. Her attempts to elide political differences by way of cultural and spiritual transcendence can be read by some as liberatory, or even as contemporary liberal hybridity’s well-meaning yet ultimately poor cultural stereotyping. But by others, it can be seen also as merely an example of cultural trespass or crude striptease. For this lecture-recital, I will perform two early piano works that reveal her distinctive combination of traditional idioms and contemporary techniques of the time. These pieces are: Toccata (1954), a brilliant, yet sophisticated work which Terzian wrote as a student, which features an ingenious combination of tonality, bitonality, and a harmony based on ever-changing perfect fifths; and Juegos para Diana, a children’s piece in the tradition of Federico Mompou’s Scenes d’Enfants. Each work has an immediate appeal of character and rhythm?an ingenuousness that belies its sophisticated structure. Lysolff, Rene T.A. University of California, Riverside Worlding Music Theory Speaking broadly, it is safe to say that the history of ethnomusicology is intimately bound up in the history of recording technology. It is also perhaps safe to say that the history of Western music theory is intimately bound up in the history of musical notation. In other words, for ethnomusicologists, the musical “text” has traditionally been the audio recording (or the live event) while, for the Western music theorist, it has been the score. Furthermore, while music theorists have focused on pushing the limits of Western musical knowledge, ethnomusicologists have reflexively explored other musical epistemologies and the societies that gave rise to them. Lucia, Margaret Shippensburg University CMS Tradition and Innovation: The Music of Argentine Composer Alicia Terzian This historical divergence between the two fields has had profound implications for the kinds of questions they each pose in doing the work of musical analysis. I argue in this paper that ethnomusicology has no single “music theory” as a Composer, musicologist, conductor and tireless champion of Latin American Individual Abstracts SEM 73 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 Magriel, Nicolas University of London SEM Khyal as property: power considerations in the transcription of North Indian classical songs. coherent sub-discipline. It may be because music theory for ethnomusicologists means studying not only the structure and meaning of music but also the nature of musical community (music in or as culture). At the same time, we might say that ethnomusicology has many theories of music. After all, it is concerned with the diversity of musics in existence throughout the world. Yet, ethnomusicologists all too often limit the scope of their research to the particularities of a particular genre, style, or region. The question is: how might music theory be reconfigured to transcend the discursive exuberances and deficiencies inherent to Western and nonWestern music study? Short songs in dialects of Hindi are the basis for improvisation in khyal, the principal genre of contemporary North Indian classical vocal music. Khyal songs are not defined by written representations, but are transmitted orally, committed to memory, and re-created through performance. During the twentieth century several collections of khyal songs were published for pedagogical and archival purposes. This development was largely catalysed by the Independence movement and the widespread perception of a need to reclaim India’s cultural identity. Songs which had been the closely guarded property of hereditary musicians were brought into the public domain. Musicians from the emerging middle classes gained not only the power of access to the repertoire, but also the power exerted by literacy itself. The written word gave a stamp of alleged authenticity to song compositions, shifting the locus of musical authority. Maciszewski, Amelia University of Pittsburg SEM Guria, Gossip, and Globalization: Crisscrossing Discourses on Presenting Socially Marginal North Indian Musicians to the Mainstream In this paper and accompanying video, I present my most recent fieldwork in North India (January-February 2003), in which I explore the network of crisscrossing discourses regarding the politics of representing North India’s tawaif-s (courtesans) and their performance as “culturally authentic” icons of Indian tradition that embody music, memory, and nostalgia. Through an examination of direct and reported speech, oral and musical performance, exhortative speech, and debate, 1 analyze the dialectic emergent in these discourses. This dialectic pushes and pulls from several perspectives, namely 1) that of the proactive nonprofit organization Guria Sevi Sansthan’s agenda to empower socially marginalized women musicians and entertainers to fight forced prostitution, 2) the simultaneous curiosity and discomfort on the part of the mainstream (members of the press, elite musicians, and music presenters) regarding the incongruity between the notalgia about the tawaif-s as a symbol of India’s courtly past and the present-day reality of forced prostitution and 3) the mainstream’s aggravated unease vis-a-vis my role in the representation ol a “negative” aspect of Indian “culture” and “tradition” globally. Entangled in this juxtaposition of voices is the ongoing negotiation of rapport among the musicians, Guria’ s leader, and myself regarding my/our re-presentation of tawaif-s and their musical culture globally. Individual Abstracts The majority of contemporary khyal is performed by literate musicians who are able to consult published texts. Many singers keep their collections of song lyrics in treasured notebooks which they carry everywhere. How has the power of literacy affected the music itself? In our work on khyal songs, we are endeavouring to make a collection of transcriptions based on the readily verifiable evidence of commercial disc recordings. By accurately documenting specific instances of song performance, we in small measure return power to aural reality. The present paper will survey the power of transcriptions, the power to transcribe and the powers which have shaped written representations of khyal songs. 74 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 Magrill, Sam University of Central Oklahoma CMS What You Can Do with a Career in Music: Career Options Outside of Music Teaching and Performance francophone West African countries and the appropriation of African diasporic music by Africans. Additionally, the body of work on globalization and transnational urbanism centers on First World cities. This paper addresses this lack of scholarship through an examination of salsa in Dakar, Senegal. See Lamkin, Kathleen - What You Can Do with a Career in Music: Career Options Outside of Music Teaching and Performance Malvini, David Independent Scholar Django's Children: Gypsy Crossings in European Jazz Since the 1940s Latin American music has played a vital role in Senegal’s popular music scene. Senegalese musicians first imitated the tango, bolero, paso doble, son, and pachanga. However it was the Cuban son that prevailed as the dominant genre and formed the basis for a Senegalese style of salsa. In the 1970s, salsa was combined with jazz, rhythm and blues, and local Senegalese popular styles such as sabar (indigenous drumming) to create the fusion music mbalax. Today salsa in Senegal exists as a distinct style performed by such groups as Africando and Orchestra Baobab and as the hybrid genre known as salsa mbalax that features sabar. SEM Now legendary is the Parisian collaboration of Gypsy guitarist Django Reinhardt and violinist Stephane Grappelli, who as the Quintette "The Hot Club of France" pioneered a style of performing popular songs which perhaps stands as Europe's greatest contribution to jazz. Although their style remains current, an unexplored aspect of The Hot Club's inimitable style is their reliance on the perception of the tropes of Gypsiness, especially virtuosity, deep expressiveness, and an overall seductive quality to the sonic experience—indeed, from contemporary accounts it appears that the temperamental and passionate Django was the leader, practically and spiritually, of the Quintette. Yet because these Gypsy tropes can be common to jazz generally, we shall focus on the impact of an element not so found in American jazz of the 1930s and 1940s: the elevation of string instruments to soloistic roles, what we shall argue is the legacy of the Hungarian-Gypsy primas tradition. We shall next consider the vibrancy of Django's legacy on the current Hot Jazz scene, also known as "Musique Manouche" in France or "Sinti jazz" in Germany, both expressions directly referring to the darkness of Gypsy skin. Director Tony Gatlif's film “Swing” and guitarist Bireli Lagrene's two recent "Gypsy projects," covert tributes to Django, will be compared as manifestations of Django's original music, which to our knowledge was never marketed solely as "Gypsy jazz." Clearly at stake in this musical marketing is that "Gypsy" as a signifier has become a powerful ingredient for the distribution of this style of music. What are the musicological features that characterize Senegalese salsa? In what ways does Senegalese salsa represent Dakaroise cosmopolitan attitudes? I argue that Senegalese salsa is a national style reflecting local and global cosmopolitan identities. I analyze Senegalese salsa performances and music based on fieldwork conducted in Dakar nightclubs, interviews with musicians and fans, and my experiences as a performer with salsa mbalax groups. Marshall, Wayne University of Wisconsin, Madison SEM Hip-hop in Jamaica: Representing the Local through International Sound What does it mean for Jamaican youths to express themselves primarily through hip-hop—including African-American accents, the distinctive flows or rhythms of rap, and “gangsta” clichés—yet still claim to be “keeping it real” in “representing” Jamaican reality? Empowered by and critical of American economic and political power, hip-hop offers Jamaicans a complex and contradictory cultural product for continued creative invention. By probing Jamaicans’ ambivalence about hiphop—simultaneously bemoaned as another symbol of U.S. cultural hegemony and celebrated as a musical prodigal son—we can learn a great deal about the way that particular Jamaicans perceive and negotiate their relationship to the U.S. and to Jamaica. How do factors such as class, race, age, and religion influence an individual’s embrace or rejection of hip-hop as an authentic idiom? How have the mass media, now largely imported from the U.S., or new patterns of migration affected hip-hop’s resonance among Jamaicans? Might a focus on Jamaica’s Mangin, Timothy St. Lawrence University, Columbia University SEM Senegalese Salsa: The Representaion of Cosmopolitan Identities Ethnomusicological studies of salsa have tended to concentrate on issues of identity in the Americas and the Caribbean. Little research focuses on salsa in Individual Abstracts 75 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 longstanding relationship to hip-hop challenge the prevailing story of rap music? Considering the thirty-year conversation between dancehall and hip-hop, a history pervaded by popular narratives of origins, migrations, and constant exchange, Jamaica constitutes a critical site for examining hip-hop’s significance outside of the U.S. The contemporary interplay between hip-hop and dancehall, from Kingston to New York and back again, highlights music’s crucial role in the imagination and projection of such concepts as Jamaican, not to mention (African)American, culture and nation. Maus, Fred E. University of Virginia Using and Delimiting Music Theory Maultsby, Portia Indiana University SEM Reformulating Tradition and Redefining Meaning: The Rhythm and Blues Aesthetic in the "Rock 'n' Roll" Era One response is to legitimize other musics, adding them to the content of theory courses. This can be valuable, but it is misleading unless conjoined with critical contextualization of the discourse of music theory. The migration of millions of African Americans from the rural south to the nation’s industrial centers during the World War II era altered the demographics and the character of life in urban America. Within the boundaries of de facto segregated communities, African Americans adapted to urban life by transforming their rural traditions into new expressions. In this context, black musicians created a bluesjazz-hybrid and a jazz- jubilee- and blues-oriented quartet style categorized as rhythm and blues. This music embodied the spirit of city living and the sounds of new technologies. By the mid-1950s, a new generation of African American musicians had reformulated the content and aesthetic parameters that defined the pre-1950s rhythm and blues tradition. Expressing their own experiences, aesthetic priorities and cultural values, they replaced the blues text with teen-oriented lyrics, introduced elements of black gospel music to the vocal quartet style (later known as doo-wop), and replaced the shuffle or “jump” rhythm a new beat labeled “rock ‘n’ roll” by the music industry. While music theory may seem effective in legitimizing "classical music," some scholars have argued that it offers an inadequate approach even for the music for which it was created. Music theory abstracts from performances, addressing qualities attributed to "works"; and it offers a narrowly normative account of musical experience. Several scholars (Brett, Cusick, Maus, Guck and others) argue that these misrepresentations constitute a masculine defense against crucial aspects of musical life that are incompatible with hegemonic masculine self-images. Introducing concepts of music theory and methods of musical analysis, focusing on a canon of European "art music," music theory courses carry strong evaluative messages. They legitimize one tradition of music as rational and, at least implicitly, deny this to other musics. They endorse an ethnocentric hierarchization, congruent with the idea that one kind of music deserves intrinsic study, while other musics can be studied only contextually or practically. Conclusions for pedagogy are not simple. An honest approach to pedagogy of music theory, for "its own" European musics as well as in extensions beyond, should combine training in concepts and skills with a more skeptical commentary, somehow using music theory while insisting on its limitations. This requires a very different style from ordinary theory pedagogy, with its emphasis on terminology, rules, and drill. The rhythm and blues styles of the second generation of black performers moved from the margins to the mainstream of the American society under the labels of “pop” and “rock ‘n’ roll.” This form of cross-cultural marketing assigned new meanings to both traditions and obscured the connection of the l950s styles to earlier rhythm and blues tradition. This paper will examine the innovations of the 1950s generation of rhythm and blues musicians that broadened the aesthetic parameters of this tradition and simultaneously redefined the sound of mainstream American popular music. Individual Abstracts SEM May, Beverly New York University The Chocolate City Legacy: Race & Class in Detroit Techno SEM Racial and class issues have heavily influenced the creation andevolution of Techno music, a sub-genre of electronic dancemusic that evolved out of Chicago House and emerged in Detroit duringthe 1980's as a form of "Black" music: it was created byAfrican-Americans, for an African-American audience, within anAfrican-American socio-cultural heritage and mileu, and it containeddistinct African-American musical elements. However, Techno's was alsoheavily 76 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 influenced by prior white and/or European artists and musicalmovements, including Germany's Kraftwerk and many "industrial" and"electro-pop" groups of the 1980's. relate to music and contexts for music making over time. The major genres will then be introduced: dance tunes, step dance, set dance, and songs in the Irish and English languages. This introduction will be followed by an overview of musical instruments in the tradition. Audio and audio-visual examples of the instruments will illustrate how they are played, how they sound, and instructional strategies for presenting them to students. This material will include listening charts. Techno became enormously popular with European audiences from its earliest releases, and soon morphed into a global genre associated with European producers and the predominantly white Rave scene. These changes, in turn, influenced the genre's form and subsequent evolution,diminishing the subsequent public awareness and influence of the genre'sAfrican-American roots. After the instrument survey, examples will be presented of the dance tunes themselves-jigs, reels, and hornpipes. We will focus on their structure and distinctive rhythms by listening, clapping, and teaching a dance such as Fallai Luimni (The Walls of Limerick). The dance will be accompanied by the presenters. The last section of the workshop will introduce Irish singing traditions. Ornamentation and performance practice will be discussed as participants listen to two versions of the same song and then learn to sing the song themselves. Some Techno scholars, such as Simon Reynolds and Bill Brewster, have tended to cover Techno's racial and class evolution from a Eurocentricstandpoint, while others have implied but not explicitly analyzed the music's complex AfricanAmerican racial and cultural heritage, such as Dan Sicko. My research attempts to clarify the impact and role of the music's socio-cultural heritage on its form, impact and evolution. McCord, Kimberly Illinois State University ATMI Using MIDI Instruments for Reaching Children With Special Needs McCarthy, Marie University of Maryland CMS Fifty Years of an International Perspective Through the International Society for Music Education Children with special needs are often a challenge for music educators to include in their classes and ensembles. Music educators are often not even sure if disabilities impact music learning and understanding. Under current federal law (Individuals with Disabilities Act of 1990) music educators are expected to include children with disabilities in their music classes. Observing children create music using music technology is a powerful way to understand how their disabilities impact them musically. A variety of children with disabilities will be discussed with supporting video clips and MIDI files. MIDI instruments such as the SoundBeam and DrumKat are used along with keyboard synthesizers and software to help reach children musically. See Oliva, Giacomo - Fifty Years of an International Perspective Through the International Society for Music Education McCarthy, Marie University of Maryland Lilt a Tune, Dance a Reel: Irish Traditional Music in the Classroom CMS This presentation falls under the "Music Education" category in the CMS Call for Program Participation. The session addresses how Irish traditional music and dance can be presented in the K - 12 classroom. Our focus in this demonstration/workshop will be interdisciplinary: through our presentation of particular music and dance forms, we also illustrate other aspects of Irish culture from both an historical and a contemporary perspective. The session will include lecture, listening, and hands-on activities. McGee, Kristin University of Chicago Imaging the Gender of Jazz: All-Girl Bands on Film, 1928-1946 This paper investigates a number of “all-girl” bands featured in music films from the late 1920s to the 1940s, which have until now, been mostly forgotten and seldom viewed since their initial releases (Tucker 2000, Rosetta Records 1990, Jezebel 1986). All-girl bands first appeared during the 1920s in short-subject films and later, in the forties, as Soundies, three-minute music films played in mini-film The workshop will begin with an overview of the nature and scope of Irish traditional music, including a brief background of political and social issues as they Individual Abstracts SEM 77 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 boxes strategically positioned in ballrooms, theatres, cafes and hotels (Terenzio 1995). The various feminine representations of all-girl bands reveal a range of gendered assumptions put forth by the industry through the revolutionary medium of soundfilm including the cult of “white” womanhood, the patriotic service girl and the “hot” and glamorous jazz band director. The few extant reviews of the original, pioneering all-girl musical films betray the double burden experienced by women musicians who performed in the public domain from the 1920s on. The industry’s obsession with female attractiveness and the more damaging assumption that good-looking women or “ringers” were not capable of playing professionally further perpetuated the notion that all-girl music was merely a novelty, a gimmick or a commercial ploy. In the early days of soundfilm, many of those all-girl bands presented on film also performed in theatres as openers to feature-length films. Phil Spitalny and his Hour of Charm Orchestra, for example, opened for several Paramount features in New York City, including Artists and Models (1937) starring Jack Benny and featuring Louis Armstrong in a musical cameo, while Ina Ray Hutton and her Melodears provided the overtures in New York for a Hollywood adaptation of Marie Antoinette (Buckley 1989). The number of all-girl bands performing live in theatres both before talkies and after in the 1930s suggests that their role as professional musicians was firmly established prior to their assumed “novelty” appearances in short subject films in the 1930s and 1940s. education in teaching traditional music. Included are the problems of balancing respect for tradition with the need to innovate, the acceleration of change required by the commercial world, and the ability of academia to respond to the multidimensional aspects of an oral tradition when brought into an institutional framework. The paper will end with a consideration of whether such programs could work similarly with U.S. institutions—and whether that is a desirable goal. McLucas, Anne Dhu University of Oregon O Brother: The Creative Use of Film in Teaching Oral Traditions Ever since the film 'Amadeus' created an unprecedented interest among college students in the music of Mozart, music teachers have been aware that popular films can entice university students into learning about a new topic. The film by the Coen brothers, 'O Brother, Where Art thou' provides the opportunity to create a course on another topic that has not been at the forefront of popular courses since the 1970s-American folk music. Just as with 'Amadeus,' 'O Brother' must be used judiciously and with supplemental material to show which of the many performance in the film are traditional and which are 'show business,' but the very act of teaching students how to tell the difference and where to look to find the original performances can be instructive. Since the film itself provides a form of context around the music, it is a good starting point for teaching how oral tradition connects with work, religion, political action, entertainment, and commercial recording. By using comparisons to both documentaries and other commercial films, one can also show the uses of music in film and the ways in which it is manipulated to tell a story. Most valuable, however, is to have students take on as projects a closer look at each one of the kinds of music in the film-their genres, their context, their original performer(s), and their collection history. McLucas, Anne Dhu University of Oregon SEM The Scottish Experiment: Incorporating Traditional Music Into Higher Education The interplay of oral and written music and traditional, popular and art music, has been an ongoing feature of Scottish musical life since the 17th century. In the 20th century this interchange reached new heights and entered the arena of commercial music in the wake of the folk revival of the 60s and 70s, which is in some sense an ongoing phenomenon in Scotland. Two major, prestigious institutions of higher education in Scotland, and many smaller ones, have played an important role in the late 20th and early 21st centuries in joining research to the practice and promotion of Scottish traditional music: the School of Scottish Studies at the University of Edinburgh, and the Royal Scottish Academy of Music and Dance in Glasgow. After an intensive period of visiting classes, interviewing faculty, students, administrators, alumni, and outside observers (as a Fulbright Distinguished Scholar in 2002-03), I have formed a picture of a vibrant interchange of research, performance, and commerce, which brings up fascinating issues of the role of Individual Abstracts CMS This presentation will give a sampling of how such a course is taught and what kinds of projects can help students gain an understanding of the process of collecting and studying folk music. 78 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 McPherson, Eve University of California, Santa Barbara Vocal Timbre in Islamic Calls to Prayer Across Cultures SEM where unemployment figures are amongst the highest across the nation, how might “isigqi” – “power” understood as an aesthetic principle – translate into “amandla” – “power” accumulated in the world of social practice and institutions? The particular form of masculinity forged in ngoma might be an increasingly important resource for young men, given the postapartheid circumstances against which they struggle. Yet the valorization of this form of the young male body also plays a critical role in the undoing of the body through sickness and injury. This study begins with the premise that cultural aesthetics govern the production of vocal sound, especially since the voice has communicative capabilities that transcend language. If this is true, then a cultural aesthetic claimed by its adherents to span political borders ought to prescribe common features in music whose cultural context may be otherwise vastly different. This paper is a case study in the use of vocal timbre analysis as a method of isolating and examining acoustic details whose production may respond to the expectations inspired in listeners by such an aesthetic. Difficulties associated with analyzing vocal timbre begin with ethnomusicologists who may be insensitive to subtle but culturally salient acoustic details which define a genre or aesthetic to listeners indigenous to the music. This paper presents a case study of a method which attempts to skirt such problems by isolating a collection of acoustic features that correlate with broad indigenous characterizations of sound. Specifically, I will compare samples of the Islamic call to prayer as recited by mu’adhdhin from Middle Eastern and North African cultures. This comparison provides an interesting case study for several reasons: (1) its acoustic presence defines Islamic communities; (2) it is recited in Arabic regardless of the local language; (3) religious texts note that there is a preferred vocal sound. Using spectrographic analysis, this study seeks to establish whether uniform acoustic features unite the call to prayer across cultures, and whether those features correspond to an express pan-Islamic ideal. Meintjes, Louise Duke University Ngoma song and dance and the disintegrating body Meizel, Katherine University of California, Santa Barbara Timbre as a Conveyor of Meaning in Cross-Cultural Lullabies Issues of meaning in music have long been at the forefront of musicological and ethnomusicological research, though a paradigmatic approach has been elusive. The goal of this study is to identify and explore meaning-bearing elements within examples of one cross-culturally functional genre of music: the lullaby. Previous research has shown that lullabies share acoustic and affective characteristics across cultures to an astounding degree. One premise of this paper is that the generic restrictions imposed by contextually-sensitive and goal-oriented music produces similar vocal features, which in meeting the requirements of the genre, transmit meaning more easily than more “free-form” music. I will include timbral analysis of lullabies sung by both mothers and fathers, comparing renditions sung normally to their infants with renditions of the same song sung by parents with no baby present. Spectral components of these examples will be related to findings in previous studies addressing timbral considerations in emotional speech. As a case study, this paper will contribute to a model of meaning in music, and of emotion in the context of singing. SEM This paper examines the forging of an expressive masculinity in Zulu ngoma song and dance performance, in contemporary rural KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa. When definitive features of responsible and proper Zulu manhood are acutely difficult to sustain in contemporary KwaZulu, how do young men negotiate a pathway into mature adulthood within the community? I use the practice of ngoma song and dance as a prism into the world of this question. Mendonca, Maria Independent Scholar SEM Exploring The Role of New Composition in Validating The 'Authenticity' of British Gamelan Performance The notion of ‘authenticity’ in performance, a charged concept in any context, takes on complex dimensions when applied to Javanese gamelan performance in Britain, a performance culture which is not a consequence of the activity of a migrated Javanese minority, and is comprised overwhelmingly of people with no ethnic or cultural ties to Indonesia. Based on ethnographic research around one song and dance team and drawing on South Africanist masculinity debates, I analyze the virtuosity of individual display and the quality of collective singing. In a community sited at the center of the continent’s HIV/AIDS epidemic, in a region historically ravaged by violence, Individual Abstracts SEM 79 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 The majority of Javanese gamelan groups in Britain play a mixture of traditional Javanese and new British repertory, in different proportions. Not all players value the creation and performance of new repertory to the same extent (or indeed, at all). However, even those who are strongly disinterested in new composition for gamelan appear to recognize its importance in providing “a bridge between musical cultures,” a point of connection which not only balances programs but also attracts audiences and promoters. government's creation of a cultural heritage scheme that teaches tuk in schools will also be considered. This role is reinforced at the supercultural level. In trying to ascertain where gamelan performance fits in the British cultural mosaic, arts funding agencies appear to have come up with a rationale for its support: as long as the performance of traditional Javanese repertory acts as a stimulus for the creation of music for a British context, then it has funding viability. As such the development and performance of new composition provides British gamelan performance with a major part of its “authenticity,” if not in terms of how it views itself (players can be divided on this point) then in terms of how it is perceived by others. See Oliva, Giacomo - Fifty Years of an International Perspective Through the International Society for Music Education Meredith, Sharon University of Warwick Tuk Music and Modern Barbadian Identity Mickey, Maud Northwestern University CMS Fifty Years of an International Perspective Through the International Society for Music Education Milburn, Ellsworth Entre nous CMS Entre nous, for violin, cello, and piano, is in two movements. The first is marked "Slowly, flexibly; agitated." The second is marked, simply, "Fast." Each movement follows somewhat classical models in terms of structure and proportion. The first movement is a modified ABA form, beginning and ending in a quiet and atmospheric manner, while the middle section is dramatic and intense. The second movement is relentlessly fast, and is in the shape of a slightly asymmetrical rondo, with the A sections returning almost literally to provide aural pillars in the structure of the piece. The harmonic and melodic vocabulary is based on a 10-note scale, which, in the whole and in its subgroups and transpositions, allows for exploration of contrasting consonant and dissonant sonorities. Entre nous was commissioned by the Music Teachers National Association and the Pennsylvania Music Teachers Association. It was given its premiere by the Kandinsky Trio at Susquehanna University on November 8, 2002. SEM Tuk, one of the Caribbean family of fife and drum musics, is today promulgated as the indigenous music of Barbados, and officially considered an essential part of modern Barbadian identity. It is presented to tourists as part of cultural shows, is played at official functions, and is taught in schools as part of a national cultural heritage scheme. Traditionally, however, tuk was associated with the black working classes and therefore looked down on by other quarters of society, particularly as it was closely associated with the village rum shop. This led to tuk being derided and, coupled with the social developments of the twentieth century and the replacement of live entertainment with jukeboxes, radio and television, tuk went into decline. By the time Barbados gained independence from Britain in 1966, tuk had almost disappeared. Miller, Kevin University of California, Los Angeles SEM Desi Sounds and Festival Grounds: Authenticity, Identity, and Muscial Syncretism at a South Asian-American Festival In this paper I examine the adoption of tuk as part of the creation of a post-colonial national identity rich in the heritage of the majority black population. Its inclusion in Cropover, Barbados' version of carnival, and the development of an annual tuk competition will be examined, as well as tuk's place in tourism. The role of Wayne Willock, a non-working class practitioner, who has significantly contributed to the revival and recontextualization of tuk, will be discussed. Reasons behind the Individual Abstracts Hunlock Creek, Pennsylvania This paper examines the emerging trends of music production and consumption among South Asian-Americans, and queries the relationship between such musical activities and the formation of a “hyphenated” cultural identity. Self-described as desis, South Asians in North America must negotiate between their cultural origins 80 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 in India or Pakistan and the larger multicultural setting of the United States or Canada. Perhaps not surprisingly, the music of the younger, second generation of South Asian-Americans reflects this tension between cultural and national identity through various styles of music that couple South Asian genres with the now global pop genres of hip hop and house, among others. Inseparable from the discourse surrounding the emergence of these new musical forms is the issue of authenticity, which is held in tension with the expectations of both South AsianAmerican and mainstream audiences. The case study for this paper is Artwallah, a multimedia arts festival of the South Asian diaspora that has occurred annually in Los Angeles since 1999. The ideological space created at the festival encourages an inherently “hybrid” style of artistic expression, and the participants at Artwallah 2002 may represent an emerging genre of South Asian-American music distinct from related models of Indo-pop music in urban India and the UK. As this new "Desi-American" music searches for its voice, it both reflects and contributes to a maturing transnational identity among people of South Asian heritage in the complex sociopolitical context of North America. Subsequently I present a preliminary case study of interactions between folk music enthusiasts and lifelong “traditional singers” in southern Georgia, showing how these singers actively co-opt and subvert the stereotypes of linked authenticity and backwardness. Miller, Richard C. University of Wisconsin SEM Preservation, Renewal, Appropriation: Authenticity in the Japanese Minyô Transcriptions of Fujii Kiyomi (1899-1944) The act of transcribing involves aesthetic choices regarding the selection of musical features to transcribe as well as their representation on paper. These choices provide clues to the underlying conception of an authentic identity, which may range from very local to supranational, and from class-specific to universal. In Japan, the transcription of traditional music has historically taken place in service of three goals, all of which relate to notions of an authentic identity: the preservation of a changing repertoire, the renewal of a flagging tradition, and the appropriation of musical practices for use in other genres. Although the goals of preservation, renewal, and appropriation are often grounded in very different constituencies, their linkage via authenticity at times enables simultaneous movement toward all three goals in spite of the significant disjunctures between them. Indeed, in some instances a single person may deliberately strive to accomplish all three goals. In this paper I consider one such person, Japanese composer Fujii Kiyomi (1899-1944). By comparing the minyô (folksong) transcriptions he created in the late 1920s for the journal Minzoku geijutsu [Folk Performance] and the anthology Sekai ongaku zenshû [Complete Collection of the World’s Music] with his work as a composer of solo and choral music in the western classical tradition, I suggest that Fujii located the key to developing a unified Japanese national identity in the preservation and revitalization of diverse local identities. Miller, Kiri Harvard University SEM A Middle Ages for America: Song/Politics/Praxis in the Rural South At the end of the nineteenth century, music critics and composers bemoaned the absence of an authentically American folk music that could serve as the basis for American art music. By the end of the twentieth century, however, American folk music was well-established in pop culture media outlets and well-documented in national archives and American music history books. In this paper I focus on the cultural construction of the rural South in an effort to understand the conceptual genesis of American folk music. After only a few generations of settlement, isolated Southern communities were “discovered” by local-color journalists, song collectors, and middle-class female education workers who described their inhabitants as “our living ancestors”—a trope long reserved for the “primitives” studied by anthropologists. Their music was conceived as racially pure—unsullied by urban immigration or the institution of slavery—yet organically adapted to the American landscape. I explore the strategies writers and filmmakers have used to create a timeless past for America, a “middle ages” projected upon life in isolated Appalachian valleys and Southern swamplands. Examples are drawn from early twentieth-century writings as well as films like Deliverance, Songcatcher, and O Brother, Where Art Thou? Individual Abstracts Miller, Terry E. Kent State University Ballroom Dance As Anacronism and Parody CMS Participatory ballroom dance-not the exhibitions seen on television-primarily takes place at studio- or organization-sponsored events. Having studied ballroom dance for seven years and participated in numerous events sponsored both by Fred Astaire, Inc. and the United States Amateur Ballroom Dancers Association 81 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 (USABDA), I wish to raise questions about these events, the behaviors encountered, and their meanings. I conclude that these events retain both anachronistic aspects of the balls held as long ago as the eighteenth century but, through mimicry and reinterpretation of the original behaviors, have also taken on aspects of parody. political activists within and outside Iran. In these discussions the new station is often criticized for its emphasis on Iranian and Western popular musics. This paper examines the musical implications of this change in format. The current discourse about radio Farda's popular music policy will be used to explore contemporary Iranian views of the status of Iranian popular music and musicians. The radio’s evolving play list and its listeners feedback will be examined in an exploration of its audience’s musical taste. In Europe and the United States well into the twentieth century ballroom dance was primarily reserved for what was left of the aristocracy and for members of the elite society that developed following the Industrial Revolution. Socially, wealthy families were expected to offer thé dansant and diner dansant for members of their social and business circles. In contemporary America, however, ballroom dancing is primarily offered in the context of competitions in which participants are expected to dress appropriately-including in tails and evening gowns-but dance with numbers on their backs while cheered on by onlookers as if at a sporting event. By combining the formal dinner and dance, one of whose components was "social competition" characteristic of upper class behavior, with "athletic competition" characteristic of the middle and lower classes, these events take on aspects of both mimicry and parody of upper class behavior. They are anachronistic in that the behavior parodied is no longer practiced to any extent by the upper classes. Ming, To Yee SEM Disappearing Childhood: A Case Study of Hongkong " Children's Songs"- " Yi Goh" Hong Kong “children’s songs”—” Yi Goh” (Q*) is no longer a genre for a 5-yearold child though its literally suggests it. While Yano suggests that Japanese enka is nostalgic for Japanese people, causing memories of their nation, hometown and various kinds of love, Hong Kong “Yi Go” seems to revitalize the listeners to cherish childhood memories. In the case of Hong Kong, the production of “Yi Goh” is geared for the taste of adults rather than that of the children. Childhood appeal becomes an artifice catering for a wider market. The selling point of children song is to provide a sense of irretrievable childhood, albeit brief and illusionary. In recent television program for children, the language of popular songs has been heavily appropriated. In terms of musical presentation, promotional strategy, lyrics, accompaniment and soundtrack production, Hong Kong “YE Goh” has become a highly hybridized form, mixing elements of popular genres and local children song tradition. I will focus on the interrelationship between “Yi Goh” of Hong Kong and the local popular music industry. In particular, I will highlight the various guises of childhood appeal in the songs. Examples of how childhood is distorted will be presented. Genuine childhood has been displaced and manipulated by the dominance of popular music language. Mina, Niloofar New Jersey City University SEM US Government's Use of Popular Music in its Media Campaign in Iran: An Ethnomusiclogical Exploration On December 19, 2002, the US Government launched a 24-hour radio station addressing Iran from the headquarters of America’s Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty in Prague. The new station, Radio Farda (tomorrow), features a popular music format interrupted by news and political commentaries. Radio Farda is part of a new US initiative to promote America's image in the Middle East. To reach its intended audience, the station has recruited young Iranians from Iran to develop a play list. Radio Farda’s use of Iranian popular music as its core attraction is in recognition of the significance and power of popular music in contemporary Iran where musical restrictions remain in place. Mitchell, Carmen Brooklyn College Diva Delight: Theorizing House Music and House Divas Radio Farda replaced Radio Free Europe’s popular Iranian station, Radio Azadi (liberty), that featured 10 daily hours of news and cultural programing. The change in American radio's format has been publicly criticized by Iranian intellectuals and Individual Abstracts SEM My research explores the mediation of racialized sexualities and gender within house music. Whereas many sources on house music note that this music formed in Chicago, Illinois, as a contemporary dance music text with primarily gay African 82 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 Moehn, Frederick Stony Brook University Racing Brazilian Music American and Latino men at the helm, I explore the historical formations, articulations, and dissemination of house music with a focus on the African American female performer, commonly known as the house diva (a descendant of the disco diva to the extent that house is the musical offspring of disco). Brazilian musicians often claim that they are able deftly to absorb and mix styles in large part because of the country’s history of racial mixing. The trope of miscegenation locates national cultural production precisely in race while it simultaneously obscures the essentialist assumptions underpinning such discourse. Race is important for its very “erasure.” A parallel discursive current, however, implicitly posits a continuum in which certain specifically racialized musical characteristics are representative of authentically Brazilian expression. Prominent musicologist José Ramos Tinhorão, for example, once derided bossa nova as not authentically national because the white youths of Rio de Janeiro could not feel “in their own skin, the rhythmic asymmetry of the blacks,” the latter exemplified by samba. More recently, percussionist Marcos Suzano argued that highlighting the bass frequencies of his pandeiro (tambourine) gave him access to a more “Afro” and, hence, more “Brazilian” sound in his music (1999, personal interview). Although specific case studies have addressed the theme of race in Brazilian music, the topic has not received the level of theorization that it merits. Without advocating a monolithic approach to the topic, I argue for a critical insertion of race into a Brazilian music scholarship that seeks to synthesize various case studies and perspectives as part of a broader comparative critique of the intersections between music, race and nation. In doing so, I also reflect on my position as a North American observer, thereby referencing the complex comparative impulse that has long characterized Brazilian reflections on race. In this paper, I aim to address the following questions: In what ways can the African American woman as house diva be centered within and beyond gay club cultures? How can one place the performance and articulation of the diva as a racialized and gendered icon in house music within the continuum of African American music? What is the relationship between technology and gender within that continuum? Through an examination of the use of digital technologies in house music, the construction of race, gender, and sexuality as “other” will be explored. Miyakawa , Felicia Indiana University SEM "I Flow Like a River When I Deliver": Defining and Mapping Rap's Verbal Styles” Rap devotees distinguish rappers by their flow, the musical application ofthe rapper's skills to a poetic line. Each rapper hones an idiosyncraticflow style comprised of phrasing, rhyme scheme, rhythmic play, timbre, andaccents. Flow styles have changed dramatically since rap's early days andcontinue to be the locus of some of rap music's most daring experiments,yet flow styles can also be a measure of authenticity and allegiance torap's history. As music theorist Adam Krims has argued, flow styles markboth geographic and personal styles, and also help define genericboundaries. In many ways the history of rap music's maturation andgeographic expansion can be told through the history of flow styles. Monson, Linda George Mason University CMS Ross Lee Finney's Creative Use of Aspects of Tonality Within a Twelve-Tone Framework Album reviews, fan communications, and scholarly readings of rap all speak knowingly of flow yet defining the term is a slippery task. This paper argues for a broad, inclusive definition of flow as the combined effectsof rhythmic play, rhyme scheme, phrasing, accents, timbral manipulation, and pitch inflection. Using examples by KRS-One, Run-DMC, the Beastie Boys, Nelly, and DMX, I will identify distinguishing features of several flow styles and will illustrate new ways of mapping flow. These examples will also demonstrate how understanding flow greatly facilitates the telling of rap's history, allows for recognition of the individual artistry of rap musicians, and enhances our appreciation of the dynamic interaction between lyrics and accompanying musical tracks. Individual Abstracts SEM Goals: This lecture-recital illustrates how American composer Ross Lee Finney (1906-1997) creatively incorporated aspects of tonality within his dodecaphonic compositions through the use of tonal centers, lyrical and expressive melodies, symmetrical hexachords, synthetic scales, and chord clusters. His melodies feature scalar passages and triadic harmonies, arising from sets comprised almost exclusively of steps and thirds. Methodology: The compositional approach of Ross Lee Finney's Variations on a Theme by Alban Berg is demonstrated via explanation and theoretical analysis, 83 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 followed by a complete performance of this solo piano work. Finney maintains a tonal center of G minor throughout this dodecaphonic work. Composed in 1952, Finney's Variations are based on the opening theme of Berg's Violin Concerto. rock necessitates not only acknowledging the value of students’ experiences, but drawing upon such experiences as course content. Success in this venture demands that both teachers and students rethink their concepts of music and of authority. As punk rock ideals foster the notions of energy in community, so the practice of the classroom needs to rely on the students as much as the instructor in forming creative energy. In its best moments, this approach to punk generates a productive anarchy. A classroom that allows students to claim their own authority in their own ideas, while offering them the tools, intellectual and musical, to create new concepts of music, its uses, and its meanings. Finney's creativity in combining aspects of tonality within his twelve-tone compositions is explored further through analysis and performance of brief excerpts of Finney's three pedagogical works for piano: 24 Inventions (1956, revised 1971), 32 Piano Games (1968), and Youth's Companion (1981). These collections of delightful short pieces with descriptive titles combine traditional forms with contemporary harmonies and hold great appeal for the young pianist and composer. Improvisation, tonal clusters, bi-chordal sections, and free repetitions are some of the contemporary devices introduced. Some of the pieces are distinguished by Finney's use of a single hexachord, rather than an entire twelve-tone set. Mook, Richard University of Pennsylvania SEM Oh How I Miss That Old Gang of Mine: Memory and Homoeroticism in Barbershop Performance Conclusions: Finney's approach to twelve-tone music is appealing and accessible to music students and to audiences alike. It is particularly useful for introduction, analysis, and application of the dodecaphonic style for classes in music theory, 20th century music history, applied piano instruction, keyboard skills, and music appreciation. The purpose of this paper is to re-examine how memory and nostalgia have shaped the homoerotics of barbershop performance in Philadelphia. Scholars have only recently explored the roots of this nostalgic genre in African-American culture, commercial entertainment, and the early recording industry, and the importance of this complicated and dynamic history for current barbershop repertories and performance practices (Abbott, 1992; Henry, 2001; Averill, 2003). Anthropologists have recently drawn metaphorical connections between the social closeness and "harmony" that characterizes barbershop groups and the musical harmony of barbershop singing (Averill 1999, 2003; Garnett, 1999). Using evidence from fieldwork conducted with the Sounds of Liberty Barbershop Chorus in Philadelphia and archival research, this paper will document that both this musical/physical closeness in barbershop performance and the lyrics of many barbershop songs reference an otherwise forgotten aspect of barbershop's history. They cite the urban, working-class, male communities of the early 20th century, especially "gangs", in which men often engaged in same-sex intimacy and pleasure while performing and defining their masculinities relative to one another. By contextualizing and analyzing the gestures and song interpretation of a recent barbershop performance, this paper will show how, through this nostalgic musical practice, barbershoppers engage a rich tradition of male intimacy that defines their hobby, even as they forget the history of that tradition. Montague, Eugene University of Central Florida CMS Anarchy in the Ivory Tower: An Approach to Punk Rock in the Music Curriculum Teaching a course on punk rock within a music curriculum poses several interesting problems. To cite a few: punk, as a genre, dismisses what are generally considered musical skills; punk demands a rebellious attitude to authority, including that of a college professor and, in practice, punk includes a plethora of small bands and ‘zines that escape the radar of most textbooks and publications. This paper will give an account of a class on punk offered through the Music Department of the University of Central Florida. In doing so, it suggests solutions to the problems described above, while recording both the positive and negative effects of introducing anarchy to the ivory tower. In particular, the paper discusses students’ relationships to the course music, comparing these to courses in the classical canon. The context of a class in punk Individual Abstracts 84 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 Moore, Hilary University of Pennsylvania SEM British Jazz?: Imitation, Innovation, and the Search for Authenticity by the mid-1960s. The paper notes that the 1950s had been associated with corruption, inequality, and vice, yet gave rise to amazingly vibrant musical life. The 1960s, by contrast, witnessed the emergence of a much more egalitarian society with fewer racial barriers, more educational opportunities, and many free social services, yet one that suffered a process of musical impoverishment virtually from the outset. Ken Colyer, a British Cornet player, joined the Merchant Navy in 1951 in the hope of reaching his jazz Mecca. After more than a year of sailing the world, he docked in Alabama, jumped ship, and boarded the Greyhound bus for New Orleans. Over the next month, he played, recorded, and formed friendships with George Lewis, Kid Howard, and many others. However, having outstayed his visa he was jailed for over a month, before being deported back to Britain. The poetic drama of his pilgrimage caught the imagination of the British musical public and a band greeted him on the peer, awaiting his leadership. After devoting the rest of his life to the reproduction of “true” New Orleans jazz, he died a pauper. Morales, Melissa University of California, Los Angeles SEM Re-claiming Colombia: The Politics and Poetics of an Andean Music Festival Aguadas in Andean Colombia, this ethnography looks at how the people of a nation in conflict musically express, question, negotiate and redefine their cultural identities. Considerably distinct from folk festivals in other Andean countries, folk music festivals in Colombia have evolved into largely urban-centered, corporatesponsored events where mostly conservatory-trained musicians compete for significant cash prizes, recording contracts and national prestige. In this paper, I consider the motivations behind Colyer’s passionate dedication to a music so foreign to his own background. I also draw connections between race and class as imaginative categories within the British jazz community. Finally, I question Colyer’s belief that no European can equal or surpass the brilliance and depth of America’s jazz legacy. While his humility may not have been misplaced for the 1950s, it surely is now? Therefore, the convergence of oral and written, traditional and modern, local and transnational on a festival stage cause creative and political tensions among participants, audience and judges-who year after year embark on a quest for meaning, reaffirmation and opportunity-to the extent that even the terms “traditional music” and “folklore” are considered problematic. Moore, Robin Temple University SEM Progressive politics and inadvertent cultural crisis in early 1960s Havana Exploring the history that brought hundreds of emigrant performers to Miami, this paper examines early political decisions by Cuban revolutionary leaders and their impact on music making. While well intentioned, most had disastrous results. They included the outlawing of casino gambling, an industry which had heavily subsidized performance. As a result of this alone, virtually all cabarets and major hotels faced bankruptcy within the first nine months of 1959. Other decisions included the creation of minimum and maximum wages for musicians which outraged well known artists and resulted in their departure; the abolition of copyright, viewed as exploitative, which led to a similar exodus of composers and the registering of fewer songs; the closure of neighborhood dance halls and private societies (sociedades de recreo) in an attempt to break down barriers of segregation; and the nationalization of record labels, throwing production into disarray and soon leading to a radical drop in LPs for sale. Such actions in conjunction with sharp declines in tourism after the Bay of Pigs invasion decimated Cuba’s entertainment sector and made it entirely dependent on government support Individual Abstracts More broadly, as music festivals are spaces where notions of authenticity, modernity, tradition and “progress” are articulated and contested in and through music, this paper looks at current performative and stylistic trends, which are organized in thematic categories: a) the increasing ‘academization’ of Andean music in Colombia; b) the symbolic significance of Colombians’ attempts to sophisticate both the musical and lyrical content of once traditional forms into alternative products (“propuestas”); and c) the perceived higher value of foreign cultural practices (“extranjerismo”). This paper’s discussion is framed in light of the literature on Latin American modernity and global cultural flows, attempting to delve into the discursive positions from which contemporary Andean musical practices stem. 85 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 Morelli, Sarah Harvard University SEM Kathak Yoga: Combining Dance, Musicianship and Meditation Through an Indian Art in the West lyrics, and cross-cultural references in the lyrics (from Biblical quotations to references to African unity). Linguistic structuralism is applied to selected lyric and is defined as the belief that codes, signs, and rules govern all social and cultural practices, including communication and literature. This coding makes the specific language used culturally loaded. In Jamaica, certain language is used to explore issues of religious faith (Rastafarianism), African identity, and cultural awareness. This study decodes some of this loaded language and identifies its cultural ramifications. In his article, “The Ecology of Indian Music in North America,” Daniel Neuman cites several factors lending to the persistence of Indian classical music in the West, including the music’s technical virtuosity, improvisatory nature, and religious significance, symbolically exemplifying the “spiritual East” (1984: 14). These features also mark the music’s associated dance form, Kathak, and in particular, “Kathak Yoga,” an innovative technique combining technical difficulty and spiritual appeal, which aids in the mastery over tal (rhythm) necessary for improvisational dancing. Moskowitz, David V. University of South Dakota CMS Jamaican Song Lyrics As Multicultural Signifiers: Cultural Identity in Reggae Developed by Kathak master Chitresh Das over the last 30 years of teaching in the San Francisco Bay Area, Kathak Yoga demands that a dancer produce the most basic musical elements necessary for dance accompaniment. The dancer must recite the theka (syllables representing a tabla player’s most basic marking of the pulse of a particular rhythmic cycle), and sing the lehara, (a cyclic melody serving the same function), while simultaneously dancing rhythmically complex compositions utilizing footwork, turns, hand gestures and facial expression. The proposed lecture is an interdisciplinary discussion of the use of song lyrics as cultural signifiers in the music of Jamaica (employing elements of structuralism). The most visible exponent of Jamaican popular music in the 1960s and 1970s is reggae. Reggae music itself is an amalgam of disparate influences both in musical style and in language use. The Jamaican case study will include discussion of the use of patois in reggae lyrics, and cross-cultural references in the lyrics (from Biblical quotations to discussion of repatriation to Africa to overt calls for African unity). Selected musical examples will be employed to illustrate reggae style and lyrical content. In Jamaica, certain culturally coded language is used to explore issues of religious faith (Rastafarianism), African identity, and cultural awareness. This coding makes the specific language used "loaded." This paper decodes some of this loaded language and identifies its cultural ramifications. Kathak Yoga was developed out of artistic necessity particular to life in the diaspora and in response to the challenges of teaching Kathak in a Western context. Although primarily for riyaz, or concentrated individual practice, it is now beginning to appear on stage even in the most traditional settings. This paper examines Kathak Yoga’s development and explores the performative and discursive strategies employed in rendering this innovation “authentic” and “traditional.” SEM Munger, Jennifer University of Wisconsin, Madison SEM It’s Three A.M. - Do You Know Where Your Partner Is? Dancing The Quadrille In North Sulawesi The proposed lecture is an interdisciplinary discussion of the use of song lyrics as cultural signifiers in Jamaican popular music in the period spanning 1960 to 1980. The most visible exponent of Jamaican popular music during this time is reggae. Reggae music itself is an amalgam of desperate influences both in musical style and in language use. The Jamaican case study will include discussion of general Jamaican history (where it applies), general reggae style, use of patois in reggae Late at night on January weekends in villages all over the Minahasa regency of North Sulawesi, Indonesia, announcers shout out to residents to find partners for the Katrili (quadrille) dance. No longer the 17th century French figure of four couples, the Minahasan dance square is formed by as many people as can find a partner. How have contemporary Minahasan villagers transformed this social dance, brought by Dutch colonizers, into a means of expressing themselves? I argue that colonial nostalgia plays an important role in the integration of the Moskowitz, David University of South Dakota Song Lyrics as Identiy Signifiers: a Jamaican Case Study Individual Abstracts 86 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 quadrille into the Minahasan repertoire. If, as Rosaldo (1989) suggests, colonizers are nostalgic for that which they have destroyed, how is colonial nostalgia felt and expressed by the colonized? One would expect them to focus on a pre-colonial past, and indeed, many Indonesian cultural practices from the colonial era have been effectively erased by the central government. However, Minahasans not only perform quadrille for themselves; they also display it to outsiders as a unique marker of Minahasan identity. There are two reasons for this: the first is that they do not consider the changes brought about by the colonial regime to have been uniformly destructive. More importantly, quadrille and the colonial past represent nostalgia for a future based on Western democratic ideals, which, according to Minahasan commentators, seem to have been forgotten by the Indonesian government. awareness of its African heritage in Jamaica’s cosmopolitan centers but stressed an equally strong European influence that influenced the way Festival adjudicators judged competition. Many performers found that their particular “nationalist” approach to mento did not match official expectations and were forced to question Festival policy. This conflict between official ideology and grass roots beliefs turned some mento musicians away from Festival competition in the late 1960s and early 1970s. In the 1970s, however, a mento -influenced sub-style of reggae called “mento reggae” emerged that fulfilled some of the officially sanctioned expectations about traditional mento, but gave artists greater musical freedom to incorporate new ideas and sounds. Mento reggae created a sense of national belonging different from that promoted by the National Festival for the Arts. Using a historical method that uses fieldwork observations and interviews as the basis for interpreting archival information, I will examine the re-interpretation of mento in reggae to show the how these national conflicts over race and class created at independence have been addressed in music. Nasreddin-Longo, Ethan Newfane, Vermont CMS Teaching Music Theory from a Cross-Cultural Prospective - A Report from Year Three in the Field See Bennett, Barbara - Teaching Music Theory from a Cross-Cultural Prospective A Report from Year Three in the Field Neal, Jocelyn University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Music Theory Pedagogy: An International Perspective Neff, Severine University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Music Theory Pedagogy: An International Perspective CMS This panel will familiarize Americans with the curricular and pedagogical approaches of Korean and Russian institutions. Faculty and graduates of Moscow State Conservatory, Moscow, Russia, and Hanyang University, Seoul, Korea, will present short papers. They will discuss the teaching of the western theoretical legacy and the original folk and classical traditions of their nations. An American theorist will respond to the matters raised by the panelists. A general discussion will follow. See Neff, Severine - Music Theory Pedagogy: An International Perspective Neely, Daniel New York University National Belonging, Mento Musicians and Reggae Music SEM Severine Neff, moderator of the panel, will give a brief history of the foreign institutions under discussion. Ildar Khannanov, a graduate of Moscow State Conservatory and the University of California at Santa Barbara, and currently an Assistant Professor of Theory at Oklahoma City University, will give an overview of theoretical instruction in Soviet and post-Soviet Russia. In particular, he will engage unique approaches to solfege based on Russian folk song. Mikhail Krishtal, currently a doctoral student in composition at Duke University and a graduate of and former Assistant Professor of Theory at Moscow State Conservatory, will critique the Soviet system of music education for its failure to motivate personal Jamaica introduced a new cultural policy with independence in 1962 intended to present, preserve and, more importantly, legitimate Jamaica’s African heritage. This policy helped foster a stronger sense of national belonging among Jamaica’s black majority (especially through the National Festival of the Arts) but produced conflicting opinions about the meaning of Africa in Jamaican culture that are still at the root of nationalist discourse today. The National Festival of the Arts’ description of mento music helped raise Individual Abstracts CMS 87 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 responsibility for study, especially the analytic study of acknowledged masterworks. He will argue his points by focusing on the Soviet-sanctioned harmony book by I. Dubovsky, S. Evseev, I. Sposobin and V. Sokolov, commonly known as the brigade text provocative musics; they engage one another in animated discourse. They execute creative projects, in any medium, in response to select compositions; with these projects, they identify and transmute the prevailing energies of a given work. Respected as intelligent assayers of music, they are challenged to shape their own critical-responsive worlds from scratch; and they generate original musical, verbal, and visual texts in honoring this charge. Tatiana Gutnik. currently a doctoral student in composition at Duke University and a graduate of Moscow Conservatory, will contend that pedagogy in counterpoint suffered during the Soviet regime, since its study is more difficult to reduce to formulaic substance than harmony. She, however, sees the text Polyphony by Victor Fraionov as the exception and argues that it is Russia’s most impressive, recent publication on counterpoint. Songtaik Ahn-Kwon, Associate Professor of Music at Hanyang University in Seoul, will describe her University’s curriculum in Korean theory and European harmony, counterpoint, and form. She will give special emphasis to the different pedagogical traditions in the study of western and Korean theory. Jinmi Davidson, a doctoral student in musicology at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, will comment on the recent Korean trend to turn away from European studies toward the study of Korean theory, aesthetics, and instrumentation. Jocelyn Neal, an Assistant Professor of Theory at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, whose expertise is American country music, will both summarize and critique the issues raised by the panel. Nelson, Mark Wesleyan University A Holistic Experimental Sound-Art Curriculum Confronted with fundamental underlying questions: * Who are you? * How can you use sound to explore and articulate your identity?, students are emboldened to forge their own sonic investigations of fundamental human concerns. The multiplicity of political, aesthetic, spiritual, literary, and psychological issues that emerges in their original compositions is often breathtaking to them and me. By sharing some of their work, I hope to demonstrate the transforming power of this curriculum. Neubert, Colleen Slippery Rock University CMS Muse Over Miami: Songs and Piano Works of the Legendary Mana-Zucca CMS See Solomon, Nanette Kaplan - Muse Over Miami: Songs and Piano Works of the Legendary Mana-Zucca The premises of my experimental sound-art curriculum for students of disparate musical backgrounds are simple. Since Nishimura, Junko University of Chicago Musical "Cuteness" as Women’s Narcissism and Men’s Fetishism (1) numerous 20th-century composers sparked dramatic transformations of our understanding of music's purposes and possibilities; and as (2) basic sound-recording and -processing equipment makes it possible for anyone with a modicum of encouragement and guidance to create vivid, substantive music, a critical engagement with the work of 20th-century iconoclasts, coupled with the opportunity to undertake one's own sonic explorations, can promote the life-changing growth and intellectual acuity that liberal-arts institutions seek to nurture. "Cute" girls are more popular among Japanese men than “sexy" girls. "Cuteness" as a value standard by which men estimate women serves as an important index of body formation for women who have internalized the male gaze. The patriarchal Japanese music industry tends to standardize female singerson the basis of "cuteness," and the female body as well as her music is commercialized through this standardization. In a contradictory turn of events, however, the commercialization of the female singer intended for male consumershas produced the female consumer. aiko, for example, as a representative of Japanese female singers who emphasize "cuteness," is supported by fans of both sexes. Why would a "cute" singer who is strategically designed to satisfy the male gaze gain My class assignments spur students to become probing, articulate listeners as well as imaginative and fearless composers. They read seminal texts; they listen to Individual Abstracts SEM 88 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 Norton, Sean Hampshire College SEM Articulating Cultural Identity in Traditional Khmer-American Music popularity among women? Is this because these women identify the commercialized singer with their body image, thus satisfying the desire of “others’ (men)” that equals their own self-desire? Is sisterhood or homosexual bodily intimacy experienced between the singer and female audience? It can be said that while men's fetish adherence to a "cute" singer is based on female objectification, women's narcissism is paradoxically satisfied by the self-objectification achieved through the male gaze. Thus, the duplication of the objectified female body can be observed in the musical phenomenon represented by aiko as a "cute" singer. I will look not only at her musical features but alsoher bodily attributes such as "voice," "behavior" and "utterances" in order to examine J-POP's musical "cuteness" from the gender perspective. Khmer-American musicians in New England arrived as refugees in the early 1980s in the wake of the Vietnam War and the atrocities of the Khmer Rouge regime. Coping with staggering emotional trauma, Khmer-Americans have focused on the transition from life in a largely rural agrarian society to a capitalist economy and on rebuilding core cultural institutions, particularly Theravada Buddhism. Traditional music has also been a site of revival, and today Khmer-Americans perform several vernacular styles, notably mohori (entertainment music), and phleng kar (wedding music). Anthropologists writing about the Khmer diaspora have concentrated on the politics of cultural reconstruction and paradigms of unification, underscoring the value refugees place upon establishing indigenous traditions in the U.S. However, this focus has often de-emphasized conflict within the Khmer community, reifying static models of cultural identity. Khmer music scholarship has been primarily concerned with salvaging what remained of musical knowledge after the Khmer Rouge era and on the sophisticated practices of Cambodian court musicians. Vernacular traditions inside and outside Cambodia have been documented, but little has been revealed about the cultural context of this music and its relationship to the court tradition. In this paper, I will compare Khmer vernacular music in New England with recordings of court musicians in Cambodia who perform vernacular music with the techniques of court music, thus highlighting previously unexamined regional variety. I will also contextualize this musical analysis within the wider discourse of Khmer culture, providing an opportunity to demystify static views of an evolving Khmer-American identity. Nooshin, Laudan Brunel University SEM Subversion and counter-subversion: Power, Control, and Meaning in the New Iranian Pop Music In May 1997, Mohammad Khatami was swept to power in a historic landslide victory in Iran’s presidential elections. Since 1997, Khatami has initiated a series of reforms in which the most far-reaching have been in the cultural domain. One of the most remarkable changes is that after almost 20 years in which all pop music was officially banned, there has been a gradual relaxing of government policy and certain types of pop music have now become legal again, including a new brand of local pop, heavily promoted by the Government broadcasting organization. Particularly interesting is the fact that more recently, and for the very first time in Iran, young people are making their voices heard through the emergence of an independent and grass-roots popular music, something only made possible by the relaxation in government restrictions. Novak, David Columbia University SEM Noise at the source of the Signal: US-Japan Circuits of Experimental Music Drawing on fieldwork carried out in Iran in the Summers of 1999, 2000 and 2002, this paper will consider the implications of the post-1997 changes and trace the various attempts to control pop music and its meanings. The paper will explore the ways in which music and the discourses around music have served as an arena for playing out some of the most contested issues of nationhood, identity and power in Iran and ask what happens when a form of cultural resistance is appropriated by those against whom the resistance was originally directed. Individual Abstracts How do we expand our notions of politics, place, and expressive culture when we travel with a recording in its transnational distribution? As contemporary global distribution networks further separate sounds from their spatial and historical sources, popular music circulations increasingly reflect the imagination of place, criteria of performative “liveness,” and practices of reception in collecting and exchanging recordings. This paper traces the US-Japan circulation of experimental music within the larger frameworks of popular music industries, revealing the 89 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 multiple layers of intercultural communication and miscommunication that develop flexible histories of translocal music scenes. It is concerned with the ways in which esoteric musical subcultures lucidly articulate the critical concerns surrounding globalization, as underground margins in different sites attempt to both partake in and evade pervasive contexts of nationalisms, marketplaces, essentialist cultural identities and social histories of locality. In the shifting circuits of experimental music that connect Japan with the US, discourses of genre in “independent,” “underground,” “outsider,” and “avant-garde” scenes intersect with broader global cosmopolitan practices of subcultural naming and scene identity, the documentkeeping network of record collecting, the spread of independent media, and new technologies for creating and exchanging musical objects. O'Hagin, Isabel Barbara University of Michigan Musica Para Los Ninos: Song and Games for Children O'Connell, John Morgan Brown University, University of Limerick SEM In the Time of Alaturka: Tracing Alterity in Turkish Musical Discourse O'Hagin, Isabel Barbara University of Michigan Transforming Music Programs to Care This talk concerns the appropriation of a European musical discourse (It. alla turca; Tr. alaturka) in Turkey during the nineteenth century. Representing the percolation of European cultural practices into the Ottoman Empire over the past two centuries, the talk will show how native culture bearers manipulated this discourse to suit (and to validate) contemporary prejudices concerning taste. In this respect, the paper traces the diachronic manifestation of difference in Turkish musical discourse at four different historic moments. That is, it examines the construction of alterity in Austrian Opera during the 1780s (In the Time of alla turca); in Ottoman military music during the 1850s (In the Time of alabanda); in Turkish art music during the 1920s (In the Time of alafranga); and in Turkish popular music during the 1990s (In the Time of arabesk). Principally informed by postcolonial criticism, the talk will map the various articulations of alaturka in Turkish musical discourse showing the ways in which native conceptions of difference were defined according to the precepts of western prejudice and deployed according to the strategic interests of an ever-changing political elite. In this way, traces of the alaturka polemic persist today in Turkish popular imagination. Latinos constitute the largest minority group in the school-age population, and, in 2003, have surpassed African Americans to become the largest overall minority. Our nation’s mosaic is definitely shifting and this challenges notions of how we view ourselves and educate our youth in this new century. Yet, as the numbers increase, more Latino students fail in our school systems than other minority groups. As music educators vested in multicultural education, we ask how our music programs will change to meet these challenges? In order for this transformation to take place, it will require that we become engrossed in fostering caring relationships with our students, immersing ourselves in care, the ultimate reality of life (Heidegger, 1962). What kind of approaches and what type of music curricula should we design to improve the success rate of not only Latino students, but for all students? We ask what would our schools look like if all students had a chance to be nurtured and cared for; if all students had the right to succeed. We can reconstruct our own reality based on socially responsible pedagogy, and by expanding our parameters and thinking about what music is or which musics really matter. This reconstruction could include strengthening our parental and community relationships by inviting them to join the dialogue, exploring ways to involve community musicians into our school programs (K-12 and beyond), and the inclusion of their voice in curricular design. By doing so, we will begin to understand the meaning of music in people’s lives. Individual Abstracts SEM This poster session will feature traditional children’s songs and games from Mexico and border states. A selected repertoire (i.e.. finger plays/chants. singing games, and lullabies) and their variants will be highlighted. Teaching strategies that help to build a cultural context in the classroom will be shared, in addition to ideas of how to involve your local community. Participants will learn about the many resources available when teaching multicultural musics. Information regarding fusion characteristics in recorded music for children will be discussed as will the importance of maintaining cultural traditions. 90 SEM October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 O'Hagin, Isabel Barbara Central Michigan University CMS The Latino Connection: Community Partnerships between Latino Musicians and Academe emphasis on money and status rather than talent and creativity. Also, children resent parental sacrifices made for musical training and feel economic pressure due to the obligation to repay parents. In consequence, children develop strained relationships with parents. A survey of Hong Kong private piano instructors is used to explore the effects of a competitive society in combination with traditions of filial obligations and the economic rewards of music instruction. The objectives of this paper are to discuss (1) materialistic motivation for musical learning - due to the social prominence and high income of trained piano teachers, students pursue music instruction more for materialistic rewards than aesthetics; (2) materialistic motivation for musical teaching - due to the importance of music certifications, teachers tend to teach to the test rather than teach meaningful concepts and techniques; and (3) strained family relationships - some children resent parents' insistence on music lessons and their filial obligation to repay their parents' investment. A collaborative partnership between university faculty (music educators and ethnomusicologists), a cultural arts agency (Sofia Quintero Arts and Cultural Center), and Latino musicians in Toledo, Ohio was developed to better inform nonLatinos of the inherent rich musical culture offered. Through observation of musical events (following a year's life-cycle) and subsequent interviews with Latino musicians and community leaders, we examined the role the musical arts play in celebrating heritage, preserving oral and musical traditions, constructing identity, and effecting personal life styles. We also sought to identify the varieties of Latino musics in Northwest Ohio within their sociocultural contexts. We found that contemporary tex-mex and conjunto styles were the most popular musical styles, yet fluid and ever-changing innovations reveal a syncretism with mainstream popular youth music and other musical styles such as salsa and cumbia. We found that Latino musicians use traditional music to express their ethnic identity and to create a sense of community within the host culture. Our discussion will include issues such as: (a) the involvement of culture bearers in local communities, (b) collaborative partnerships in the community, and (c) the development of a theoretical rationale (Banks and other) for a curricular design that encompasses other voices. We believe that the planning, shaping, and delivery of multicultural music education curricula at all levels should contribute to a meaningful understanding of cultural diversity through the arts. By doing so we will better maintain both musical traditions and their contemporary evolutions in their authentic cultural contexts. Ohlenbusch, Grace University of Central Arkansas ATMI Beyond the Talking Head: Multimedia Interactive Projects for Elementary Music Methods Current research suggest that technology is (1) not modeled by university education faculty as a viable teaching tool, and (2) not being used by recent graduated of teacher education programs to implement music education standards. There is a need to adapt and develop curricula that enable educators to establish their classrooms and organize instructional priorities in an efficient and cohesive format. This presentation will delineate the foundations and processes underlying custom designed computer-based multimedia instructional programs: multimedia PowerPoint presentations, video analyses of peer presentations, and interactive Web-based multimedia software with digital video presentations of teaching scenarios. The presentation will include a brief summary of the research tools, an overview of the crafting of the multimedia instruments, and a discussion of effective approaches for the use of multimedia technology in undergraduate music education classes. Oi Yan Yau , Eugenia Southwestern College CMS The Effects of Music Education on Family Dynamics and Economics in Hong Kong Culture: A Survey on Private Music Instruction in the Western Classical Tradition Hong Kong has a unique mixture of social and familial values, combining highly competitive Western values with traditional Chinese filial obligation. Education in Western classical music contributes significantly to Hong Kong cultural diversity. The professional teaching of private piano lessons is considered a consistently well-paid career in Hong Kong society. The high status of private music instructors combined with the mixture of Chinese and Western values has resulted in an Individual Abstracts 91 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 Oliva, Giacomo M. University of Nebraska-Lincoln CMS Fifty Years of an International Perspective Through the International Society for Music Education refined. Written as a coda for his radio opera based on Federico Garcia Lorca's play "Bodas de Sangre", "Rainbow Theorem" uses the rich colors of the piano to create a mysterious kaleidoscope of sound. This session is presented in commemoration of the 50th anniversary of the International Society for Music Education (ISME) and in recognition of the lasting relationship over many years that ISME has enjoyed with the College Music Society. The session will address the context in which music is taught in various countries and the relevance this might have for preparing teachers in the United States for the diversity and musical plurality found in today's schools. At the core of this presentation will be ISME's beliefs that the music of the world's cultures, seen individually and as a unit, should play a significant role in the field of music education, broadly defined, and that a minimal background in understanding a selection of music of the world's cultures should be part of all teacher education curricula. Participants will also have an opportunity for a dialogue with the four panelists, all of whom are well acquainted with ISME's work. Ozah, Marie Agatha University of Pittsburg IWALI: The Child-Queen dance in Ogoja Southeastern Nigeria This paper focuses on the Iwali a term that literary means “Queen” but also refers to a unique genre of musical tradition practiced by the Bekwara and lyala peoples of Ogoja in Southeastern Nigeria. The purpose of the Iwali is to celebrate the ideals of womanhood and the person selected is trained to become the model girl, the model woman. The selection process begins early, approximately when the girl is four years old. Once identified as the queen, the young girl is given a horsetail, the symbol of authority. By virtue of this symbol, the Iwali is implicitly admitted into the community of elders. Beauty and artistic excellence are considered among the ideals of womanhood and these are reflected in the selection and training of the Iwali, who in later life is expected to be the most beautiful woman and best dancer in the village. In the 1970s, the Iwali dance, under the drive by the State government to promote the cultural heritage of the then Cross River State, gained international reputation when it was first performed in London. Oshima-Ryan, Yumiko Carleton College CMS From a New Generation of Japanese Composers: Sunao Isaji (b. 1968) Sunao Isaji, recent winner of Japan’s prestigious Akutagawa Composition prize has emerged as one of the most exciting talents of a new generation of Japanese composers. He freely overturns the previous generation’s idea of exploring "crossing points" between Japanese and Western, between modern and traditional. Instead, he explores the juxtaposition of disjunctive elements in quick succession to create a unique new sound, both wild and sensitive. He compares his work to the "hayagawari" of Kabuki theatre in which one character, with the help of stage hands, swiftly transforms from one role into another. In this paper, I will discuss the central role of music and dance in the selection processes of the Iwali, her life as queen, as well as how dance and the song repertoire enrich the ritual and performance practice of this music genre. The paper will also explore how Iwali is transmitted and preserved, and the changes in these processes as a result of political and economical factors especially from the latter part of the twentieth century to the present. The work contributes to studies of music and dance as expressions of gender roles and social class and how they inform the aesthetic dispositions of the dance. This presentation examines two recent works: "Nanban Yakyoku" ( 2001) and "Rainbow Theorem" (2001). A percussion ensemble piece, "Nanban Yakyoku" ("Foreigner's Nocturne"), features the mischievous collision of sounds: from a chorus of Japanese folk tunes to an audio tape of broadcast television. It also employs unique juxtapositions of instrumentation - the modern keyboard harmonica imitates the sound of the traditional Sho from Gagaku (Japanese court music dating back to the 8th century), together with Swiss cow bells, Thai gongs, and Javanese angklung, etc.. The solo piano composition "Rainbow Theorem", presented in a live performance, offers a contrasting kind of work - serious and Individual Abstracts SEM 92 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 Palackal, Joseph City University of New York Ettuniram of the Syrian Orthodox Church: Music in Transition" SEM Pardue, Derek University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign SEM "Tracking Beats and Representing Charts: An Analysis of Brazilian Rap" The system of classifying melodies in an eight-weekly cycle in the liturgy of the Syrian Orthodox churches, known as oktochos (‘eight voices’), took final shape in Syria and Palestine by the eighth century. As a result of the ecclesiastical relation between a section of the St. Thomas Christians of South India and the Antiochean Church, the system came to be introduced in Kerala, progressively from 1751 to 1876. Since then, this strictly vocal, monodic, and mostly syllabic style of music has taken a life of its own in its new home, where it is designated as ettuniram or ettur~gam, meaning ‘eight colors.’ Since the 1960s, the melodies of ettuniram are sung both in the original Syriac (West Syriac) texts and in their translations in Malayalam, the local language. Although oktochos has received scholarly attention in the past (Cody 1982), the theory and practice of ettuniram have virtually been unexplored. In this paper, I examine the application of the concept of ‘color’ to an aggregate of musical characteristics intended to generate aesthetic and emotive effects in the practitioners. The equivocal use of niram and r~gam may have relevance in exploring the early stages in the development of the concept of r~g in Indian art music. Ettuniram appears to be a rare example of a musical system that has explicit theory (as opposed to implicit theory in folk music traditions), and yet falls outside the classical music discourses in India. In urban Brazil, similar to other global hip-hop centers, rap’s sound is usually best captured as an engineered art form – a result of careful production rather than live performance. Over the last five years, hip-hoppers have become more divided on the issue of how to represent “reality,” which is explicitly linked to the process of transforming shantytowns into places of productive citizenship. In this paper, “Tracking Beats and Representing Charts” I investigate the local discourses and structures that rap producers employ in their efforts to articulate specific sound compositions to distinct ideologies vis-à-vis innovative musical sub-genres. Palmer, Anthony F. Boston University Transforming Music Education: Creating Alternatives Parker, Craig B. Kansas State University The Symphonies of Ellen Taaffe Zwilich CMS Miami-born (April 30, 1939) and raised Ellen Taaffe Zwilich ranks among the most esteemed and most performed American composers. The first woman to earn a doctorate in composition from Juilliard (1975), she became the first woman to win the Pulitzer Prize in Music (1983) with her Symphony No. 1: Three Movements for Orchestra. Recipient of numerous prestigious awards, her works have been commissioned, performed, and recorded by many major American orchestras and chamber ensembles. In 1995-99, Zwilich occupied the first Composer's Chair in the history of Carnegie Hall. Named 1999 Composer of the Year by Musical America, she is currently Frances Eppes Professor of Music at Florida State University. CMS See Reichling, Mary - Transforming Music Education: Creating Alternatives Parakilas, James Bates College Top Ten Lists: Mediating Conflicting Methodologies This paper examines Zwilich's four symphonies (1982, 1985, 1992, and 1999), unique works which represent Zwilich's own homages to and transformations of symphonic tradition. Like her other orchestral works, the symphonies reflect her philosophy that "there are no second-class citizens in the orchestra . . . everybody in the orchestra is a virtuoso, and part of my orchestral writing is writing that gives everyone something they can sink their teeth into." The importance of each symphony in her career development and critical reaction to each will be noted. Zwilich's typical stylistic traits (including panchromaticism, lengthy pedal points, ostinatos based on interlocking thirds, and angular melodic lines) will be identified, as will elements which give each symphony its own creative personality. Representative samples from each symphony and excerpts from the author's interviews with the composer will be played to enhance the author's own observations and conclusions. CMS See Sturman, Janet - Top Ten Lists: Mediating Conflicting Methodologies Individual Abstracts 93 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 Party, Daniel University of Pennsylvania Balada at the crossroads: Latin-American pop music in Miami SEM interested in gaining a better understanding of such a service and its instructional advantages. Balada is the pan-Latin-American music por excelencia. A hybrid of Italian and French love songs, Mexican bolero romántico, and African-American R&B ballads, balada is the only musical genre to enjoy a strong fan base and media presence in every Spanish-speaking nation–a position it has consistently maintained for over thirty years. Pease, Rowan University of London K-Wave Fansites in China Supported by a significant presence on satellite and local broadcasting networks, ‘K-wave’ or ‘Korea-wave’ hit China in the late 1990s. Dance and hip-hop bands like H.O.T. achieved album sales of over 400,000 and began to feature in popular dramas as well as music shows. ‘K-wave’ continues to enthral Chinese teenagers and, not surprisingly, South Korean agencies have capitalised on this success to promote trade and tourism. In the 1980s, production of baladas was increasingly centralized, converging on Miami from disparate locations throughout Latin America. This consolidation not only involved the migration of the genre’s star performers but also of an entire support industry. Miami thus found itself playing host to composers, photographers, hair stylists, labels, etc. Centralization in Miami resulted in a homogenization of local styles; turning balada into what García Canclini would consider a global symbolic product. Today it is very difficult to distinguish between a Mexican balada and an Argentinean or Venezuelan one. While music producers attribute the success of ‘K-wave’ to high production values and carefully groomed stars, cultural commentators credit the music’s “Koreanness,” “being neither American nor Japanese,” and “being conservative but trendy.” Drawing on fieldwork in Santiago de Chile I study how listeners perceive and value the transformation of Chilean baladista Myriam Hernández following her immigration to Miami–a transformation that included her physical appearance as well as her musical style. More broadly, I explore how listeners/consumers understand the changes that have occurred within the genre in the past twenty years. Finally, I theorize about the implications of having a U.S. city, Miami specifically, as the production center of a Latin-American musical genre. Fans use Chinese websites to share enthusiasm and information (in July 2002, there were 46 million Internet users in China, 53% under 25 and 45% using chat sites). I have been researching the ‘Korea-wave’ phenomena through fan-sites and chat rooms, exploring tastes, regional cultural flows, and government and industry attitudes. I have become increasingly wary, since the Internet presents all the risks and benefits of armchair ethnomusicology, and others besides. Chat rooms offer anonymity and the possibility of observing undetected, and this raises significant ethical issues. Despite the apparent universality of Internet platforms, my being of a different generation poses as many problems as my coming from a different culture. To participate, one must learn conventions of names, buzzwords, icons and taglines. Paul Menoche, Charles Central Connecticut State University ATMI Enhancing Instruction Through the Delivery of Audio Over the Internet: Digital Audio Reserves as a Collaborative Project Between Libraries and Music Departments In this paper, I discuss how the Internet is used by ‘K-wave’ fans, how they discuss musical tastes, and the practical and ethical problems raised by this type of research. The specialized music resources housed library collections are crucial tools for successful music teaching, scholarship, and study. It is important to include music in digital library initiatives that help to create a "library without walls." One of the most common music-related library digital projects is the development of a digital audio reserves system as an alternative to the traditional reserves desk. After a brief overview and demonstration of a representative digital audio reserves project, the presentation will explore and discuss issues of importance to music faculty Individual Abstracts SEM 94 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 Pekkila, Erkki University of Helsinki SEM The Kalevala on screen: Music and national-romantic framing of an early Finnish folkloric film historical examples of recursive music and on ways in which recursive structures might be used in new compositions. The paper details the multi-level structure of the third movement of Ruth Crawford's 1930 Diaphonic Suite for Solo Flute and examines the pedagogical implications of composing recursive etudes. The paper will conclude with a challenging assertion that music history also exhibits a tendency toward recursive periodicity. In 1920 The Kalevala Society, a Finnish promotional folklore organization, had an ethnographic film made called “The Wedding in Poetic Carelia”. The silent film was shot in a Carelian village and directed by A.O. Väisänen, one of the prominent ethnomusicologists of his time. For the film A. Launis, who was both an ethnomusicologist and a composer, wrote a score, which included among others a lullaby, a lament, and a dance melody. The film and its score were regarded as genuine descriptions of the people of the Kalevala. However, both were representations in many ways. The film was shot on a stage setting where the scenes were acted out and its music largely originated from two earlier operas by Launis. My paper deals with the problem of authenticity from the point of view of framing, this meaning a set of metacommunicative premises guiding one’s interpretation. Behind the film score a number of devices of this sort can be found, including the two operas by Launis, a theater play by Kivi, the written Kalevala by LOnnrot, and finally, the rune songs themselves. What makes the issue more complicated is the fact that Launis was also a field worker who had collected hundreds of folk songs on to a phonograph, transcribed and published them, and had even written a doctoral dissertation on the rune singing. Consequently the purpose of the film seems to have been to provide the viewers with some metacommunicative signs of authenticity rather than to provide authenticity itself. Perone, James E. Mount Union College Recursive Structures in Music Perone, James E. Mount Union College CMS What You Can Do with a Career in Music: Career Options Outside of Music Teaching and Performance See Lamkin, Kathleen - What You Can Do with a Career in Music: Career Options Outside of Music Teaching and Performance Perullo, Alex Indiana University SEM A Popular Genre in the Beginning: Dansi in Dar es Salaam's Interwar Years During the 1920s and 1930s, Dar es Salaam, Tanganyika (now Tanzania) became a center for many musical styles. Due to the pervasiveness of gramophone recordings, the sounds of European, Indian, Arabic, and American music were heard in shops and homes. Several clubs featured ballroom dancing, jazz music, and traditional music and dance. Within this mixture of sounds, cultures, and practices emerged a new genre: dansi. Dansi combined elements of Western music and performance (tuxedos, jazz melodies, and foreign instruments) with local music (traditional drums and rhythms). It became a significant style of popular music because it enveloped and assimilated characteristics of the city in new ways. CMS Ever since the Middle Ages, composers and theorists have shown interest in mathematical patterns in music. The utilization of mathematically based patterns in musical analysis and composition include such diverse examples as: isorhythmic motets, Schillinger's use of interference patterns, Information Theory as an analytical tool, and Bartók's use of the Golden Section. In this paper, I examine the early years of dansi and discuss its importance for Africans migrating to and living in Dar es Salaam. I argue that, dansi, along with another genre taarab, represented the beginning of a popular music scene in the city. Like other parts of Africa during the interwar years, popular music formed through an interest in music more in-line with urban lifestyles. In the case of Dar es Salaam, dansi appeared through the collision of multiple cultures, and grew in importance due to local residents interest in music that symbolized their urban experiences. It is within this historical period that I discuss dansi to comprehend the formation of the genre and its importance in building an urban, popular culture. For the past two decades, considerable attention has been given to recursive structures in the form of fractals. Such recursive structures as the Koch curve, and the Mandelbrot set, with its bug-like shape replicated on many levels of structure, became the popular mathematical icons of the late 1970s and the 1980s. This paper will provide an introduction to the concept of recursion, and will then focus on Individual Abstracts 95 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 Pesek, Albinca University of Maribor National Ideology and Music Education: Experiences from Slovenia Pinzino, Mary Ellen Come Children Sing Institute A New Multimedia Software Paradigm for Music Educators SEM Music education has the potential to bring together the seeminglyopposing interests of national culture and multicultural worldviews. In contrast to the older approach that emphasized the development of musical abilities through the study of classical and to a much smaller extent folk music, the two being sometimes related, new developments in Slovene music education testify to the holistic interest in music as a universal phenomenon. In addition to the increased use of domestic folk music and musics of the world, one should notice the use of music in general as a tool to promote positive values and overcome negative traits such as racism, nationalism, xenophobia, sexism, and homophobia. This paper critically examines three selected projects, in which the interest of national ideology in safeguarding Slovenia’s own folk music heritage is successfully met by the intention to broaden knowledge and abilities by using “foreign” resources. This demonstration will present a new integrated multimedia software tool for Music Educators. The CD-ROM based package integrates audio with text and graphic viewing capability within a single standalone software application. An integrated data base system indexes multiple parameters for cross-reference searching of more than 800 songs for children. Each song is directly linked to a graphical representation of the notation and a midi performance of the score. Key technical features include a music educator focused interface, compatibility on Mac and Windows platforms, the ability to print any score through standard platform resources, and the ability to build and print compilations of songs for classroom use or performance. Designed for teachers of preschool, elementary and children's chorus, this new software application offers a multimedia system paradigm for libraries of music for instrumental and vocal solos, ensembles, and music education series books. Pettan, Svanibor University of Ljubljana SEM Slovenian Ethnomusicology between Folk Music Research and Anthropology of Music Pixley, Stephen Wesleyan University SEM The Performance of Revisionism in Northern Thailand: New Agendas and Reconstituted Hilltribe Tourism Slovenian ethnomusicology developed in close proximity to the important centres of both comparative musicology (Austria) and folk music research (Hungary), yet it fully embraced the paradigm of folk music research only. Such a development was determined by national ideology and care for Slovene cultural identity in the context of multinational states. During the past decade of political independence, following the disintegration of S.F.R. Yugoslavia and prior to the likely inclusion of Slovenia into the European Union, Slovenian ethnomusicology is characterized by two tendencies: one seeking continuation of (Slovenian) folk music research as determined by “national interests” and the other trying to broaden the scope of ethnomusicological research through the holistic anthropological perspective. This paper points to intricate connections between these two tendencies and their reflections in topical and methodological aspects. It is structured in a comparative manner in order to point to the important relations between the developments and personalities in Slovenia and abroad. Individual Abstracts ATMI Erik Cohen has brought attention to the disproportionate power structure of hilltribe tourism, with Thai-owned trekking companies imposing themselves on villages and reaping nearly all the profits. This paper examines two unusual cases, in which alternative agendas are pressed, and music is the central activity on display. The first is of an entire village hired by its NGO overseer to perform at feasts for trekkers, who are told their visit is not touristic but philanthropic and educational. While this NGO does profit-share, its message of concern about trekking exploitation masks the exploitative dynamic of a development agency brokering those under its care, and illustrates latent touristic tendencies underlying hilltribe development work. The second case is a village that had once epitomized the artiface of the jungle trek. Cohen’s fieldwork in the 1970s witnessed a community aggressively preserving the appearance of authenticity, “lest the tourists lose interest and stop coming” (1983). During my own recent fieldwork, Laota was deemed “spoiled” in the estimation of trekking companies, and was being passed over in favor of more impoverished locales. A single family, however, had reinvented tourism on its own terms, with a non-invasive homestay, educational musical demonstrations, and a focus on the visable results of 96 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 development. This depiction deliberately contradicted trekking’s normal primitivist narrative, and had the hidden agenda of countering Laota’s image as a village grown wealthy through narcotics. My analysis focuses on the ways that musical performance acts both symbolically and structurally within these alternative tourism examples. pain for she and I, as well as our two young children. It took us time, but the next year was a time of healing and I found my relationship with God stronger and more precious than ever. This piece celebrates that healing and renewal. It was inspired by the following scripture from the book of Micah: "With what shall I come before the Lord, and bow myself before God on high? Shall I come before him with burnt offerings, with calves a year old? Will the Lord be pleased with thousands of rams, with ten thousands of rivers of oil? Shall I give my firstborn for my transgression, the fruit of my body for the sin of my soul?" He has told you, O mortal what is good; and what does the Lord require of you but to do justice, and to love kindness, and to walk humbly with your God? Micah 6:6-8 Poole, W. Gerard University of Maryland SEM Flamenco and the Sacred; Pilgrimage and Pagentry in Andalusian and Gypsy Catholicism This presentation will focus upon three Catholic rituals in which Flamenco features prominently: The first will be the singing of the devotional Saeta (sung in the Flamenco style since the turn of the 19th century) at Holy Week in Sevilla, Spain. The second will be the Gypsy pilgrimage to the city of St. Maries-de-la-Mer in southern France, where the Spanish Rumba is the predominant musical rhythm in which the Gypsies sing to St. Sarah “la Kalí” (the Dark One). The third will be the festival known as “El Rocio” which is celebrated in honor of the Virgin Mary as “the Mother of Andalusia” at an ancient pre-Christian site outside of Sevilla. The piece is in four sections. The first depicts some of the tension and sadness of remembered pain. The next is a slower and lyrical song of yearning. This is followed by a short percussion interlude utilizing some interesting timbres and effects. The final portion of the piece is a dance, which evokes the joy of reconciliation. The presentation will begin with a short history of the three celebrations and situate them within the framework of the greater Catholic pilgrimage system. This will be followed by footage of all three celebrations from the video taken this spring. The footage will include interviews with the well-known singer and Flamencologist, Alfredo Arrebola PhD. Prestamo, Manuel Oklahoma City Community College The Many Facets of Community College Music Education The goal of this project is to provide an indication as to whether Flamenco Deep Song continues to be, or has ceased to be, influenced by its sacred elements. The investigation looks into the contemporary, rather than the historical, relationship between Flamenco and present day sacred practice, which in turn, will reflect on the broader issue of art in transition from the sacred to the secular. Prechtl, Brian What is Good Grace College CMS See Bowker, Barbara E. - The Many Facets of Community College Music Education CMS What is Good is a piece that celebrates life and the joy of walking with God. I wrote this piece following a difficult period in my life. The previous year. my wife and I had lost a child very late in her pregnancy. It was a difficult time of loss and Individual Abstracts 97 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 Procopio, Mary Michigan State University SEM Transculturation in the Cuban Diaspora: Musical and Cultural Identity in the Lansing Cuban Community gain employment and to succeed financially. In this study, I discuss how Cubans living in the Lansing area use music to demonstrate their idea of Cuban culture, examine the cultural reciprocity that has taken place here between Cubans and other ethnic groups, and explore the relationship between musical and cultural identity within this community. I argue that while Cubans in Lansing do not demonstrate their "Cubanness" through festivals or community-sponsored events, there is still a strong presence of Cuban culture in this area, and that Cubans here have found the means to retain their identity through music and culture even as they are assimilated into American society. One of the major challenges that diasporic communities must contend with is the attempt to retain their identity, both as individuals and collectively, even as they assimilate and integrate into a new society. In his book Modernity at Large: Cultural Dimensions of Globalization, Arjun Appadurai examines assimilation and isolation in diasporic communities in regards to identity, and challenges us to understand how these two social phenomena intersect. Identity, he argues, is based on constructions of the imagination that are influenced by issues within a given community. The language barrier that today’s immigrants face results in numerous problems that require them to become “Americanized” by their need to learn English, attend U.S. schools and simultaneously adopt U.S. customs in order to gain employment and to succeed financially. In this study, I discuss how Cubans living in the Lansing area use music to demonstrate their idea of Cuban culture, examine the cultural reciprocity that has taken place here between Cubans and other ethnic groups, and explore the relationship between musical and cultural identity within this community. I argue that while Cubans in Lansing do not demonstrate their “Cubanness” through festivals or community-sponsored events, there is still a strong presence of Cuban culture in this area, and that Cubans here have found the means to retain their identity through music and culture even as they are assimilated into American society. Prouty, Kenneth Indiana State University SEM From ‘Keeping Your Head Above Water’ to ‘Movin’ on Up:’ Representing African American Urban Culture Through Theme Songs for "Good Times" and "The Jeffersons" In this paper, I engage in a musical and textual analysis of the theme songs for two television situation comedies during the 1970s and early 1980s, “The Jeffersons” and “Good Times.” Although their productions shared a common origin, these programs painted strikingly different portraits of African American urban life during the post Civil Rights Era. While “The Jeffersons” was often viewed as something of a parody, a “fish-out-of-water” tale of African Americans living within the world of white wealth, critics and audiences frequently lauded “Good Times” as a more authentic representation of urban black culture, despite assertions to the contrary by a number of individuals involved with the show’s production. In particular I will explore how these brief, but memorable musical vignettes represent a worldview particular to each show. Underlying themes of perseverance (in the case of “Good Times”) and upward mobility (in “The Jeffersons”) are articulated not only through lyrical content, but also in specific historicallyconstructed musical references. I further argue that each song is dialogic not only with the content of the programs themselves, but also with the production of each show, the subjects of authenticity and race relations within the sit-com genre (specifically “All in the Family,” which inspired both programs), and with divergent representations of and perceptions about African American urban culture in American society. Procopio, Mary Michigan State University CMS Transculturation in the Cuban Diaspora: Musical and Cultural Identity in the Lansing Cuban Community One of the major challenges that diasporic communities must contend with is the attempt to retain their identity, both as individuals and collectively, even as they assimilate and integrate into a new society. In his book Modernity at Large: Cultural Dimensions of Globalization, Arjun Appadurai examines assimilation and isolation in diasporic communities in regards to identity, and challenges us to understand how these two social phenomena intersect. Identity, he argues, is based on constructions of the imagination that are influenced by issues within a given community. The language barrier that today's immigrants face results in numerous problems that require them to become "Americanized" by their need to learn English, attend U.S. schools and simultaneously adopt U.S. customs in order to Individual Abstracts 98 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 Pyper, Brett New York University SEM Long Way From Home: South Africa, Jazz, and Exile in New York in the 1960s education. Campbell has pointed out that in music education, the lines between “multicultural” and “global” have been blurred. At present, multicultural and world musics are similar in scope. In the current controversy between those seeking to provide a unifying philosophy for the music education profession as reflected in the works of Elliott, Jorgensen, McCarthy and Reimer, the concept of multiculturalism has been embraced. The similarities and differences in the writers’ social interpretation of the concept can be better understood if addressed in light of Kincheloe’s and Steinberg’s categories of multiculturalism. In her analysis of these five categories, Morton suggests that the approaches inherent to critical multiculturalism would be more conducive to begin articulating a clear moral vision and conceptual framework for multicultural music education. New York City has long been recognized as a primary node of transatlantic musical connections, and the particular significance of Harlem in the South African cultural imaginary has been well documented (e.g. Coplan 1986, Erlmann 1991, Ballantine 1993). Yet until the 1960s, relationships between African-American and black South African artists were on the whole rather distant, mediated both by the American entertainment industry and dissemination through the British Commonwealth. This was particular salient in the case of one of the most striking manifestations of African-American influence on black South African culture: the urban black jazz scenes that had by the 1950s become emblematic of African modernity, cosmopolitanism, and political self-assertion. Though jazz music had acquired local audiences since the 1920s and soon incorporated a variety of neotraditional African popular musics into its stylistic vocabularies, there is little evidence of direct contact between the originators of jazz and other American popular styles until 1960. When the Sharpeville massacre of that fateful year put an end to the political and cultural optimism of the 1950s, many of South Africa’s jazz luminaries were performing on Broadway, and New York soon became a rallying point for a generation of exiled South African musicians. In this paper, drawing on archival research in and around New York City, I sketch the particular sociomusical art worlds in which such figures as Miriam Makeba, Hugh Masekela, and Abdullah Ibrahim established themselves during the 1960s, tracking the musical and political alliances that emerged from their presence in the Big Apple. Quick, Sarah Indiana University SEM Mapping Musics: the Problem of Geography in Early Ethnomusicology This paper examines geography as an epistemological principle that has had lasting implications for ethnomusicology’s practice. In it I ask, how do ethnomusicologists conceive of geography in formulating their objects of study? That is, is there a geographic consciousness that guides their choice of subjects and analysis? By a ‘geographic consciousness,’ I mean to consider not only what people study in space, but also how their imagination or theories of spatial relations feed into their methodologies for studying what they study. My hypothesis is that the kinds of geographies studied are directly related to both the methods and theories used to study them. Here I will examine ethnomusicology’s ‘geographic consciousness’ in the early stages of its disciplinary chronology before ‘ethnomusicology’ became a named discipline. Recent accounts of this earlier period divide it into at three orientations-comparative musicology, anthropological interests in music, and folk revivals/search for national musics—which all then feed into the ‘ethnomusicology’ of the next phase (Myers 1992; Sadie 2001). I analyze the geographic consciousness within each of these three orientations through an examination of particularly key figures within them. I then consider where these orientations converge and diverge in their geographic practices/premises. Especially significant is how geographic consciousness connects to conceptions of temporality or historical frameworks. Finally, I point to the implications that a geographic consciousness has to disciplinary practices within ethnomusicology. Quesada, Milagros Agostini Kent State University, Tuscarawas SEM Multiculturalism and World Musics: Current Perspectives to Consider in Formulating New Peadagogical Directions As a response to the urgent call by distinguished music educators for a path to a socially responsible pedagogy, it is the purpose of this presentation to address current understandings of related concepts and philosophies underlining them, mainly, the concept of multiculturalism in music education. Multiculturalism in schools has been based on the notion that the curriculum should serve the diverse population of the United States and develop in students an understanding of cultural elements in countries across the world. Some in the field of education argue that the latter properly belongs in the area of international and global Individual Abstracts 99 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 Quintero, Michael Birenmaum New York University Black Music in a Multicultural Colombia SEM nation. Notting Hill Carnival has been variously viewed as a noisy spectacle, as a site of conflict or as a display of Black Power. 2002 seems, nevertheless, to have marked a turning point in public perceptions of this musical spectacle. Mas featured prominently in the Queen’s Jubilee celebrations. Calypsonians performed at the Victoria and Albert Museum. Are these signs that Caribbean musics have found a place in the national imagination? In this paper, I will examine how Caribbean-British musicians question the borders of Britishness and how their diasporic sensibilities intersect with a sense of belonging in Britain. World music is usually seen as produced in the global South for consumption by educated, affluent consumers in the North. In 1991, the embattled government of Colombia ratified a “multicultural, pluriethnic” federal constitution, sparking a newly pluralist cultural policy which markets the cultural products of Afrocolombian and other marginalized groups to artistic and intellectual sectors not only in the North, but in Colombia itself. These domestic consumers aspire to a kind of cosmopolitanism, common in Latin America, which values the consumption of the products (cultural and otherwise) of the North. But with the legitimization, via Northern multiculturalism, of the cultural products of the Third World, Latin American elites are put in the awkward position of looking to the North for Culture only to find the North looking back! This new development paradoxically maps cosmopolitan modernity onto those same black and indigenous Colombian populations which have historically been viewed as an impediment to the nation’s Eurocentrically-conceived project of modernity. Rancier, Megan University of California, Los Angeles SEM "Music is Just One Way to Peace": Protest Music Traditions in Los Angeles During the 2002-2003 Anti-War Movement Ever since the wealth of “protest songs” that burst out of the American antiVietnam War movement, the protest music scene in the United States has experienced a relative decline, both in terms of popularity and of identity as a unified assemblage of artists working towards a common goal. However, the immense reactions of American protestors to the threat of a U.S.-led war against Iraq have indicated that traditions of protest remain vibrant in the American consciousness. I would argue that musical expressions of dissent in particular have re-emerged into the forefront of major anti-war protest events, encompassing extremely diverse genres– such as traditional Korean gong ensembles, recreations of Aztec drumming and dance, old-time fiddling, and hip hop– and building on the foundations laid down by a previous generation. Based on my ethnographic work executed during a series of anti-war demonstrations in Los Angeles and San Francisco, California, and interviews with performers of political (anti-war) music, my paper examines the place, value, and/or effect of musical performance in the practice and ethos of political protests against the war with Iraq. In addition, my paper reflects back on the musical traditions that arose from the anti-Vietnam War era and makes observations on how protest music traditions have changed in the thirty years separating these two anti-war movements. Using ethnographic case studies from both popular (champeta) and traditional (currulao and chirimía from the Pacific coast) Afrocolombian genres which have been effected by these dynamics, I aim to depict the agendas of a state feigning legitimacy in an increasingly fragmented and ungovernable nation, and an artist/intellectual class searching for class distinction. This paper provides an alternative example of globalization in which cultural capital is transnational while the commodity itself (music) stays put. Here, even the supposedly anti-colonialist doctrine of multiculturalism has taught the South to colonize itself. Ramnarine, Tina University of London SEM Home in the Diaspora? Imperial Legacies and the Politics of Musical Creativity Notions of diaspora raise problematic questions about the borders of belonging and about the national imagination. Caribbean communities in Britain have contributed to pushing against the borders of the ‘national’ through their musical practices. While musical events such as dancehall or chutney have been viewed as ‘alternative’, ‘hidden’ spaces in which collective community solidarities can be expressed, London’s Notting Hill Carnival has provided one of the most prominent public forums for debates centred on the politics of imperial legacies, race and Individual Abstracts 100 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 Rao, Nancy Florida International University SEM Contextualizing Early Chinese American Music: Its Relation with Chinese American Civil Rights Movement sorts of creative invention. Ways in which Malakov utilizes formulae during performances, his techniques of elaboration upon core ideas, the relationships of melody and text to poetic meters, and rhythmic considerations (especially in connection with ideas of “free” rhythm) are investigated. I discuss his treatments of hymns, prayers, and canonical texts in relation to Jewish practices of nusah( (a prayer style that involves the combination of motives that undergo different amounts of variation) and the generally more virtuosic cantorial art form, or h(azzanut. Other points of consideration, especially regarding Malakov’s CD and notation projects, are the use of on-the-spot arrangements, general attitudes that may owe something to the current environment of New York City, and ramifications of notating and recording his repertoire. From 1870 to 1930 Cantonese opera was the most important music activity for Chinese communities in the United State. The scarcity of evidence for Chinatown’s music life from its early period, however, makes the reconstruction of its history difficult, an important reason that studies dealing specifically with the early history of Chinese American music are still noticeably lacking. Seeking a history for the music of Chinese Americans—in some ways fighting for those sonorities and images that would threaten to disappear irretrievably—is an urgent necessity. In this paper, I will discuss the repertoire and performers popular during this time, reconstructed from news accounts, advertisement of over a thousand playbills, and advertisement of phonographs in the Chinese newspapers published in New York City and San Francisco, as well as historical recordings. The paper will address the following questions: what were these theaters actually like? How did they compare to the Cantonese troupes performing in Canton and south east Asian regions? Who were the performers, what were their levels of virtuosity, and what performance adjustments did they make for the mode of life of Chinese in America? And what can we learn about the sophistication of their audiences and their changing tastes? In addition I will explore the relation between the different characteristics of opera performances and their adjustment to local tastes. This will be done through a study of oral history and personal papers, for example, the ways in which central themes of the repertory are linked to the bachelor society’s surrogate love and romance. Rapport, Evan City University of New York Performance Styles of a Bukharian Singer Rasmussen, Anne The College of William and Mary SEM Bodies, Voices, Religion, and Nation: Rethinking Women, Music, and Islam While the Western imagination hides the Muslim woman under a black cloak, and scholarship confines women to a sphere of segregated interiority, my work describes professional female reciters of the Qur’ân as well as performers and producers of Islamic music who work, with voice and body, as beneficial agents of Indonesian religion and nation. I propose that the prominence of women in Islamic public life may be closer to the origins of Islam rather than a distortion of or variation on a more “authentic” Arab version of the religion. I take my cue for this thesis from recent works by scholars of Southeast Asia who challenge the assumption, promoted by previous scholars that Arab Islam is normative. Despite the religion’s authoritative origins, it is important to remember, I argue, supported by Muslim feminists Ahmed, Mernissi, Malti-Douglass, and Mooallem, that the secondary and tertiary tenets that decorate the framework of the faith (particularly those effecting women) are based in cultural practice and not in original doctrine. By accepting this premise we open ourselves up to understanding Indonesian Islam as “authentic” rather than “unusual.” As described in my earlier works, musical performance is the advocate and not the adversary of Islam in the Indonesian context and much of this performance is made by women. Speaking to the conference theme of the politics of representation and authenticity, this paper maps contemporary Indonesianist perspectives and controversies onto assumptions about the trio: women, music, and Islam. SEM This paper explores variation techniques in the sacred music of Bukharian Jews (mostly from Uzbekistan and Tajikistan), approached through analysis of the styles of Izro Malakov, one prominent member of the immigrant community of Queens, New York. In addition to serving as h(azzan (cantor) at Beth Gavriel Synagogue in Rego Park, Malakov is an accomplished singer of genres and forms such as the Tajik-Uzbek shash maqâm, haqqoni, and popular traditional Jewish wedding songs. His cultural activities also involve producing CDs and compiling notations of Bukharian melodies. These many genres and the contexts in which they are performed call for different kinds of flexibility and approaches that reflect various Individual Abstracts 101 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 Rathmell, Robert Hillsdale College Motivic Transformation... CMS censored media, they were able to negotiate not only local and government restrictions, but also a global market. As musicians and agents of new media, Les Têtes Brulées were able to co-opt local and global images and sounds to comment on, reinforce, or confound competing and conflicting discourses of musical and media use. Benjamin Britten's Nocturnal, op. 70 for guitar is atypical of the variation genre in that the theme-John Dowland's Ayre for voice and lute, "Come, heavy sleep"arrives adapted to its purpose at the end of the set, following the developmental processes of the variations. Presented in this inverted order, Dowland's theme harmonizes Britten's disparate motives into a momentary unity, restores each to its original diatonic context, and places the music directly in relation to Dowland's poetry. Whereas Philip Rupprecht's voice leading analysis (Journal of Music Theory, 1997) emphasized the "uncertainties" of the tonal organization and the opposition of simultaneous and contrasting pitch centers in the first variation, this analysis draws the listeners' attention to the clarifying power of the theme. It identifies principal motives and follows transformational paths back into the theme to consider the fullness of associations between the music and the first verse of the poetry, included as a preface to Britten's composition. Character markings at the beginning of each variation enhance the associative potential of the music, facilitating not only clear apprehension of the broader musical design but also connections between the affect of each variation and elements of the verse. Britten's classicism here finds expression in the scope of the work rather than a technique of voice leading and aligns the Nocturnal with a distinguished idealist tradition: harmony as a consonant relation of diverse parts, and the artwork as striving to rejoin its source in the idea. I will show how a contemporary, non-Western band can negotiate performance technologies using techniques I refer to as strategic minstrelsy. Les Têtes Brulées carefully construct an identity situated firmly in a Black modernism, arguably a stage written out of the European history of Africa from Victorian colonialism to post-modernity. The conscious use of technology, the media, and images of the body maximize the possibilities that represent a perhaps neglected, or un-examined modernity. Reed, Daniel Indiana University SEM "The Ge is in the Church: Music, Identity, and Resistance Among the Dan of Cote d'Ivoire" During the past 50 years, many Africans have “Africanized” Christianity by incorporating indigenous music, dance and in some cases beliefs into their worship services. In Man, Côte d’Ivoire, Catholics of Dan ethnicity have formed choirs that set Christian lyrics to indigenous Dan songs and rhythms. Included in these choirs’ repertoires are adaptations of music used in the performance of Ge--an indigenous religious enactment involving masked dancers and music. This music, called getan, is the element of Ge performance that attracts spiritual energy to the human realm. Getan is taught by masked Ge spirits in boys’ initiation; as such, for many practitioners of Dan religion, getan is central to what it means to be Dan. That getan is performed in the Church means, for them, that the Ge spirit itself has entered the church, which they view as a kind of resistance to French colonial attempts to abolish local cultural and religious practice. For choir members themselves, however, this music, adapted with Christian lyrics, no longer attracts indigenous spirits but the Holy Spirit. Dan choir members assert that the use of this music in the Church enables them to express their Christian faith in a form compatible with their identities as Dan people. This paper, based on ethnographic research conducted in the I 990s, will explore the multiple interpretations and related identity conflicts surrounding the use of this music in Catholic worship, and demonstrate that music is central to the negotiation of religious and ethnic identity for Dan people today. Rathnaw, Dennis University of Texas, Austin SEM Strategic Minstrelsy: Les Têtes Brulées and the Claim for Black Modernism This paper examines the popular music genre bikutsi as a site of interaction between music, politics and the Cameroonian media. Bikutsi has long been associated solely with the Beti region of Cameroon, and as such considered a marginal music patronized by the “villageois.” Nevertheless, after Paul Biya, a Beti and bikutsi fan, assumed the presidency in 1982 and inaugurated the Cameroon Radio and Television, bikutsi acquired the importance of a national music and global phenomenon. In order to understand the practice of bikutsi as an experience mediated by politics and internal and external consumption, I focus on Cameroon’s most successful bikutsi group, Les Têtes Brulées. What is most striking about Les Têtes Brulées is not their music, but their carefully cultivated appearance, and how under state- Individual Abstracts 102 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 Reichling, Mary University of Louisiana at Lafayette Transforming Music Education: Creating Alternatives CMS the local population invests heavily in the production of Holy Week through an intense collective dramatization. The theatrical display moves between masses, processions, and enactments of the passion, each accompanied by a specific musical repertoire, encompassing choral works by colonial composers, locallycomposed dirges, and collective singing. Today, however, locals fear that their celebration is being corroded by a progressive clergy, who see it as out-dated and elitist, and as a hindrance to the church’s current project. While some teachers view the status quo in music pedagogy as an imperative, many are open to change, dissatisfied with the ordinary, and eager to embrace new ideas. The panel looks at what it means to transform music education and how we might go about doing it. It includes and encourages audience participation. 1. An Overview of Transforming Music Education. What might music education be like, what could its effects be on the people comprising it and the communities in which it occurs? Transforming music education calls for principles that can be interpreted and practiced in different ways. These are suggested with implications arising from problems of gender, world views, and music making. This paper focuses on the orchestration of Holy Week in Campanha, looking at the role of music in the promotion of heightened - or ‘enchanted’ (Reily) - experiences amongst participants. Enchantment - the musical mode of religious ritual orchestration - creates a highly charged experiential realm, in which devotees visualize the truths of their religious tenets: thus, it constitutes a powerful medium for forging religious commitment. Going one step further, I will argue that enchanted experiences can be strong forces in motivating collective action. In Campanha the power of enchantment is being harnessed to establish Minas Gerais as a final stronghold of traditional Catholicism, in an effort to confront the threat of the modern church to local heritage. 2. Focus on Ways of Thinking. If we are truly interested in transforming music education, it is necessary to break out of the ties that bind and restrict our thinking both at theoretical and practical levels. Suggestions are offered along with the challenge to music educators to raise their expectation and look beyond the ordinary. Repp, Richard Georgia Southern University Adapting Home Surround Sound Systems for Teaching Purposes 3. Focus on Ways of Being. A broad view of music education can be directive and liberative, didactic and dialogical. It calls for both inspiration and imagination. "Being" refers to human beings, living things cannot be standardized. Music education is explored holistically addressing these concepts. Many of us have chosen to incorporate a surround sound system into our home entertainment centers. Unfortunately, many schools do not yet have the capability to mix in a multi-speaker environment. A working solution is to adapt a home surround system for teaching. The demonstration features a home surround system with a Digi 001 interface to produce an environment which allows surround sound mixes. The system is also portable enough to bring into the classroom occasionally for demonstrations. Also featured will be demonstrations of pieces produced for surround sound, in both electro-acoustic and popular styles, discussions of how to achieve some of the surround effects both for live performance and recorded pieces, and anecdotes of experiences of using the technology to demonstrate surround sound to students. 4. Focus on Ways of Acting. Acting involves teaching and learning, but also leadership, music making, and music taking. Our mass-mediated, informationdriven, multicultural world demands that for music to be transformative, it also has to translate into practical plans and policies involving collective action, inclusiveness, leadership, and cooperation. Reily, Suzel Ana Queen's University Belfast The Power of Enchantment: Holy Week in Southeast Brazil ATMI SEM During the colonial period, Holy Week became the main event of the annual calendar in the mining towns of southeast Brazil. Embodying the memory of the gold era, Holy Week continues to be central throughout the region, constituting an emblem of local identity. In Campanha (MG), where this project was undertaken, Individual Abstracts 103 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 Repp, Richard Georgia Southern University The Search for an Academic Position in Music Technology the past two decades, Afro-Peruvian music is gradually replacing música criolla as a banner for Peruvian-American urban identity, reflecting a diverse heritage transplanted into a new multicultural context. ATMI More academic positions in music technology, or with a component of technical skills, appear in the job listings every year. Because the discipline is relatively new, often advisors are unaware of the procedures necessary to gain employment and the special needs of the technology-centered academic. Topics discussed include types of jobs available, duties associated with positions, sources for job listings, discussion of tenure and promotion procedures unique to music technology, interviewing and demonstrating technical skills to employers, planning for facilities management, and budgeting. The discussion is geared to students or newer faculty seeking employment at entry level status. Reuter, Rocky J. Capital University Conservatory of Music Using Pro Tools as a Creative, Composition Tool Concomitantly, the cajón emerges as a symbolic affirmation of the Peruvian diasporic history. Despite strong currents of resistance to Cuban influences, syncretisms have developed synthesizing Afro-Peruvian and Afro-Cuban secular and sacred traditions. The presentation will explore the promotion of AfroPeruvian idioms as an expressive resource for the construction of a place-identity, and its significance in the evolving intercultural aesthetics related to the discourse of the "Cubanization" of a pan-Latino culture. Reflecting the complexities of the immigrant experience, these adaptive expressions function as cultural symbols of a displaced national identity, and enhance the sector's status within the regional Hispanic hierarchy of historically distinct and socio-economically stratified diasporic communities in South Florida. ATMI Rice, Timothy University of California-Los Angeles CMS Music in Bulgaria: Collaborative Moments for Teaching a Musical Culture Pro Tools is the industry-standard software/hardware solution for professional digital audio recording studios. However, this cross-platform software provides an extremely useful tool for composers who want to create digital musique concrète compositions using digital audio, with the option of including MIDI and/or software synthesizers. This session will demonstrate how your students (of any age) can use Pro Tools Free and its substantial manipulation tools to create original compositions on a computer without any additional substantial hardware purchase, whether at home or in your music lab. In addition, other available Pro Tools configurations will be discussed. The demonstration session may be followed by a hands-on training session if a computer lab is available and time allows. The work worlds of ethnomusicologists continue to converge into a realm known as "world music", and a pedagogy of world music is emerging as a result of the confluence of concerns of trained music-scholars and instruction and curriculum specialists. Their combined efforts have the potential for revolutionizing the nature by which young people come to understand music, education, and culture in university (and K-12) settings. The session will be co-presented by "one of teach", a music-scholar (whose pioneering fieldwork in Bulgaria has shed considerable light on that musical culture's traditional and changing expressions) and a curriculum and instruction specialist (whose work in the formulation of world music experiences for children, adolescents, and teachers has been guided by a concern for developmentally appropriate materials and methods). Both have an understanding of the other's work, too, including the ethnomusicologist's interest in cognitive processes of musical learning and the educator's experiences in a research exchange program in Bulgaria. Their collaboration is an attempt to demonstrate the possibilities for shared work in the search for pedagogical experiences of musical integrity that are sensitive to the cultural context of the music's origin and that of the classrooms in which it is taught. Several songs and dances will be featured as exemplar of resources for teaching the music of Bulgaria, but the greater intrigue may be in noting the process by which music Rey, Mario East Carolina University SEM Festejo, Cajón, and Hybridity: The Music of Afro-Peru in Cuban Miami The Peruvian immigrant community in Miami endeavors to assert an identity predicated on the homeland musical culture that is distinct from other Hispanic sectors in South Florida. This paper examines Peruvian immigrant music-making vis-à-vis the Cuban musico-cultural hegemony, and the shifting preferences of second-generation Peruvian-Americans who devalue Andean traditions and favor technocumbia or Anglo pop. Gaining local popularity is the Perú Negro repertoire. Largely derived from "invented" traditions and disseminated throughout Peru over Individual Abstracts 104 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 professionals can come together in ensuring that students grow in their understanding of a rich musical culture. music technology, what, if any, are the key arguments to be made for choosing one platform over another? Richardson, Carol University of Michigan Musical Journeys in Ghana, West Africa Rios, Fernando University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign SEM Cultural Embarrassment and Transnational Theft: Andean Folkloric Music and Bolivian National Sentiment SEM This paper will explore the issues involved in bringing undergraduates to authentic musical experiences in musical cultures different from their home musical culture. The University of Michigans Global Intercultural Experience for Undergraduates program (GIEU) supports faculty sponsors to take undergrads on 3-4 week summer study trips. Our trips to Ghana, West Africa have allowed us to study various forms of traditional music with local teacher/performers and ensembles, and have offered rich opportunities for expanding participants’ musical frames of reference. The more challenging aspects of these interactions will be explored here, including learning in the aural tradition, traditional teacher/learner roles, and the intricacies of traditional teaching methods. Andean folkloric music, a musical style that prior to 1966 was more visibly performed in Buenos Aires and Paris (primarily by Argentine musicians in both sites) than in Bolivia, has functioned as the foremost Bolivian ‘national music’ since the late 1960s. In direct response to both Andean folkloric music’s relatively recent ‘nationalization’ and to the transnational performance of this musical style by non-Bolivian musicians, deeply felt and long-held urban Bolivian sentiments regarding ‘embarrassment’ over national identity and the transnational ‘theft’ of national patrimony have become so commonly evoked that Bolivian ‘national music’ has become a primary site for their elicitation in public discourse. In this paper, based on historical research conducted via dissertation fieldwork (in Bolivia, Argentina, and France) and archival work (of the 1936-1985 period via Bolivian newspapers), I will first contextualize the historical significance of these ubiquitous sentiments of ‘cultural embarrassment’ and ‘transnational theft’ within the Bolivian experience. Next, I will trace how and why these sentiments have become so strongly linked to ‘Bolivian’ musical practices. The main goal of this presentation, however, will be to argue that, as well as to explain why, this case is an especially clear illustration of how ‘national sentiment’ (Smith 1971) not only consists of feelings of ‘national pride’ but is also constituted by, and in the Bolivian case significantly so, often-overlooked feelings of ‘national embarrassment’ (Herzfeld 1997). Riley, Carole Duquesne University ATMI Innovative Practice Techniques for Secondary Piano Using Blackboard 5.5 Participants will learn the dynamics of blackboard 5.5, graduate assistants and mentors teaching using MIDI classroom of 16 Kawais. Three primary innovations will be presented. Riley, Raymond Alma College Macs vs. PCs: Does Platform Really Matter? ATMI Rissman, Maurice Nick Lamar University Cycling Through Polyrhythms This presentation attempts to sort out the myths and hype from the facts when comparing the Windows and Mac platforms for a broad range of applications in music technology. Hardware, software, motherboards, sound cards, USB audio, and virtual instruments are all the topics of this closeup look at Mac and PC solutions for music technology needs. Now that the dust seems to have settled with Apple’s anything but smooth transition to Mac OS X, it seems an appropriate time to revisit the state of the “platform wars”. Did Apple fall asleep at the wheel and let the Windows OS gain the upper hand in what has always been a key market segment for Apple? Considering the wide range of applications now available in Individual Abstracts CMS The formal study of polyrhythms (2:3, 3:4, 3:4:5 etc.) often begins in the typical four semester undergraduate theory cycle. Polyphonic instrumentalists are--no doubt--introduced to the rhythms prior to this. Commonly, the rhythms are taught with the aid of mnemonic rhymes and through the use of sub-divisions. Mnemonic rhymes help students memorize the sound of specific rhythms but, unfortunately, do nothing to reveal the rhythmsÆ mathematical mechanics; students are unable to determine the patterns of unfamiliar rhythms. The use of sub-divisions--the least 105 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 common denominators shared by the separate parts of a polyrhythm--guarantees that students will calculate and accurately perform any polyrhythm. However, a sub-divided polyrhythm is difficult to integrate into the actual composition at hand, particularly if the polyrhythm is super-metrical (exceeds the length of a beat). The author of this paper suggests teaching and understanding polyrhythms in a new way: wrapping the sub-divisions around on themselves so that they form repetitive cycles and thus, mimic the motions of gears rather than a linear index; oral counting of the sub-divisions is unnecessary and thus, the polyrhythm is more easily integrated into the composition at hand. The process is easily demonstrated, learned, and becomes a valuable reference tool while motivating students to explore ever more complex polyrhythms. Robinson, Kathy Eastman School of Music "Passage to Kimberley: Finding the Real Diamonds" Robbins, Scott Converse College Just Like Job Participants share general/choral music lessons centered on South Africa’s Curriculum 2005 classroom goals for music with more than 2500 students and their teachers in public and private elementary/secondary schools in Galeshewe. This presentation discusses the issues involved in incorporating music teaching and learning experiences in an unfamiliar culture to professional development programs for in-service music educators. The University of Rochester, the Eastman School of Music, and selected public and private schools in the South African township of Galestiewe have collaborated on a 6-8 week cultural immersion project (Umculo!: Kimberley) bringing experienced choral/general music teachers to teach, live among and learn from people in an unfamiliar culture known for its rich indigenous musical traditions. CMS Composed for Keith Jones, Christopher and Kelly Vaneman, Kenneth Law, and Melanie Taylor, Just Like Job was commissioned by the South Carolina Music Teachers Association and the Music Teachers National Association and premiered at the 2001 SCMTA annual conference. Teachers join school, community and church choirs to learn traditional choral music and to share knowledge of western choral traditions with groups preparing these pieces for competition. They have unlimited opportunities to participate in music and cultural events led by Galeshewe’s students, teachers and community musicians in the role of cultural translators. The title of the work comes from Maya Angelou's poem of the same name, which provides the text for the piece. As is the case with Job in the Old Testament, the narrator in Angelou's poem makes a transition from despairing to trusting in the power and promises of God. The musical work reflects this, as the opening section has a plaintive, desolate character, which gives way to the faster, more exuberant ending. This cultural immersion experience raises questions about transmission, traditional roles of teachers and learners and developing culturally relevant teaching in South Africa and the US. Rodel, Angela University of California, Los Angeles SEM "Extreme Noise Terror: 'Aesthetics of Badness' as a Punk Gate-Keeping Strategy" Given the nature of the poem, it seemed appropriate that this work incorporate gestures reminiscent of the blues, gospel, and rock. Sometimes (maybe not often) this is subtle, as in the beginning of the piece, when the long, dreary melodic lines of the cello and oboe suggest the spirit of the blues. Other times, the incorporation of other musical styles is quite blatant, as in the tenor's Smokey Robinson-styled falsetto, or the way the muted piano becomes like a drum set, or the Bo Diddleystyle harmonic/rhythmic progressions that occur. Musically, I tried to cast a wide net, hoping that a "classical" work which uncompromisingly presented pop music allusions (or is it a pop work which uncompromisingly utilizes classical techniques?) might be of appeal to a larger audience. Individual Abstracts SEM Over the past few years, a genre called "extreme hardcore" has been steadily gaining popularity in the underground punk scene. With its lightning-fast tempos, screamed vocals and almost total lack of melody, this genre raises questions about how the concepts of “bad” and “good” music, as well as “music” and “noise” are employed as “gate-keeping strategies” by cultural insiders in the struggle to create musical meaning and value. In this paper, I explore the “aesthetics of badness” in extreme hardcore punk, arguing that punks deliberately cultivate an image of 106 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 Rohlehr, Gordon University of the West Indies Weaving the Musical Tapestry of Miami musical “badness” as a way of attempting to retain control over punk sounds and images. Extreme hardcore can be seen as the latest development in an ongoing struggle by underground punks to resist commodification by the commercial mainstream. The aesthetics of badness in punk encompasses two distinct yet related issues: “badness” defined as a low-level of technical proficiency and “badness” on a more purely aesthetic level. Drawing on theories of the culture industry and mass commodification developed by Theodor Adorno, Jacques Attali and Pierre Bourdieu among others, I will investigate the way extreme hardcore manipulates aesthetics as a way to resist appropriation by the mainstream and to retain “underground authenticity.” Finally, I will explore whether such an aesthetic strategy can ever be anything but oppositional “position taking” in the Bourdieu’s sense, or whether such art has the potential to foment actual social change. See Fulton, Carolyn J. - Weaving the Musical Tapestry of Miami Romero, Brenda University of Colorado-Boulder Intersections of Music Theory and Ethnomusicology CMS The intersection of music theory and ethnomusicology is emerging as a point of great potential for expanding the canon in college music teaching. Addressing the ethnomusicologist's desire for cultural contextualization and congruence as well as the theorist's concern for concepts and structural coherence, this panel focuses on various aspects of these intersections. Ethnomusicologists teach not only budding ethnomusicologists, who in turn study musical cultures as scholars, but also young musicians who can benefit from studying musical practices and concepts drawn from a variety of cultures. In this manner ethnomusicology has the potential to enrich musical application and practical musical training. The presentations focus on the usefulness of studying the theoretical principles of varying world music cultures as a tool to build practical musicianship skills; a course design that explores ways of bringing "world music" into the music theory classroom; and on specific ways in which the activity of building and playing panpipes provides a tactile point of reference for enlarging the cultural base of a course in music fundamentals. Rodger, Gillian University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee SEM “If ‘The Past is a Foreign Country,’ How do we get there? Ethnomusicological Approaches to Past Music Practices.” In researching music practices and cultures of the past, I found myself, in many ways, faced with a similar set of problems as the researcher contemplating fieldwork. I needed to understand the people and their customs, the musical form in which I was interested, and the performance practices employed in it. Before embarking on my own research, I made a thorough study of existing works on the topic/culture/practice. But, in beginning my own research I could not then transport myself to the “field” to see how my observations compared to those of my scholarly predecessors. In historical work, and particularly in work where there is no extant tradition, researchers need to construct their “field” from surviving, often fragmentary records, and also depend on our predecessors to know where to locate those pieces of evidence, and for our overall view of our “field.” Our inability to experience the “field” in person means that any gaps in earlier scholarship are less likely to be noticed. Romero, Brenda University of Colorado-Boulder Top Ten Lists: Mediating Conflicting Methodologies CMS See Sturman, Janet - Top Ten Lists: Mediating Conflicting Methodologies This paper will explore approaches drawn from ethnomusicology to suggest ways in which historical research can construct a richer “field” by seeking alternate sources of evidence. Using examples drawn from my own work in popular American entertainment of the mid- to late-nineteenth century, I will show how a “whole culture” approach that actively seeks to locate what is missing changes our views of what is known now about this history. I will discuss the range of the primary sources on which I rely in my own work to suggest broader applications of ethnomusicology in historical music research. Individual Abstracts CMS Rommen, Timothy University of Pennsylvania SEM Protestant Vibrations? Reggae, Rastafarianism and Conscious Evangelicals The globalization of reggae continues to engender a wide range of highly poignant reinscriptions and reinterpretations of reggae’s sound and of Rastafarian thought. One of the most compelling of these has been the negotiation of Rastafarian and Christian ideologies within the context of Protestant reggae hands/artists. The 107 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 application of Rastafarian thought, dress, and language to the evangelical concerns of Protestants - at times paradoxical, at others ingenious - signals an important moment of inter-religious contact that opens a window onto the complexities and multiple meanings that attach to music and to religious systems as they travel between the local and the global. Reading against the teleological grain of reggae’s globalization, this paper analyzes music by Christafarfi (United States). Sherwin Gardner (Trinidad and Tobago), and Stitchie (Jamaica), thereby situating the discussion between reggae’s transnational growth on the one hand and the historical proliferation of evangelical Protestantism on the other. It is in the interstices of the centrifugal expansion of reggae and the constant, centripetal flow of religious ideology- both centered on Jamaica-that I will argue for a significant connection between popular culture and the sacred and for a reconsideration of the ways that the Rastafarian elements within reggae might he understood in new, global and local contexts. the task. Moreover, I argue that the activities of nineteenth-century folklorists are an often forgotten but critical parts of our discipline’s history, and demonstrate how their works prefigure the pursuits of ethnomusicologists in the twentieth century and beyond. Rubin, Joel Cornell University SEM "The Limits of Generational Memory: The Case of the Epstein Brothers" Taking off from the social historian Tamara Hareven’s concept of generational memory (The Search for Generational Memory: Tribal Rites in Industrial Society, 1978), this paper looks at issues of memory and nostalgia as it relates to oral history and the present. From 1990-200001 conducted fieldwork among American Jewish wedding instrumentalists (“klezmer”) born between 1910 and 1930. This largely forgotten generation of musicians forms an important bridge between the Yiddish-speaking past of the Eastern European Jews and the development of new cultural movements -- in particular the klezmer revival -- in the present. My main informants, the Epstein Brothers (National Heritage Fellowship 1998), had lived in South Florida since the 1970s, where they served in the present a mostly elderly community of European and American-born Jews at condominium villages, community centers and synagogues. In the process, their lives centered around the past via their memories, constantly reminiscing, reliving and reinterpreting events that had taken place 60 and even 70 years earlier. This paper explores Jewish modes of memory and memorialization and how they relate to ethnomusicology, drawing on the works of Yerushalmi (Zakhor: Jewish History and Jewish Memory, 1982), Steinsalz (Talmud fuer Jedermann, 1995) and others. Rosenberg, Ruth University of Pennsylvania SEM The Science and Ecstasy of Encounter: Corsican Lament and French Folklorists (1830-1900) This paper describes how the funeral laments traditionally improvised by Corsican women (voceri) were collected, published, and annotated by French scholars during the nineteenth century. While la poésie populaire of France’s provincial regions had long inspired Romantic novelists, it was only in 1852 that the French government encouraged the systematic collection of its regional folksongs by publishing a set of guidelines. As the field of folklore established itself in France at mid-century, far-flung and under-assimilated regions of the nation became the subjects of numerous collections and the testing ground for various approaches to the analysis of popular song traditions. On the island of Corsica, perceived as an exotic backwater of French civilization, local notables as well as cosmopolitan travelers sought out and transcribed expressions of female grief. Ruippo, Matti Sibelius Academy ATMI Creating new combinations of teaching methods and technologies in music studies and training The presenter has produced study contents to university and high school studies as well as to teacher training. These contents at least partially use information and communication technology (ICT) to support learning and transmission. The main reasons to utilize ICT are: it helps and motivates composing and other musical productivity, it increases the variety of study possibilities and it is a method to act in a network. To overcome problems we have to make various solutions and combinations - both pedagogial and technical. In presentation the presenter will describe the outcomes of four different projects in details. These textual representations of the Corsican voceru and its performers illustrate the ambiguous relationship between what Johannes Fabian has called the science and “ecstasy” of collecting that characterized this early kind of folklore in France. In this paper, Fabian’s theory of collected objects as mediators of ethnographic knowledge allows me to consider collections of voceri for what they reveal about attitudes toward popular song at a time when historical musicology had disavowed these “vulgar traditions” and the field of ethnomusicology did not exist to take up Individual Abstracts 108 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 Runowicz, John New York University Looking for an Echo: Doo-wop and the Oldies Circuit SEM on the conditions and practices of non-profit opera organizations in New York City and the role of large-scale, individual philanthropy. Using my own research and the few relevant sociological studies, I explain the motivations of large-scale donors and their structural function within board-governed non-profit organizations. My work highlights the involvement of WAM institutions in the (re)production of social status, and the role of arts philanthropy in soothing anxieties associated wealth and in affirming a positive upper-class identity. From the standpoint of cultural economics, I explore the financial dependence of non-profit arts institutions on large-scale donors, and stress the extent to which: 1.) such institutions are “owned” by elites, and 2.) institutional arts policy in the US is an extension of the needs of arts organizations’ (financial) constituencies. Finally, my argument also challenges the myth of altruism that underlies philanthropy. Doo-wop is a style of American vocal group music that emerged in 1950s and early 1960s. Using Billboard charts as a measure, this initial period of popularity was short-lived and marginal compared to other styles of the time. However, even before doo-wop singers and songs stopped charting consistently they found new life as objects of nostalgia. By the end of the 1960s an “oldies” circuit had started to take shape that has continued to give doo-wop singers work to the present day. Now the terms “doo-wop” and “oldies” are very often used interchangeably to market performances by the musicians of that era and, according to oldies radio polls, doo-wop songs are more popular now than ever. The oldies circuit – a fluid network of singers, background musicians and promoters – provides entertainment for an aging but devoted audience that, judging from the success of recent PBS fundraisers, still continues to make its presence felt. Based on interviews with oldies circuit participants and my 16 years of experience performing with them, I will outline the history and nature of a community where making music is almost always framed as a nostalgic event. What I’ve found however, both backstage and on-stage, is that this is much more than a trip down memory lane. The performance of doo-wop is inextricably bound up with issues of race, class, gender and commerce. This paper is part of a preliminary study of the relationship of music, nostalgia and these issues. Sakata, Lorraine University of California, Los Angeles Revisiting the Music of Afghanistan in Fremont, California The Music of Afghanistan was never inextricably tied to geography, but rather to culture, a culture of an ethnic, religious or social group, or of a nation. The many ethnic groups inhabiting Afghanistan have always shared their musical culture with that of their neighbors in Pakistan, Iran, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, and Tajikistan. The classical music of North India, the Hindustani tradition, played an enormous part in formulating the musical style associated with Afghan classical music and later, that of the state-run radio station, determining a radio style that was eventually adopted as the musical style of Afghanistan. Sailer, Uli New York University SEM Wealth Anxiety and Class Identity: A Study of Philanthropy and Western Art Music Institutions in New York City During the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, a great number of Afghans emigrated out of Afghanistan to Pakistan, India, Iran, and parts of Europe and the United States. For Afghan musicians and their audiences residing outside of Afghanistan, their music is largely dependent on their memory of music in Kabul from the 1970s, the music that was heard in public and private concerts, and heard on Radio Afghanistan. In the past decade, heeding poststructuralist and ethnomusicological perspectives and concerns, historical musicology has increasingly sought to look outside the text to address the meanings Western art music (WAM) holds for its audiences. In this pursuit, the social, economic and institutional realities of musical performance have rarely been considered. Studies of institutions addressing these issues have played a marginal role vis-à-vis mainstream research focusing on textual and even contextual analyses, and they have exclusively adopted a historical perspective. This neglect of WAM’s contemporary “outside life” limits our understanding of a relevant and crucial discourse about meanings and aesthetics. A large population of these Afghan émigrés now resides in California’s East Bay Area where they share an Afghan culture epitomized by the activities of the residents of Fremont, California, dubbed “Little Kabul” by journalists. My revisit to Afghanistan and its musical culture takes me to Fremont, where the community’s musical activities speak to patterns of immigration, issues of identity, and the development of a musical style that may or may not find a parallel in Afghanistan itself. My paper offers an ethnographic study of WAM institutions, with particular focus Individual Abstracts SEM 109 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 Salavuo, Miikka University of Jyvaskyla, Finland ATMI Building a model of a comprehensive network-based music-learning environment. a different message than mainstream musical culture. It opened doors for women musicians, producers, sound and light technicians and for new women-owned recording companies, such as Olivia Records and women-oriented shows. Pioneers like Cris Williamson, Bernice Johnson Reagon, Margie Adam and Linda Tillery recall the frustrations and the triumphs of finding women sound engineers and other professionals in a completely male-dominated industry. The purpose of the presentation is to describe a model of a comprehensive network-based music-learning environment, complemented with conventional objects. It consists of different network-based modules and tools but also physical artifacts, such as people or musical instruments, which are connected to each other in different ways. The functions and the purposes of these modules are grounded on learning theories and conceptions on learning and music education. The claim is that by connecting these modules in a defined but flexible system we can create an environment that fosters distributed expertise, collaboration as well as contextual, self-directed and creative music learning. Part of this environment already exists in various institutions including University of Jyvaskyla, Finland. Salmon, John University of North Carolina-Greensboro Straight Talk on New Notes: Composers and Performers Together Additionally, the film highlights the whole infrastructure that made possible the recording, production, and dissemination of the work of these talented performers. Radical Harmonies movingly illustrates how the Women's Music movement changed the lives of countless women. Sarrazin, Natalie University of Virginia SEM Bound in Bollywood: Musical Coding, Sonic Authenticity and Representation in Hindi Film Song CMS In Bollywood film, specific visual codes represent character or situational authenticity. Such codes utilize particular cinematographic techniques as well as other established conventions that construct and present character and place. The formation of sonic representations within the Bollywood film song genre however, is less understood. Previous scholarly work discusses the narrative conventions used in Hindi film song and examines their contextualization within the film and their resultant constructions of meaning. In this paper, I focus on specific musical formations, and Bollywood’s use of these sonic formations to establish and legitimize representations such as caste, class, gender and place. See Zaimont, Judith Lang - Straight Talk on New Notes: Composers and Performers Together Sandstrom, Boden University of Maryland Documentary Film: Radical Harmonies SEM Radical Harmonies chronicles a women's music cultural movement which resulted in a revolution in the roles of women in music and culture. The movement gave birth to an alternative industry that changed women and music forever. During the early 1970s a convergence of cultural feminism and the radical politics of lesbianseparatists created the philosophy and space necessary for a new genre of music–Women’s Music–to bloom. This music became the embodiment and expression of this woman-to-woman creativity, and expression of a lesbian and/or feminist aesthetic. The film song genre, with its own unique and constantly evolving aesthetic, draws simultaneously on familiar conventions from pan- and non-Indic genres and styles which are subsequently fused to an image. I propose that the resulting musical conventions are situated between established codes derived from both Indian and Western musical genres, and that these codes intentionally convey a vague, indeterminate quality, capable of multiple representations and interpretations. The resulting sonic-image, however, must resonate not only Bollywood’s ideals, but with viewer expectations and with what may ultimately be rejected as an “inauthentic” representation. Through festival and performance footage, interviews, and archival material, the film delves into the rich and beautiful history of women creating a cultural life based in a commitment to diversity, personal integrity, feminism and women loving women. In its heyday, during the 1970s and 80s, Women's Music offered Individual Abstracts With the help of musical analysis, I identify relevant musical aesthetics from various genres and styles, and discuss the formation of musical codes and their 110 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 application to specific tropes that successfully represent the sonic-image in Hindi film. Using examples from films, I will demonstrate how these sonic conventions legitimize an image while simultaneously remaining open to multiple interpretations capable of transcending regional and cultural boundaries. Satterwhite, Marc Spiky Epiphanies University of Louisville immanently aesthetic (music theory), and as historical (musicology), and as living practice (composition), and, more recently, as an anthropological object (new or critical musicology). While ethnomusicology does not ignore aspects of musical structure altogether, its music-theoretical aspirations are limited. This presentation has two parts: First, through a critical inquiry into the work of leading ethnomusicologists, I examine the epistemological and political limits of ethnomusicological music analysis. Second, within the tilted transnational context of drastic economic inequality today, I demonstrate various music-theoretical strategies that may contribute to political solutions (the devolution of power; the alleviation of inequality; the un-standardization of cultural products, etc.) on the terrain of African music. For example, using Nyungwe panpipe music and Shona mbira music as examples, I show how African music revises our understanding of perceptions of meter and rhythm in general. I show how a consideration of African music informs the way Westerners hear Western music no less than the way Africans hear African music (or indeed the way either hears music of the other). This is not a case of localizing the reach of ostensibly "universal" theories, as it is to Africanize those theories that go as universal. CMS Matthew Kube-McDowell, the teenage son of two of my oldest and closest friends, uttered the phrase "spiky epiphanies" during a visit in the summer of 2000. I didn't think to inquire if he coined it himself or if he was quoting, but I immediately filed it away mentally as a title for a future composition. In this piece I have attempted to capture the rapturous quality that "epiphanies" conjures up for me, with a liberal dose of edginess to provide the "spiky" part. The first idea is a jumpy set of chords in the two stringed instruments, chords that will return frequently in various guises. These chords are the first part of a slow introduction, with several contrasting moods, which then gives way to an extended fast section. Midway during this section, the piano plays a chorale over repeated patterns in the strings. Most of the remainder of the piece combines this chorale idea with material from earlier in the piece. Schloss, Joseph Tufts University SEM The Boom From the Canon: Constructing History on the Hip-Hop DanceFloor Schauer, Elizabeth Alamosa College CMS What You Can Do with a Career in Music: Career Options Outside of Music Teaching and Performance There are five to ten songs that hip-hop deejays across the United States always play to accompany b-boying (better known as breakdancing) – and all of them are funk songs that predate the emergence of hip-hop music. See Lamkin, Kathleen - What You Can Do with a Career in Music: Career Options Outside of Music Teaching and Performance Scherzinger, Martin Eastman School of Music Africanizing Music Theory For those who see hip-hop as a wild, anarchic expression of youthful abandon, this may seem odd. Could these rebellious teenagers really be so conservative that they insist on dancing to the exact songs that brought the form to life thirty years ago? In a word, yes. As DJ E-Rok puts it, “…It’s almost like old folk songs handed down from generation to generation.” (DJ E-Rok, interview with author, 2000) SEM There is a tendency in our music-scholarly practices (buttressed in the form of institutions) to keep indigenous African music in a state of excluded cultural conformity. The sub-disciplines of music scholarship adopt different methods, which simultaneously uphold different repertoires. African music is approached via the anthropological tenets of ethnomusicology while western music is regarded as Individual Abstracts In this paper, based on ten years of ethnographic research in various hip-hop communities in the United States, I suggest that this group of songs can be profitably analyzed as a canon, with all that the term implies. Moreover, I argue that hip-hop deejays strategically invoke the power of such canons as a conscious performance strategy, and that their audiences understand and respond to them as 111 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 Schultz, Anna University of Illinois SEM Politics as Devotion: Rashtriya kirtan and Indian Nationalism before 1947 such. The fact that the canonization process is embodied in the relationships between deejays and their audiences can illuminate the ways in which larger aesthetics are defined by specific, situated, musical negotiations. In short, in order to apply recent analyses of canonicity to hip-hop, I will be inverting them. Where the literary theorist asks, “how have social forces shaped the canon?”, I ask “what can the canon tell us about the social forces at play in this community?” Partha Chatterjee argues that historians of anti-colonial nationalism focus on the ‘material’ realm of the State and neglect the equally important ‘inside’ realm of arts and spirituality. He explains that colonized elites turn to the autonomous ‘inside’ when they are divested of power in the ‘material’ realm, and asserts that nationalists negotiate between the two arenas to fashion a nation that is both indigenous and ‘modern’. Hindustani music represented the ‘inside’ for preIndependence Indian nationalists, who institutionalized the music through schools and conferences, ‘systematized’ it through scholarship and notation, and objectified it through staged performances. Schuler, Nico Texas State University-San Marcos CMS Towards an Intra-Disciplinary, Methodological Globalization of Teaching Music - From a World Music Perspective At American universities and colleges, music is very often taught without including non-Western music, by just focusing on Western music. But in reality, Western music relates, especially since the late 1800s, quite often to certain styles and genres of non-Western music, and non-Western music also developed in new forms that include elements of Western music. Furthermore, in the electronic age, processes of musical globalization and cross-cultural exchange are part of our everyday-life and are irreversible. Finally, the development of Western popular music - which is dominating today's musical life - was, and is, strongly influenced by non-Western music. For these reasons, a perspective of world music should dominate and influence our teaching and understanding of music. This paper explores the ‘spiritual’ world of nationalism in the pre-Independence era from the perspective of Marathi rashtriya kirtan, a solo temple genre that combines song, storytelling, and nationalist discourse. Rashtriya kirtan provides a foil to the reformism of Hindustani music, since it was nationalist without being appropriated and ‘modernized’ by the cosmopolitan elite. As Brahmans, rashtriya kirtankars shared caste status and Hindu-centric discourse with cosmopolitan nationalists, but unlike nationalist elites, rashtriya kirtankars did not negotiate between the ‘spiritual’ and ‘material’ realms. Instead, they redefined politics as a devotional exercise of the ‘inside’. Based on major revisions of the music curriculum at a mid-size American university, this presentation will provide practical examples of how the inclusion of music from non-Western cultures will contibute to the study of music in a college music curriculum, in which different music disciplines are strongly related to each other ("integrated curriculum") - for instance performance, history, theory, pedagogy, etc., and their sub-disciplines. The presentation will make suggestions, how traditional (Western-oriented) methodologies can be expanded to meet the needs of a global view on music. The presentation will furthermore show how such a curriculum will contribute to the globalisation of teaching music, and how it may eventually lead to the development of a global theory of music. In this paper, I argue that rashtriya kirtankars were independent nationalist leaders who sporadically aligned themselves with cosmopolitan nationalists at points of intersecting interests. I also discuss how kirtankars used the devotional context of their performances to transform politics into devotion, and how the orality of kirtan represented autonomy from the colonial implications of written media. Schwartz , Elliot Bowdoin University Composers on Traditional and Art Music: A Cultural Synthesis See Torres-Santos, Raymond - Composers on Traditional and Art Music: A Cultural Synthesis The presentation will outline this curriculum and provide practical suggestions on handouts. Individual Abstracts CMS 112 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 Schweitzer, Kenneth Washington College SEM Learning Cuban Batá: Transmitting Rhythms and Meaning Within an Oral Tradition environments by assembling and customizing existing parts. The software supports the persistent storage of the student’s work on a server so that instructors can view the completed exercises. This library implements a number of design patterns for the creation of the user interface and manipulation of sound that can apply to a wide range of similar applications. The presenters will explain the design and implementation of this class library and demonstrate its use in creating music learning environments. This lecture/demonstration investigates Santería, a rich spiritual and musical tradition inherited by Miami, in the wake of the 1959 Cuban Revolution. In this oral tradition, the best venue for learning drum rhythms, songs and dances is the toque de santo, the ritual performance venue. While formal one-on-one lessons are offered throughout Cuba and Miami to cultural outsiders, it is during ritual performances that their meanings and uses are experientially apprehended through the body. This presentation focuses on the sacred batá drum and illustrates the active mechanisms, within the musical system, that enable drummers to teach and learn the oral tradition. Transmission of rhythms and meanings is achieved through the use of vocables, physical contact, playing each other’s drums and, most subtly, through aspects of the musical structure. Supported by drummers from the Miami religious community, our presentation extracts sections from the musical liturgy and, with the aid of transcriptions, isolates key musical moments that hold the key to understanding the process of transmission. Our examples range from excerpts of oro seco, a portion of the ritual where the drums play without song, to the guemilere, where drummers, soloist, chorus and dancers interact. While drummers fulfill their primary charge of supporting the singers and dancers, they simultaneous engage in teaching and learning scenarios that often proceed without the awareness of others. Scott, Stan Wesleyan University Lilt a Tune, Dance a Reel: Irish Traditional Music in the Classroom Scruggs, T.M. University of Iowa SEM "Not Such a Buena Vista: nostalgia, myopia and the B.V. Social Club phenomenon outside and inside Cuba" The 1997 CD launched the Buena Vista Social Club phenomena, which soon encompassed a popular film and near-constant international touring by various members of the original ensemble since. In this paper I examine how concepts of nostalgia and memory are key ingredients of the content and packaging of the project for consumption outside of Cuba, as well as important aspects of the music and the project’s reception inside Cuba. I first offer a critical overview of the claims of discovery by musician Ry Cooder, his role as purported culture broker, and the (further) myopia from the U.S. that passes over both contemporary Cuban popular music and politics for an undetermined, but decidedly pre-Revolutionary imaginary. I note how within the repertoire some of the same concepts promoted off the island overlay much of the music’s already encoded longing and nostalgic memory within Cuban culture. I then turn to the place of this music and its foreign promotion within Cuba. I draw from the field fortuity of my being with two of the five principal musicians of the project in their hometown in eastern Cuba just after the Havana recording sessions. I situate their music within the framework of a nonhomogenous Cuban musical culture and regionally dictated generational dynamics. I examine how attitudes laden with a certain type of nostalgia encumber the capital city Havana’s, and therefore much of the nation’s view of eastern Cuba, and ways in which this myopia intersects with the promotional campaign of the project off the island. CMS See McCarthy, Marie - Lilt a Tune, Dance a Reel: Irish Traditional Music in the Classroom Scott D. Lipscomb and Jonathan A. Smith, Northwestern University ATMI Building Music Learning Environments in Flash The use of interactive multimedia instructional materials provides great potential for a significantly enhanced learning experience, particularly in the music classroom. A software class library and a collection of reusable components were created using Flash’s ActionScript, making it easy to quickly create new learning Individual Abstracts 113 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 Seaton, Douglass The Florida State University Credo for a Critic: Deception and Deconstruction in Verdi's Otello CMS has been largely in the hands of non-Roma, and who daily experience the effects of political repression, economic exploitation, and social stigma. This debate evokes the following questions. How can we maintain critical and ethical consideration of representation that effectively diagnoses the power mechanisms that deprive those who are represented from participation in those very representations? Yet how to do so without condemning all representation to suspicion, thereby depriving our consultants of their voice (cf. Ortner 1995;1997)? Examination of Iago's "Credo" scene in Verdi's Otello demonstrates how the music enacts aspects of Iago's character and role. Documents surrounding the opera and analysis of the music, interpreted via the critical methodology of deconstruction, illumine the expressive workings of the scene and can serve as an example for teaching music students about deconstructive criticism. Iago is the archetypal deceiver. Two musical features of his "Credo" also enact deception. The first is the conventional deceptive cadence. Another is displacement of rhythm at the beginning of the act. Sharp, Charles University of California, Los Angeles SEM "Productive Misreading of Aesthetics: Creative Music and Communities in Los Angeles" Even more interesting is another role for Iago. The librettist referred to Iago as a critic. In fact, he acts as a deconstructive critic, a term Verdi would not have known, but a concept he understood. The Los Angeles creative music scene draws on such diverse and seemingly disparate influences as free jazz, punk rock, and Twentieth-century concert music. While all these styles have some overlap in terms of their aesthetics, each can be characterized by their outsider status. The creative music scene has come into existence in the intersections of these outside scenes. Using Pierre Bourdieu’s concepts, this paper will first illustrate how this outsider status serves as cultural capital within a field of cultural production. The diversity of the influences can be seen as a series of strategic alliances between musical scenes, which occurs, in many cases, both locally and globally; however, these alliances may not be without a price. I will examine the differences in aesthetics among the overlapping styles, which can be seen to revolve around different concepts of individual and community. I argue that through creative misreading or re reading of these aesthetics, a wholly different notion of community becomes apparent. While the multiple alliances provide the tangible benefits of venues and audience, they also illustrate a practical application of the notion of outsiderness: The creative music scene can be seen as a community characterized by heterogeneity, which is almost contradictory to the notion of community. More mobilizing than a sub-culture, which is bound to a mainstream culture, creative music suggests the possibility of creative communities that are able to redefine and transform their influences. Deconstruction teases out from a text its unstated, suppressed meanings, revealing depth and complexity within the work. Iago's villainy demonstrates deconstruction, turning Otello's and Desdemona's virtues into weaknesses: Otello's success as a man of action leads him to unconsidered reaction; Desdemona's innocence becomes fatal naiveté. Deconstruction acts in the music, as well. The ornamental turn at the scene's beginning emerges as source of ugliness. The orchestral unison cadential phrase that opens the "Credo" is reinterpreted as harmonically unstable. Study of this scene offers insight into how Verdi used music to enact dramatic process. In addition, the opportunity to illustrate critical deconstruction simultaneously through clear components of the opera's plot and audible features of the music makes this scene an eminently teachable one. Seeman, Sonia University of California, Santa Barbara SEM "Dialectics of Representation: Musical Practice at the Nexus of Power and Aesthetic Expression" Post-modernist critiques of representation seek to disclose the problematics of power and structural inequality (Marcus, Fischer, Clifford; Rosaldo). Application of such theoretical lenses in ethnomusicology (Waterman; Guilbault; Turino) discloses both representation and authenticity as problematic categories. Engaging in this debate is of central concern for Roma communities for whom representation Individual Abstracts 114 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 Sharp, Dan University of Texas, Austin SEM I like scratchy records vs. "It's not preservation quality": Issues of sound recording technology in ethnomusicological fieldwork back of the curtain." Although devoted to Latin jazz, Shindo was repeatedly called upon to "represent the authentic" during the postwar years by serving as the "Japanese musical advisor" for such Hollywood films as Sayonara and A Majority of One. (My research reveals that he actually composed much of the "Japanese" music in these films.) This experience encouraged Shindo to become a devoted student and, eventually, teacher of Japanese traditional music. Several of his albums from the 1950s and 60s—combining elements of Japanese music with the big band style—received renewed attention in the 1990s as part of the "exotica/lounge" revival. As Shindo put it: "Everyone is looking for a style. So in my case, I decided being Oriental, I had something I should draw upon and so I decided to go `exotic sound.'" While analyzing the strands of race and music in Shindo's career, I will discuss Japanese American musical life in prewar Los Angeles and in the internment camps. This paper is based on interviews with Shindo and on research at the Japanese American National Museum, the B.Y.U. Film Music Archives, and the Warner Bros. Archives. The history of ethnomusicology is bound up with the advent of sound recording technologies. Sound recordings have traditionally been considered to be transparent, objective documents that facilitate the scientific analysis of nonwestern musical styles. In the last two decades, reacting to the questions posed in Clifford and Marcus’ “Writing Culture,” anthropologists have scrutinized the ethnography as a text and its power in the act of writing the ‘Other.’ Yet musical ethnographies don’t consist only of words and pictures – they are based on sounds as well. Therefore, while many have addressed issues of power surrounding textual and visual representation, few have transposed these questions to sound recording. This paper is a historiographic study of fieldwork advice written by the principal figures within ethnomusicology, including Curt Sachs, Bruno Nettl, Mantle Hood, Charles Keil, Steven Feld, Helen Myers and others. It focuses specifically on their perspectives concerning recording equipment in the field setting. Heated debates surrounding lo-fi vs. hi-fi equipment, and recording techniques that require differing degrees of intervention by the ethnographer reveal contested values regarding the discipline itself. Shope, Bradley Indiana University SEM Emerging Genres, Constructing Identities: The Anglo-Indian Role in the Celebration of Popular Music in the Early 20th Century Beginning in the 1910s, the presence of sound technology, sheet music, railway transport, and convent schools greatly contributed to the popularization of Dixieland, jazz, swing, waltz, foxtrot and Hollywood War film music among a number of small communities in Lucknow, India. This paper will address the manner in which this American and European jazz and ballroom music emerged in this city in the first half of the 20th century by highlighting the character of its celebration within the Anglo-Indian population, defined here as those of both Indian and British descent. To this end, I will connect the manner in which the music was supported and sustained by Anglo-Indians to larger social issues such as the music curriculum in convent schools, performances in railway station dance halls, the availability of instruments, sheet music and fashion magazines, as well as the radio and gramophone technology available at the time. For the AngloIndian community, its performance was an important factor in the construction of a bounded sense of identity among an otherwise ambiguously defined group. The nature of their enthusiastic celebration of the music contributed to its dissemination among other communities in Lucknow. This presentation will draw from fieldbased individual oral histories taken from elderly interviewees to outline the character of this development, the social and historical circumstances under which By questioning "objective" documentary realism within sound recording during fieldwork, I argue that fieldworkers should acknowledge that, just as a camera shoots from a point-of-view, a tape recorder captures sound from a positioned point-of-audition. Sheppard, W. Anthony Williams College SEM Representing the Authentic: Tak Shindo's "Exotic Sound" and Japanese American History The composer and arranger Tak Shindo (1922-2002) had an extraordinary career that offers a window into the Japanese American musical experience. Interned by the U.S. government during World War II, he began his musical studies through the camp's programs. He decided, following the war, that he "couldn't go up and ... direct an all-Caucasian band" but that he could "write professionally and stay in Individual Abstracts 115 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 it arose, and the emergence of an aesthetic and style in its performance that were uniquely Luckauvi. Siskind, Paul State University of New York-Potsdam CMS Selections from Even More Epigrams and A Few More Epigrams, for Middle/High Voice and Piano Silverman, Carol University of Oregon "Music and the Politics of Representation: Saxophonist Yuri Yunakov" hese songs are drawn from an on-going collection of settings of short, epigrammatic poetry. There is no single unifying theme to the poetry selected; rather, I was attracted to the terse, often quirky nature of the poetry that lent itself to a wide variety of stylistic settings. The songs thus range in mood from reflective to jaunty to boisterous, although the settings tend on the whole to be more dramatic than lyrical. Individual singers may choose to project this sense of variety, or they may conversely choose to present a more singular perspective, such as songs relating to a specific topic or settings of a specific poet. SEM Bulgarian/Turkish/Romani Through a case study of the musical life history of Yuri Yunakov, this paper investigates how musical performances are strategies in personal and political identity politics. I also examine personal politics as embedded in wider historical factors; for Roma in general, these include economic necessity, political and cultural repression, and the trafficking in stereotypes. Throughout his life, Yunakov has negotiated multiple identities: Turkish, Bulgarian, Romani, Gypsy, and American. His musical styles have encompassed the above plus Greek, Armenian, Albanian, and Macedonian. Born in a poor neighborhood in Haskovo, Bulgaria, Yunakov learned the local Turkish repertoire and style in family contexts but was forced to change his Muslim name to a Slavic name in order to succeed as a professional boxer. He apprenticed to a Bulgarian musician, boldly broke into the competitive "wedding music" scene, was recruited by Ivo Papazov, and became the most famous saxophone player in Bulgaria. After emigrating Siskind, Paul A. State University of New York-Potsdam Straight Talk on New Notes: Composers and Performers Together See Zaimont, Judith Lang - Straight Talk on New Notes: Composers and Performers Together Slawek, Stephen University of Texas, Austin SEM In Search of a Lost Chord: Putting Nostalgia and Memory to Work in Rediscovering Joe Sgro and the South Philly "Gharana" of Jazz Guitar to America in 1994, he learned numerous other styles, "discovered" he was Romani, and became part of the "world music" circuit. Yunakov's life trajectory illustrates how, through and with music, he mediated the tension between supposed binaries such as majority/minority, official/unofficial, authentic/traditional, pure/fusion, socialism/postsocialism, insider/outsider, exotic/familiar, and local/transnational. Critiquing not only the functionalist premise that music reflects culture but also the notion that music is part of culture, I argue that music shapes identity. Via music, performers rethink and negotiate who they are in relation to patrons, audiences, kin, and themselves. Music, then, is a representational practice which articulates personal politics. Individual Abstracts CMS Reunion is one manifestation of nostalgia’s power at work in musical life. The performance of my reunited rock band, The Contemplations, at a high school reunion in September 2002 initiated a chain of reconnections that led me back to a long neglected guitar instructor and to the discovery of a regional nexus of jazz guitarists in the Philadelphia, Pennsylvania region. This paper is an initial report of recent field research on the community of jazz guitarists trained by two Italian American master musicians of South Philadelphia, Joe Sgro and the late Dennis Sandole. Sandole has received attention in jazz literature, as he was one of John Coltrane's teachers. Sgro, however, has been neglected by jazz historians despite the fact that he was responsible for developing an innovative guitar style that drew heavily on his classical violin background and interest in jazz pianists Art Tatum and Oscar Peterson. My research has revealed a loosely constructed brotherhood of guitarists from South Philadelphia that involves community, music and religious practice similarly to the sociomusical phenomenon known as gharana in Indian 116 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 music. My presentation will elucidate Sgro's approach to jazz improvisation and will demonstrate the ways that the Philly guitar scene resembles and differs from the gharana concept. Lastly, I will reflect upon the roles nostalgia and memory played in the research process, particularly in regards to the agendas of concerns and sentiments displayed by Sgro and his former students in interviews I conducted as part of this project. Sloat, Susanna Independent Scholar Endemic Species of Caribbean Island Dance ourselves from old preconceptions and "marketing concerns" and to aspire to a music beyond labels. A word about my piano-radio improvisations: the concept might seems naïve, even crude, in today's high tech environment, but these improvisations often prove to be uniquely expressive and engaging. I try to connect with any and all given material, integrating and developing musical "objets trouvées" into a new music of the moment. SEM Smith, Gordon E. Queen's University SEM Salvaging Culture: Ethnographic Modelling and Marius Barbeau’s 1927 Nass River Field Trip Just as water boundaries encourage endemic species of flora and fauna on islands, so can they lead to collections of distinctive island dances. In the Caribbean, dance forms proliferate in both sacred and social contexts, though some are no longer common outside of folkloric performances. In Cuba, Puerto Rico, and the Dominican Republic, dances have links to European and African antecedents that can be similar, but each location's endemic dances, when seen as representations by folkloric troupes of national identity, reveal substantial differences. Cuba shows a great profusion of dances and dance complexes, Puerto Rico a consolidation of them, and the Dominican Republic has unique somewhat Europeanized dance forms to strongly African rhythms in folk Catholic settings. Using three specific performances—by Cuba's national folkloric troupe in New York, by a group performing largely for tourists in San Juan, Puerto Rico, and by a New York Dominican group saluting a Dominican folklorist—this paper will examine the distinctiveness and complexities of each nation's spectrum of dance within its specific cultural contexts. Historical and political circumstances, including relationships with the United States, will be explored to some extent, but the focus will remain on the dances themselves as seen at specific performances, on their varying proportions of African and European influences, on performance styles adopted, and on the ideas of history and identity projected. Smart, Gary University of North Florida American Pluralism In the summer of 1927, Marius Barbeau led a field trip to Arrandale on the Nass River in northwestern British Columbia to record the music of the Tsimshian people. On this trip Barbeau invited Ernest MacMillan, then Principal of the Toronto Conservatory of Music to accompany him. In this paper, I examine ethnographic modelling in Barbeau’s work, including ideas and strategies of particpant/observation, informants, collaborators, documentation, authenticity, and reflexivity. I illustrate with discussion of Barbeau’s and MacMillan’s accounts of the fieldtrip, the Tsimshian song transcriptions, and the engaging visual account of the trip in the silent film titled Saving the Sagas. Barbeau’s mission of salvage ethnography, as it is known sometimes known, was driven by both his education, and the mandate of the Anthropology Division of the Geological Survey of Canada (later the National Museum of Canada), for which Barbeau worked as an ethnologist for nearly forty years. Collection, preservation, exhibitions, and other public presentations, were part of the GSC mandate, and Barbeau was a crucial player in the process of its implementation. Through discussion of different ethnographic dimensions, Barbeau’s 1927 Nass River field trip may serve as a telling example of his approach and ideas toward fieldwork and documentation, and of ways of constructing culture through ethnography. CMS This diverse program of improvised music utilizes a pluralistic mix of contemporary musical materials, styles and techniques. Today's American musician has at hand a wealth of rich, meaningful material and an abundance of distinguished models. It seems to me we now only need to free Individual Abstracts 117 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 Soares, Luciana State University of New York-Potsdam CMS Chiquinha Gonzaga: The Controversial Life and Career of a Brazilian Woman have had with Thelonious Monk and his music since the 1980s, in order to ask how the discourses of history and memory can explain—but also be reinterpreted in light of a fundamental aspect of jazz performance—the personalization of repertoire. Drawing on systematic ethnographic work with jazz musicians and informal work with listeners, conducted from 1998 to the present, this paper focuses on the connection between performances of Monk’s music and discourse about the past surrounding those performances. Centrally, this paper argues that jazz musicking often involves a series of negotiated engagements with various pasts—individual and collective—and that the variety of these engagements explodes rigidly drawn distinctions between history and memory. As ethnomusicologists have suggested recently regarding such themes as identity and hybridity, ethnographic work on musical engagements with the past can be valuable in understanding history and memory as they suffuse other aspects of life in America. Throughout Brazilian music history, there has been a substantial contribution of musical scores of all types by a category of composers who, because of their gender, were relegated to lower positions in society. These women, while fulfilling the duties and responsibilities required of their employment, managed to add a significant amount of original music to the overall musical output of Brazil. This presentation focuses on the life and music of one particularly noteworthy Brazilian woman: Francisca (Chiquinha) Gonzaga (1847-1935), a composer and pianist born in Rio de Janeiro, was influential in the creation of a new class of musicians who dared to flout the norms of a conservative society. Already at eleven years of age, she turned to composing popular dance music, marking the beginning of a controversial yet fascinating life and career. Despite the difficulties imposed by the strongly patriarchal Brazilian society who criticized her vigorously, Chiquinha Gonzaga managed to become the most popular composer of her time. She was also the first woman to conduct an orchestra in Brazil. Solomon, Nanette Kaplan Slippery Rock University CMS Muse Over Miami: Songs and Piano Works of the Legendary Mana-Zucca Gonzaga's musical output encompasses hundreds of waltzes, polkas, tangos, lundus, fados, habañeras, and many other salon genres of the day. However, much of this repertoire has been forgotten and left aside for many years. This lecture is intended to rectify this neglect in a small way. To that end, I will also exemplify on the piano the various dance genres and unique characteristics of selected works. The exciting and propulsive rhythms of Latin American dance have provided fertile ground for American composers of art music in the twentieth century. From Gershwin's Cuban Overture, Copland's Danzons Cubanos and El Salon Mexico to the recent tango craze fired by the popularity of Astor Piazzolla, the Latin influence has maintained its allure for several generations, and has become one of the "lingua francas" of contemporary compositional vocabulary. Solis, Gabriel University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign SEM Playing with the Past: Thelonious Monk and The Contemporary Jazz Scene This lecture-recital will explore piano works by three prominent contemporary American women- Ruth Schonthal, Tania Leon, and Emma Lou Diemer, which were inspired by either temporary residences in various Latin American countries (Schonthal- Mexico, Diemer- Argentina) or in the case of Leon- her own Cuban origins. Scholars of African American music have often interpreted jazz as a kind of collective memory, noting its importance as a system of conserving the past to people with limited access to institutional history. While such work has been valuable, much can be gained by investigating specific cases closely, critically engaging the substantial work on history and memory in the disciplines of history, anthropology and African American studies, and attending to the different ways the process of engaging the past may be glossed—including history, memory, and nostalgia. This paper probes the engagements jazz musicians, critics and listeners Schonthal, born in 1924, in Hamburg, Germany, fled with her family to Mexico City in 1941 to escape the Nazis; while there she studied composition with Manuel Ponce before moving to the United States in 1946, and supported herself in Mexico by playing the piano in nightclubs. In her 1961 work Fiestas y danzas, Schonthal creates a musical reminiscence of her sojourn in Mexico. A slow lyrical "Fiesta" is followed by three danzas, a borrachera (drinking song), another danza, and a final brilliant borrachera, all of which capture the essence of Mexican rhythms, melodies and harmonies. This colorful work exploits the full range of piano Individual Abstracts 118 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 sonorities. Schonthal claims that the work is "a tribute to Mexican music and the contagious spirit of joie de vivre of its people, both of which had impressed and influenced me while I lived there. The music, which combines Latino folk-like melodies and rhythms along with bitonality, is meant to exude a kind of blissful intoxication." Sommers, Laurie Valdosta State University SEM The Florida Music Train: Teaching Music of the Cultural Crossroads This poster presentation will use a recently completed unit from the Florida Heritage Education and Folklife Programs to address 1) issues of authenticity and “translation” of folkioric and ethnomusicological concepts to audiences of K-12 educators and 2) musical diversity in Florida through a multicultural curriculum module conceptualized as an imaginary train ride from the predominantly AngloCeltic and African American cultural communities of North Florida, through the Greek community of Tarpon Springs, to South Florida and Key West (represented by Seminole,Cuban. Mexican, Jewish, and Haitian music). The display will include a hand-out on issues involved in creating this model, including selection of repertoire and how the techniques and methods of public sector folklore and ethnomusicology came into play; a CD which will provide audio component (4’ of table space); graphics on ethnic and musical diversity in Florida (5’ of wall space). The Florida Music Train is the first music unit in the state’s heritage education series and is based primarily on field recordings dating from the WPA through the 1990s which reflect the efforts of public folklorists and ethnomusicologists over a 50-year period. The Music Train addresses the theme “migration to Florida” through 5 lesson plans, graphics, a poster, and a compilation CD of folk and traditional music from Florida, complete with extensive recording notes Born in 1943 in Cuba of French, Spanish, African, Chinese, and Cuban descent, Tania Leon earned degrees from the National Conservatory in Cuba and New York University. She has led a diverse career in conducting and composing, and was instrumental in the development of the Dance Theater of Harlem. Leon wrote Momentum , her first piano piece, in 1984 on commission from the International Congress of Women in Music. It represents a synthesis of American, Latin and international styles. The work combines quasi-serial tone rows, with touches of Latin dance rhythms, stride piano and blues in, as one reviewer stated, "a thick, moody jumble". Emma Lou Diemer (b. 1927) has had a distinguished career as a composer of music for the concert hall as well as for schools and churches. Her essentially NeoClassic style is characterized by driving rhythmic energy, motivic development, ostinati and shifting accents. One of her most recent piano works is Sonata no. 3, published in 2001, the third movement of which is entitled "Tango Fantastique", and was influenced in part by a stay by the composer in Argentina, where she frequented tango concerts and films. According to the composer, Tango Fantastique is by turns percussive and rhythmic, lyrical and expressive, quiet and meditative, as it reflects the many moods of the new century. It is a romanticized expression of the tango, a bit "kinder, gentler" than the aggressive, pseudo-violence that the dance can depict. The tango rhythm pervades the movement; In addition to the urgent rhythmic sections, there are freer more expressive passages, that nonetheless keep the "tango" feel, as well as jovial circus music. One of the devices the composer uses for contrast is a section where the strings are dampened in evenmetered ostinatos- to evoke the sounds of Latin percussion and create a fantasy world far from the violent tango. Sonnenschein, David Northeastern University Innovations in On-Line Music Appreciation Music Appreciation is seen as an important means to reveal great works of art to students who have had only casual experiences with it if any. Not expecting these students to be capable of reading musical notation, the suggested approach focuses on attaining music cognition by auditory perception. A courseware packet was created and used for an on-line music appreciation course. This packet was originally designed as a hybrid, interactive, multimedia/CD-ROM program. Current trends in distance learning seem to coalesce around modular designs of learning material. The advent of MP3 compression technology created the possibility to design learning modules in place of courseware packets. These learning modules are posted on the Web and users can download select modules in accordance with personal preferences. The main advantage of this innovation is that modules represent a dynamic approach whereas courseware packets are by necessity static in nature. After a brief discussion of the background of the composers and the Latin traits that infuse these works, the proposer will perform them in their entirety (approximately 25 minutes of music). Since the musical culture of Miami shares many of the features of the music of Cuba, Mexico, and Argentina, the site of the CMS 2003 annual conference will be a serendipitous venue for the presentation of these compelling and exciting works. Individual Abstracts ATMI 119 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 Spiller, Henry Kenyon College SEM It’s All Happening at the Zoo: Inventing and Contesting Sundanese "Tradition" in West Java, Indonesia and social dancers, in particular musicians' responses to the commercial and aesthetic demands resulting from changes in social dance. The Lindy hop, a dance of African American origin characterized by a high degree of physical vigour and a new driving rhythm, became wildly popular during this period. Jazz musicians, whose livelihoods depended on meeting the requirements of dancers, responded with a music that much better complemented the new dance. The musical consequences defined jazz performance for the next twenty years. This enduring and widespread popularity of the Lindy hop and Swing as a part of American mainstream popular culture was the result of the exploitation and revalorization of stereotypes of the black body in the case of the Lindy hop, and of African American musical practice in the case of Swing. In both cases, the space for black expression greatly expanded. In the heart of Bandung, the capital city of West Java, Indonesia, and the center of Sundanese culture, lies the Bandung Zoo. For the past thirty years, the Zoo has sponsored “cultural performances” on Sundays, including bimonthly ketuk tilu (a form of Sundanese men’s improvisational dance) events. As is the case with some of the once-common-but-now-rare Javanese fauna on exhibit, ketuk tilu’s presence in the zoo saves it from extinction; the price of this salvation, however, is domestication. In this paper I demonstrate how the Zoo’s domestication of ketuk tilu capsulizes a wider dialogue about "invented tradition," "authenticity," and competing meanings of Sundanese music and dance. First, I outline how ketuk tilu events once created a framework for men to explore Sundanese masculinity by providing a "safe space" in which they could behave in otherwise unacceptable ways. Next, I discuss how the Zoo events diverge from this framework. In keeping with a larger Indonesian government project of transforming regional forms into national "high" art forms, the intent is to "preserve" ketuk tilu’s "good" qualities while eliminating its seamier elements. The effect is to transform ketuk tilu into an "invented tradition" in which its original meaning—exploring masculinity—is covered by a new one—emblematizing Sundaneseness. Finally, I explore how Zoo visitors, upon encountering these sanitized ketuk tilu performances, recuperate the original meanings. I argue that by insisting on the trenchant protocols of old-fashioned events, such as choosing songs and dancing, and eschewing rigid style restrictions, these audiences resist the domestication of Sundanese dance. In doing so, they negotiate what it means to be "authentically" Sundanese in a changing Indonesia. Spring, Howard University of Guelph Social Dance and the Birth of Swing Spurgeon, Alan L. The University of Mississippi The American Play Party Play parties were folk song, dance and game all in one. The term meant both the activity and the party where it took place. Popular in rural America from about 1850 to 1940, they occurred because of the prohibition against dancing by fundamentalist Christian religious groups. They were usually held in homes. The first recorded play party was in northern Arkansas in 1836 and the last was also in Arkansas in 1956. They existed throughout the eastern and southern United States but continued longest in the Ozark and Appalachian Mountains. Participants sang the songs without instrumental accompaniment since instruments, especially the fiddle, were associated with dancing. The text often indicated the movements, which resemble simplified square dance movements. A game was often included. SEM Early sources include journal articles by Ames (1911), Wolford (1917), and Randolph (1929), a single book by Botkin (1937), a few recorded sources from the Library of Congress and the University of Arkansas as well as the CBS television program "The Search" (1954). I interviewed over 40 people who participated in play parties as youngsters. They taught me songs, movements and games and discussed experiences at play parties. Elementary school music teachers use them today as authentic folk activities because of their acceptance by fundamentalist religious groups. A new style of jazz began to take shape at the end of the 1920s in New York City and was fairly well established by 1932. The stage was set for the shift to this new style, which came to be known as “swing”, by developments in media technology, the accessibility of previous performance practices via recordings and live performance, and the types of venues that sprang up in New York during the 1920s. But the most direct factor was the dynamic relationship between musicians Individual Abstracts CMS 120 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 This paper will discuss the play party emphasizing the Ozark mountain region where most of my field-research took place. I will show videotape clips of interviews as well as a play party taped by CBS-TV in 1954. Stem, Erich After Rain University of Maryland This presentation draws from the course "Sounding and Imaging" that focuses on reading film music in relation to other modes of filmic presentation and in relation to African societies and musics. For this presentation, I will focus on one method for the analysis of film and film music that focuses on different forms and sites of representation. The African films, which I will consider here, emanate from two sources: first, the Hollywood film industry and, second, independent African filmmakers. Music is embedded in the fabric of the film, and it is the construction of the musical voices and the interpretation by filmmakers and audiences that are of interest here. CMS After Rain (2001) is comprised of two movements; Night and Journey and Celebration. The first movement, Night, is tranquil in nature, slowly evolving one theme to two other related motives expressed in the solo passages of the piano and violin. Towards the end of the piece, each motive and supporting gesture is heard concurrently, creating a new sound while preserving the identity of each idea. Journey and Celebration takes the meditative atmosphere created in Night and uses a steady pulse and unaltered melodic theme to guide the gradual and sometimes sudden changes in texture, harmony, and rhythm. The transformation that occurs from one expression of the 'unaltered' theme to the next is achieved by separately introducing a change in a particular element (e.g. timbre or rhythmic gesture) in each of the instruments as the piece progresses. The result of this transformation leads to a dramatic section, creating a sense of celebration during the final moments of the piece. Issues ranging from conquest and triumphalism to counter voice and counter gaze will center my analysis of a selection of films, beginning with African Queen (1951), made by the legendary filmmaker John Huston in Hollywood, and juxtaposed with other films such as Quartier Mozart (1992), by African filmmaker Jean-Pierre Bekolo. Stuessy, Joe Southwest Texas State University Collegiality As a Factor in Faculty Evaluation In these litigious times, administrators and faculty must understand the appropriate (and legal) use of collegiality as a factor in faculty evaluation. The courts have consistently held collegiality to be a legitimate criterion in evaluating faculty members for tenure and/or promotion. Courts have warned that considerations of collegiality must not be used as a pretext for discrimination. Collegiality need not be explicitly stated as factor in evaluation guidelines. In fact, the AAUP specifically discourages using collegiality as a separate factor, preferring that it be integrated into the traditional considerations of teaching, research, and service. Nor should faculty and administrators blur the lines between collegiality and congeniality. Even though both movements were originally conceived with no specific purpose or program in mind, the titles of the work were later given to convey ideas dealing with struggle, resolution, and finally, a new beginning. This concept took on a more important meaning to me as I composed the work during a time of renewed patriotism in our country in 2001. Stone, Ruth Indiana University Sounding and Imaging: Voices and Counter Voices in African Film SEM I think of collegiality as a continuum that extends from the "warm-and-fuzzy" individual to the genuine troublemaker. I think it is wise to include only about 25% of the continuum as non-collegial, reserving this term for those who demonstratively hinder the music unit's pursuit of its mission. By elimination, then, there is a wide spectrum of collegial behaviors that allows for people who are shy, introverted, "all business," very private, or even vociferous in their advocacy of ideas. Film weaves its powerful spell in a world where film industries--whether based in Hollywood, Hong Kong, or New Delhi--feed our imaginations. The Hollywood group has access to infinitely more resources for making and distributing any given film when compared to what is available to a filmmaker from Africa. Yet despite these inequalities, a lively and creative group of African filmmakers work and thrive both in Africa and in the former colonial powers, particularly France. Individual Abstracts CMS 121 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 Sturman, Janet University of Arizona Top Ten Lists: Mediating Conflicting Methodologies Faculty units should discuss specific behaviors as they relate to teaching, research (performance), and service and predetermine what they believe to be collegial and non-collegial behaviors. They must avoid the temptation to define collegiality as conformity with the behaviors favored by the faculty's leaders. The irony is that when this extreme is approached, the appearance of a collegial environment may become the exact opposite. Sturman, Janet University of Arizona Top Ten Lists: Mediating Conflicting Methodologies Janet Sturman (University of Arizona), Brenda Romero (University of Colorado, Boulder), Judith Coe (University of Colorado, Boulder), and James Parakilas (Bates College) This panel will compare individual and disciplinary attitudes towards musical canons, including how we develop them, and how our approach influences the ways we teach music in our university programs. As we attempt to broaden our curricula: 1) What are the pros and cons of reifying specific musical pieces, and the corresponding creators and practices as "best"?, and 2) How can we accommodate competing methodologies to optimally serve our students? SEM Ethnomusicologists have long recognized a fundamental difference of approach that distinguishes their work from that of their colleagues in Music History and Criticism: ethnomusicologist aim to explain people by studying music, while historical musicologists aim to explain music pieces and styles by way of recognizing people at various points in time. The ethnomusicological emphasis on holistic and ethnographic study prohibits simple responses to requests for a list of the top ten songs that any students of Mexican history should know, or a specific selection from of music from India to parallel a Beethoven symphony. While it may be tempting to dismiss such requests as naïve, it is argued here that we must not simply ignore them. This presentation acknowledges the ongoing discussions by Bergeron, Bohlman, Cook, and others, regarding musical canons. The presentation will explore both specific and general responses based on teaching experiences that include efforts to integrate world music into a sequence of introductory music literature courses for first year music majors, as well as collaborating with other faculty in Latin American studies to position music as a more visible component of the curriculum in that program. While these efforts are on-going, the greatest successes to date have resulted from balancing discussion of specific works with comparative study of the processes of defining musical literature, exploring not just rationale and mechanics, but also the resulting pros and cons, of reifying (in some cases, deifying) specific musical performances, pieces and their creators as "best." Individual Abstracts CMS Janet Sturman begins by considering how ethnomusicologists should respond to requests to identify for any musical practice "the ten songs (or pieces of music) that all students become acquainted with?" † Trained to more to focus on genres, traditions, and contexts, even on key performers or creators, rather than individual works, ethnomusicologists are apt to find these requests exasperating. By drawing on teaching experiences at the University of Arizona that include efforts to integrate world music into a sequence of introductory music literature courses for first year music majors, as well as collaborating with faculty in Latin American studies to position music as a more visible component of the curriculum in that program, she proposes ways to balance discussion of specific works with comparative study of the processes of defining musical literature. Calling his contribution, "Ethnomusicology to the rescue?", James Parakilas examines how musicology has turned to ethnomusicology to globalize courses and curricula. Too often, he notes these requests result in material "that simply extends, and therefore fits, the canonic and normative paradigms of classical music: bring in the sitar to show that there is 'classical music' around the world, or bring on the global freak show—the Tibetan monks, the Tuvan throat singers—to show what musical capacities the Western tradition fails to exploit. Doing battle with parochialism requires more than that: it requires challenging the paradigms that shape such requests." To meet that demand, Parakilas calls for collaboration of musicologists, ethnomusicologists and popular music scholars to jointly create courses, textbooks, and curricula comparisons and more importantly, to develop a new comparativity, finding topics and methodologies that allow cross-cultural comparisons that are neither invidious nor leveling, but are instead discriminating 122 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 Sultanova, Razia London University Memorializing Uzbek Music in Afghanistan and provocative. In her segment of the panel, called "The Integrated Musicology program and the Top Ten," Brenda Romero will draw upon her experience with just such collaboration at University of Colorado Boulder where the faculty is attempting to provide an integrated program for its musicology graduate students. She reports that the need to align conflicting methodologies is clearly visible in the course requirements, as well as in the entrance and qualifying exams the students must take to enter or exit the program.† Romero will review the model UC Boulder is following and will share input from students and professors about what is working and what is not. In the lands of modern Uzbekistan – formerly known as Transoxana, the tradition of musical instrument making, alongside other forms of transmision of traditional culture – poetry, architecture, book miniature, arts and crafts, has always possessed the status of refined culture and captured the eternal beauty of traditional art. The principal musical instruments represented by Tar, Dutar, Nai, Karnai and Quobuz, have carried a profound symbolical meaning, rooted in mythology and history of the region. Their use accompanied both happy and sad times, occasions of birth and death and occupied a distinct and valued place in people's everyday lives. Judith Coe will also address values and practice in her examination of the conflicts that arise at the University of Colorado at Denver between the Music Performance program and the Music & Entertainment Industry Studies Department (MEIS). She notes that "the performance of popular/commercial music has a number of characteristics which must be taken into account by teachers and presents some conflicts within the framework of a more traditional, conservatory-based musical training and assessment system." Among the concerns she identifies is the distinction between the experience-based evaluation of a popular/commercial music performance (i.e.,' real world') and an educationally-driven assessment (as part of an academic course, an ensemble, or applied lessons). Her presentation will focus on evaluation and assessment of popular /commercial music and will discuss salient elements involved in the evaluation of popular/commercial music performance, given conflicting methodologies. Stusek, Steven University of North Carolina-Greensboro Straight Talk on New Notes: Composers and Performers Together Globalisation and commercialisation of the arts has spelt out profound changes affecting all aspects of the musical world. Nowadays use of electronic amplifiers is becoming a prerequisite of every celebration and concert taking place. The altered instruments lose their charm along with quality of the sound, quickly becoming the fast-food equivalents in the world of culinary art. Only a determined effort into researching the past glorious meaning of each instrument, careful observation of their production processes and recording of detailed conversations with the old instrument makers (video demonstration: Dutar making by famous Ryzhon-aka Khojakhonov) can return the true and disappearing over time understanding of the values of authentic musical art and its role in history of the civilisation of the Great Silk Road. CMS Summit, Jeffrey Tufts University SEM Music and the Construction of Identity Among the Abayudaya of Uganda See Zaimont, Judith Lang - Straight Talk on New Notes: Composers and Performers Together Individual Abstracts SEM The Abayudaya, a community of approximately 600 people of Bantu origin living in villages surrounding Mbale in Eastern Uganda, are practicing Jews. They are developing musical/liturgical traditions that are creating a pan-ethnic Jewish identity, one that bridges the five Bantu language/ethnic groups that make up their community--Baganda, Basoga, Bagisu, Bagwere and Banyole. This common music of worship and para-liturgical celebration is the primary factor that increasingly causes the Abayudaya to see themselves as one people. Yet even as this overarching repertoire develops, much Abayudaya music remains rooted in local Bantu 123 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 musical forms and styles. Their introduction of Hebrew, Jewish themes and context shapes, and in some cases transforms, this traditional music. I will examine how this code-layering (Slobin 1992) presents a complex, and sometimes conflieting, set of identity markers that negotiate among the Abayudaya’ s religious and ethnic identities. I also consider how the Abayudaya understand their developing Hebrew literacy and adoption of Jewish musical traditions from North America as a means to authenticate their Jewish expression and affirm their status as members of the world Jewish community. Sung, Sang Yeon Indiana University Global Movement of K-Pop Among Local and Overseas Taiwanese Sung, Stella Night Bloom CMS n 2000, the Jacksonville Museum of Modern Art and the Jacksonville Symphony Orchestra (Jacksonville, FL) joined together in commissioning composers to write new musical to compositions to match artworks in the collection of the Jacksonville Museum of Modern Art. NIGHT BLOOM is a work by artist Memphis Woods (1978), and depicts the organic growth of a flowering plant. The musical work, NIGHT BLOOM, is based upon the concept of the process of growth, and each instrument is an integral in that process. SEM Survilla, Maria Paula Wartburg College SEM Constructing Memory, Inviting ownership and the Belarusan Beat: Concepts and compilations in Post-X Popular music This paper examines the phenomenon of hallyu (Korean Wave, Trend or Wind) that is currently popular in East Asia, focusing on local and overseas Taiwanese. The term hallyu refers to Korean popular culture, disseminated primarily through the mass media, as it enjoys broad popularity outside of Korea. It includes Korean television dramas, movies, fashion and popular music. Since rock first became a staple of the Belarusan contemporary music scene in the 198os, it has been treated in local political and social discourse as a locus for the exploration of Belarusan identities. By the early 1990S rock was a synergist for independence and since 1994, due in part to the restrictive policies of Lukashenka’s presidency, Belarusan rock has been linked to new generation engaged in their own brands of activism. Some bands have overtly connected their music to activism while others fear that their music might be marginalized if associated with a “national” cause. Focusing on Taiwan demonstrates not only the popularity of Korean popular music in contemporary Taiwanese society but also the complex issues involved in the importation of cultural products, the relationship between indigenous and foreign musical forms, and the global movement of popular music. Connected to hallyu are issues about the presence of Japanese and Western popular music in Taiwan, of Taiwanese music in the PRC, and of rap music in South Korea. Hallyu, then, is much more complex than a simple importation of Korean popular culture. It is movement back and forth between the United States and South Korea, South Korea and Taiwan, overseas Korean and overseas Taiwanese, and overseas Taiwanese and local Taiwanese. Population mobility and the rapid development of the mass media have resulted in these multi-directional musical flows. This paper explores a consolidation of intent amongst musicians in Belarus since 1998 that suggests that the musicians, rather than the mechanisms of cultural critique, are presenting an overt public stance that targets their audiences according to clearly articulated ideas about a modern Belarusan identity. Rather than avoiding the canons of national tradition, these musicians are producing a modern canon that reinvents the past and offers a real-time construction of cultural memory. This trend invites debate about authenticity and representation since bands openly borrow from iconic repertoire linked to the past, to the intelligentsia, and to the Belarusan diaspora. Independent musicians and longstanding Belarusan bands collaborate as the Belarusan Music Alternative (BMA) offering concept albums and concert performances that combine diverse musical styles according to themes of language, citizenship, and common everyday experience. The new trend, to invite ownership not according to memory as nostalgia, but according to the construction of relevance as modern memory will be explored through selections Through this study I demonstrate that globalization is not just a one-way movement but rather multi-dimensional, the result of migration, cultural importation and exportation and the mass media dissemination of cultural forms. Individual Abstracts University of Central Florida 124 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 from cooperative albums dating from 1998, 2001, and 2003. Sutton, R. Anderson University of Wisconsin, Madison SEM Bounded Variation? Music Television and its Aesthetics in South Korea principles of post-disciplinary hybridity in the arts and offer an early glimpse at the model’s successes and at the challenges it will face in the future. A decade after MTV’s international station blurb declared “One world, One image, One channel,” (1993) the configuration of music television in Asia has grown markedly more complex. In South Korea, as of July 2001, the tens of millions of cable TV subscribers have access not only to a variety of video and live music shows on the government-sponsored channels (e.g., KBS, Arirang), but also to four full-time (24-hour, 7-days a week) music television stations. Two of these stations are Korean branches of multi-national broadcasting companies (MTV Korea and Channel [V] Korea) and two are locally owned and managed (M-Net and Kmtv). Based on interviews with Korean music industry personnel (producers, VJs, musicians), music and popular culture critics, and a sample of music television viewers, complemented and informed by extensive personal viewing of these stations on four visits from September 2000 to November 2002, this paper offers an interpretation of the broadcast content and its implications for Korean popular music aesthetics. The intense competition between the four full-time stations has yielded remarkably little contrast among them, each seeming merely to present its own variation on a gradually evolving model of what music television can or should be offering its viewers. The paper considers Korean music television content within the context of demographic profiles of viewers, market forces, trends in the wider world of Korean and international popular music, local discourses of authenticity (both “musical” and “national”), and the limits of transnational cultural transmission. Sykes, Charles Indiana University SEM Making Music at Motown: Production Processes & Issues of Representation Ethnomusicologists have long been concerned with questions of the ways in which local contexts give shape to musical traditions and systems of music making. One of our primary challenges has been to arrive at a definition of a given music concept based upon indicators of socio-cultural influences within the local environment. The challenge of concept definition can be quite daunting when the setting for music making is a multi- track commercial recording studio, where music making can be driven by record sales markets and the state of the music industry, and where technology affords the potential for decision makers to control the nature and quality of the performance artifact - the recording. This paper looks at the music and music making processes employed by Motown Record Corporation, a black-owned record company headquartered Detroit, Michigan in the creation of the Motown Sound. By the mid-1960s Motown’s company sound concept, commonly known as the “Motown Sound,” had proven successful in achieving an international consumer base, across racial and cultural lines. What are the components of the Motown sound? Who were the contributors and decision makers in the creation of a company sound concept? What are some ways in which the city of Detroit, as local context, served as the environment in which decisions were nurtured and the sound was shaped? These questions provide the framework for exploring issues of representation in the configuration of the “Motown Sound.” Peter V. Swendsen University of Virginia ATMI Music technology in higher education: different models, common issues and future trends Tabor, Michelle Tallahassee, Florida CMS The Usefulness of Alberto Ginaster's Pampeana No. 1 for Various College Teaching Settings With programs in music technology now located throughout the country, it seems timely to assess the different approaches to the subject found at these programs. We will present findings on the differences and similarities between some of the leading programs in this field. These findings are the result of interviews conducted by the authors with professors at each institution. In a broader context, we will explore arts technology as the potential hub for a more unified student creative practice and technology-based pedagogy can foster what some have called a “postdisciplinary” approach to the arts. Our paper will excavate the fundamental Individual Abstracts This presentation consists of an initial lecture, followed by a performance of the rarely-heard Pampeana No. 1 (1947) for violin and piano. The lecture is intended to demonstrate the many possibilities for various types of college teaching settings inherent in this piece. The Pampeana is particularly useful in many types of music courses, such as music in general studies, music appreciation, history, analysis, 125 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 etc., for two main reasons. First this short work is easily heard in its entirety. Second, the piece encompasses a wide spectrum of musical elements that illuminate various concepts. Because this composition dates from Ginastera's early, overt, nationalistic period and his music is usually dramatic and obvious, the elements of this work are clear and can be easily conveyed to all levels of students. of American dominance in popular song composition (especially in the 1950s and early 1960s), British songwriters suddenly found a ready market for their work. While many scholars have focused on the work of Lennon and McCartney (e.g., Mellers 1973, Kozinn 1995, and Everett 1999 and 2001), numerous other songwriters contributed to the wealth of music composed largely in London in the mid 1960s: John Carter, Geoff Stephens, Les Reed, Mitch Murray, and others had numerous hit songs in this era. However, these songwriters had a problem: whereas they often sought to be identifiable as British songwriters, their models were American. Even Lennon and McCartney early in their careers expressed an interest in emulating Jerry Goffin and Carole King. British songwriters needed to establish a musical dialect that was consistent with the genres of rock and pop established by American performers and, at the same time, recognizably British. Following are some specific concepts related to the Pampeana which are discussed in the lecture. What nationalism in music means and how it can be expressed (both in general and in Latin America). Extramusical, cultural and sociological issues such as how the region of the pampas, immigration from Europe, the creation of a unique culture, and the gauchos (Argentine cowboys), contributed to a unique folklore that gave rise to the Malambo, a dance that makes up the second, Allegro, part of the Pampeana. The first part of the Pampeana (Lento e liberamente ritmato), which is contemplative and expresses feelings this region evokes, serves as a tool for learning about improvisatory music. Other factors for study include the two cadenzas, the subtitle "Rhapsody," and the use of the pitches of the open strings of the guitar ("guitar chord") as a symbol of nationalism. In conclusion, this composition, which encompasses contrasting moods from quiet contemplation to explosive drama, is a rich resource for various teaching settings. This paper examines selected songs and complements these analyses with interviews with the composers. Thompson , Donald University of Puerto Rico Composers on Traditional and Art Music: A Cultural Synthesis Taylor, Jack A. Florida State University and University of North Carolina ATMI John J. Deal, University of North Carolina, Greensboro A National Survey of Undergraduate Training in Music Technology: Reports from First- and Second-year K-12 Music Teachers The findings of a national survey on college training in music technology of beginning (first- and second-year) music teachers are reported in this presentation. Of special interest are the experiences these students received in learning how to use technology--and also in learning how to incorporate technology within various music learning environments. See Torres-Santos, Raymond - Composers on Traditional and Art Music: A Cultural Synthesis Thurmaier, David Central Missouri State University Rock Music, Rock Progressions, and Theory Pedagogy CMS The study of popular music has recently garnered much attention in music theory circles. Numerous scholars have contributed analytical writings that highlight the richness and diversity of popular music. Given this current interest, the time seems right to consider its place in the core undergraduate theory curriculum. Thompson, Gordon Skidmore College SEM An English Kind of Equivalent': Innovation and Tradition in Sixties British Songwriting I would like to propose bringing rock music into the aural skills classroom through harmonic dictation using what I call rock progressions . These progressions capture a great majority of rock music from the 1950s to today. Additionally, they were chosen because of their frequency in the literature, their ability to describe many types of music, and because their nomenclature can be easily taught to students. In British popular music in the 1960s exuded originality and excitement: the bright instrumental timbres, the impassioned voices, and an attention to the craft of songwriting marked a new kind of British musical identity. Indeed, after decades Individual Abstracts CMS 126 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 my presentation, I define and provide examples of six progressions—from artists such as the Beatles and the Police—and explain their applicability to harmonic dictation in the classroom. By figuring out the bass line in conjunction with the quality of a given chord in rock music, the student acquires another method to reinforce harmonic skills already taught for classical music. apply to music technology as well as to generic computer courses. The focus will be on a set of concepts and skills that are independent of specific software, equipment, or platforms. Side-by-side comparison of general and music technology syllabi and suggestions for assessing the proposed concepts and skills will be included. Tingler, Stephanie University of Georgia Liszt's Songs: An Ongoing Quest to Meld Tone and Text Trimillos, Ricardo University of Hawaii CMS CMS Advocacy Panel: Advocating Music Theory, Musicology, and Ethnomusicology CMS See Dickinson, Stefanie - Liszt's Songs: An Ongoing Quest to Meld Tone and Text Titus, Pamela University of Central Florida Aires Tropicales by Paquito DeRivera See Harding, Tayloe - CMS Advocacy Committee Panel: Advocating Music Theory, Musicology, and Ethnomusicology CMS Trinka, Jill University of St. Thomas Preparing the Next Generation of K-6 Music Teachers CMS See Koons, Keith - Aires Tropicales by Paquito DeRivera Torres-Santos , Raymond City University of New York Composers on Traditional and Art Music: A Cultural Synthesis Leaders in four music education organizations have collaborated to: (1) recommend a program of study for undergraduate music education students in active music-making approaches to teaching K-6 music and (2) determine how the professional K-6 music educator can help effect change in music teacher education curricula. The purpose of this panel presentation is to present a work-in-progress by leaders from the American Orff-Schulwerk Association (Marilyn Davidson); the Organization of American KodAly Educators (Dr. Jill Trinka); the Dalcroze Society of America (Dr. David Frego), and the MENC Society for Music Teacher Education (Dr. Sara Bidner). A desired outcome of the session is to communicate with collegiate colleagues about ways these organizations can continue to work toward the goal of preparing music education students in active music-making approaches to teaching K-6 music. The session will include: CMS Distinguished panelists will discuss how traditional and art music have been impacted by each other to the point of enriching both experiences. Emphasis will be given to the neglected contribution of traditional music into the music of the Western civilization since its beginning. Today the commonalties are more evident but there are many musical antecedents which have resulted in a surprising cultural gestation. Train Adams, Robert University of Montevallo Apples and Oranges: Basic concepts in computer proficiency ! A demonstration of types of active music-making in the K-6 curriculum. ATMI ! An overview of musical and pedagogical skills needed to teach active musicmaking approaches that address the National Standards. As assessment of computer proficiency becomes a requirement of state and regional agencies, courses in music and arts technologies may be required to incorporate more non-arts oriented content. This paper proposes a basic set of computer concepts and skills that demonstrates basic computer proficiency in the context of an introductory undergraduate computer course. This set is intended to Individual Abstracts ! A summary of research about past practices in general music education ! An examination of current trends in theory and practice, course requirements, field experience, reflective practice, specific methodologies, classroom 127 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 management, conducting research in the classroom, technology, and assessment. educational system in Taiwan attempt to make better adaptation to multi-cultural society and provide a better learning environment for all students. The result, however, can be both positive and negative. With the number of Asian students studying in United States increasing, strategies for success in dealing with this multi-cultural student population become more imperative. Therefore, plagiarism and citation of sources, expression of independent ideas, teacher-student interaction, ESL, and orientation to American higher education should be examined, and evaluated. I will provide examples for strategies for dealing with these issues and problems. ! Recommendations for changes in music education curricula to ensure musically and pedagogically successful K-6 student teachers and first-year teachers. ! Suggestions for incorporating recommended content into music education degree programs: establishing expectations of prospective teachers; ensuring that students gain requisite knowledge and skills for teaching K-5 music; communicating with colleagues about curricular changes, and assisting methods instructors inexperienced in K-5 active music-making approaches. ! A question-answer segment with session attendees. Tucker, Joshua University of Michigan SEM Sowing Culture On Disc: Music, Media and the Place of Contemporary Ayacucho Tsai, I-Hsuan University of Cincinnati CMS Learning in Different Cultures: A Comparison of Education in Taiwan with Education in the United States Through a discussion of one highland Peruvian genre, this paper explores the role of media networks in enabling constructions of self, society, and the relation between the two in a societal context defined by fragmentation and physical dispersal. I will explore how musicians, listeners and especially intermediaries such as DJs and producers in Ayacucho and Lima use Ayacuchano huayno to debate ideas about contemporary Ayacucho. Many recent media ethnographies underplay the crucial role of media networks and agents in bringing to audiences the material representations they use to think their selves and their cultural context. These agents circulate representations of Ayacucho that respond to local notions of cultural and musical authenticity, historically elaborated by elite intellectuals acting as folklorists. Such authoritative ideas have been challenged by the rise of a market-oriented, Lima-based style fusing huayno with Bolivian and EuroAmerican pop idioms. In creating and circulating such high-profile hybridities, producers and musicians continually create and recreate alternate visions of contemporary Ayacucho. These are taken by some sectors of Ayacuchano society to better represent their place in an increasingly urban, globalized Andean world. However, as most artists and recording studios are located in the capital, the new hybrid style largely comes home through a limited series of media channels. Thus current debates about Ayacucho and Ayacuchanos’ positionality in contemporary Peru are largely being waged in the mediated space that both separates and links provincial Ayacuchanos and capitaline migrants; I will illuminate the way in which such spaces are conformed by media agents. This paper illuminates the differences between Asian educational methods, particularly Taiwanese, and American methods, thereby providing American teachers with information that can positively affect pedagogy in courses that include Asian students. My experience as a pre-college student in Taiwan and postsecondary education in the United States has prompted serious inquiry into the pedagogical dilemma faced by many college instructors. Through case studies and my own experiences in both cultures, as well as courses in pedagogy and teaching and tutoring students from a variety of cultures, I found several differences: 1. how teachers are perceived in each culture; 2. educational goals; 3. students' attitudes and expectations in measuring outcomes, and 4. learning styles. Examples include the role of rote memorization, critical and independent thinking, and research and writing styles. The changes in the last few years in the Individual Abstracts 128 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 Tuohy, Sue Indiana University "Contextualizing and Analyzing Chinese Film and Music" SEM Primary sources for this paper will include the video clips for: Amr Diab and Angela Demetrio- "Ana Bahebak Aktar" (1999, Greece), Hisham Abbas-"Nari Narein" (2000, India), Amr Diab (Featuring Sandman)- "Wala Alla Bali" (2002, USA), Nawa El-Zughbi- "Tool Omri" (2001, Cuba), and Hakim and Olga Tanon"Ah Ya Albi" (2002, Puerto Rico). In addition to analyzing these music videos, I plan to incorporate media sources including: interviews, reviews, press releases and web sites. Such texts place these artists and their work into a popular discourse and help explicate and unpack aspects of national and intercultural dynamics. Additionally, I will include data collected from Arab and Arab-American consumers of these artists' music about their perceptions of these clips. The course "Chinese Film and Music: Sounds and Images" focuses on feature films--those produced in China from the 1930s to the present as well as Hollywood films--that center on music and musicians as their central topic. Taught within departments of Folklore and Ethnomusicology and East Asian Studies, the course is designed as a means both to introduce and apply ethnomusicological perspectives to the analysis of film and to provide a basic introduction to Chinese society and music. This presentation will focus on two related issues central to the class: contextualizing and analyzing Chinese films 1) within the social-historical conditions of their production; and 2) in relation to the conditions portrayed in the films. This dual focus attends to materials available for understanding the ideological and social contexts that influenced the creation of films and film music. It brings into the analysis information about the technological resources available at the time of production and film/music production techniques. The focus simultaneously allows for an examination of representations of Chinese society and music--whether historical or contemporary--within the films themselves. Selections from Chinese films from 1935-2000 will be analyzed as examples. Usner, Eric New York University SEM Music and Race in Early 20th Century Vienna: Viennese Jews and the Creation of Modern Viennese Identity The presentation also will address problems encountered in locating appropriate primary and secondary sources about Chinese film music as well as in teaching about films from a part of the world that few students have studied previously. Music for Viennese Jews was “the entrance art to assimilation” (to invoke Leon Botstein’s cogent description) and early 20th Century Viennese musical life is unimaginable without the contributions of Viennese Jews. In the officially more tolerant atmosphere of Franz Josef’s rule (1867-1918)--though one still suffused with a morphing anti-Semitism--Viennese Jews labored within the city’s key cultural institutions as conservatory professors, conductors, composers, and musicians and were patrons who helped insure the vitality of the city’s musical culture. Ulaby, Laith University of California, Los Angeles Exotic To Whom? Orientalizing the Orient The decay of the Habsburg Empire effected a crisis of identity as a once dominant imperial power was reduced to a geo-politically marginal state by the emergence of nationalism in Central Europe. As Vienna’s role as the nerve center of an empire vanished, musico-cultural hegemony was one last remnant of power that the former city could wield. Thus, conceptions of modern Viennese identity became in part, increasingly bound to the city’s claims to a living musical heritage. SEM One of the recent trends to emerge from the Arabian Gulf and Egyptian pop music factories over the last few years has been the strategic matching of Arab singers with non-Arab singers and/or the appropriation of foreign popular song styles, such as salsa, hip-hop or techno, that are fused with a standardized Arab popular style. The immense popularity of these songs has been supported and propelled by the production of video clips, which are widely viewed on television and purchased in stores all over the Arab world. These clips reveal a variety of insights into Arab perspectives of their own and foreign cultures. Individual Abstracts This paper examines “classical music” as a social practice within the context of early 20 century Vienna. Out of this period the musico-cultural basis of a modern Viennese ethnic identity emerges, one whose complex socio-cultural politics and processes I reveal through the frames made possible by critical race theory, in particular, studies of whiteness. Drawing upon memoirs, archival work and interviews, I render less opaque the role Viennese Jews played in the musical life of the city and their consequent role in fashioning an emergent modern Viennese identity—one that held (a false) promise of inclusion. 129 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 Valladares, Amy New York University SEM Intersections of Gender and Technology in Lucumí Ritual Drumming Veltman, Joshua Ohio State University SEM Dynamic Symmetry and Holistic Asymmetry in Navajo Yeibichai Songs This paper will attempt to understand Afro-Cuban performance theory through local conceptualizations. Lucumí (or Santeria) drumming is a practice in which men have historically created elite groups, specializing in virtuoso ritual technologies. My interest is in how this religion determines ideological categories of gender, and how music thereby becomes the exclusionary technological domain of males. Witherspoon and Peterson (1977) find the aesthetic principles of dynamic symmetry and holistic asymmetry woven throughout Navajo religion, cosmology, language, and material arts. After explaining these principles, this paper demonstrates that they also underlie Navajo music, specifically the Yeibichai song and dance form that occurs as part of the Nightway ceremonial. Analysis of several recorded Yeibkhai songs in terms of melodic and rhythmic features, motivic repetition, large-scale structure, and vocal timbre supports this claim. Descriptions of the Yeibichal dance from the fieldwork of Francis (1997) reveal that the structure and symbolism of the associated physical motions are also congruent with these principles. Finally, some specific aesthetic links among Yeibichai songs, drypaintings, and woven compositions are discussed. Calling the spirits is considered ministry to Afro-Cuban religious community. This is achieved through correct musical performance, and the creation of a sense of multiple temporality. Changes in rhythmic structures (between a stable fixed-time element and improvisations), are physically and emotionally experienced by participants. Ritual drummers conceive of techniques and technology through which humans and spirits talk to each other using musical sound. Cultural anthropologists like Reichard (1950) often shy away from detailed analysis of music, perhaps for lack of musical training or confidence, but this study presents one instance of a fine-grained ethnomusicological analysis that reveals the specific ways in which music is integrally woven into the fabric of a culture. However, this musical practice (not necessarily the theories from which the practice has evolved), and the status and privilege it affords, remains the exclusive domain of men. “Pollution” of consecrated drums focuses on localized religious doctrine about female bodies. Based on my attendance of public rituals in Havana and New Jersey as a participant, interviews with male and female initiates about their conceptual bases of gendered ritual ideas, and discussions with musicians about their music-making, this paper will examine the intersection of issues of gender and technology within a folkloric tradition. I will engage these practices in a dialogue with feminist theories, issues of ethnographic integrity, gender, and race, in which I hope to problematize the gendered constructions of access to “universal truths” (cf. Barthes) in Lucumí rituals. Velazquez , Ileana Perez Williams College Flora Invernal von Seggern, John Professional Musician and Producer Network Effects: the Internet and the Chinese Rave Scene. Since the first raves were held in Beijing in 1995, a sizable electronic dance music scene has grown up in the People’s Republic of China. Clubbing has become a popular activity among a significant segment of the country’s growing urban middle class, and anindigenous culture of Chinese DJs, MCs, producers and promoters has emerged. CMS In this presentation, I will point to some specific ways in which increasing Internet usage among participants in this scene has contributed to its rapid growth nationwide. In a country where public access to traditional mass media is strictly controlled by the government, the Internet has played a crucial role by providing members of the dance community with a viable alternative communications channel as well as a site for constructing new group identities. More generally, as Chinese clubbers are using the Net to organize and promote their activities, as they are exposed to new ideas and lifestyles through the widespread use of email and chat rooms. As new opportunities for independent entrepreneurship and wealth The piece relates to the kind of energy in nature that is not visible to our eyes. This piece evokes the energy hidden in flowers and vegetation during the winter. This "hidden life" is waiting to be awakened. Flora Invernal is about the life that is not perceptible to us which exists and is waiting for the right time to be manifested. Individual Abstracts SEM 130 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 creation emerge, there is increasing evidence of specific ways in which the Internet can act to reduce government control over the Chinese population. Ward-Steinman, David San Diego State University Brancusi's Brass Beds (Quintet No. 2) Bearing in mind Attali’s idea of music as prophecy, what kind of messages about the future of modern China might we see emerge in places such as the main dancefloor at Club Rojamin in Shanghai, where on any given weekend more than a thousand clubbers might typically be found dancing to a mix of electronic beats from all over the world? Brancusi's Brass Beds was commissioned by the Bowling Green Brass Quintet of Bowling Green State University, Ohio, and was composed over a two-month period in 1977. In 1980 it won First Prize in the Kansas Brass Quintet's national composition contest, and was subsequently recorded by the I-Five Brass Quintet for Crystal Records. The title was taken from a furniture store sign in Hollywood, the juxtaposition of Brancusi (evoking the sculptor) with "brass beds" being too tempting to resist. Wallach, Jeremy Bowling Green State University SEM Relieving Stress, Resisting Desire: Gendered Exchange at Jakartan Dangdut Performances CMS The opening Monologues find the players widely separated onstage, playing independently except for the trumpets, which are paired throughout. Whether they are performing in a smoky, darkened nightclub, at a wedding celebration in a cramped urban backyard, or before thousands of revelers at a large outdoor festival, women performers of dangdut music interact in complex ways with their largely male audiences. These interactions primarily revolve around the practice of saweran, the presentation of monetary offerings to singers during the course of their performance. In this paper I argue that saweran has value not only as a conspicuous display of wealth but also as an index of personal restraint: the male patron rewards the singer and the musicians for providing an opportunity to publicly demonstrate the capacity to resist succumbing to dangdut’s sensual temptations. I further contend that saweran at dangdut concerts is an example of gendered role playing that illustrates the tensions in Indonesian working class life between village-based conceptions of complementary female and male power on the one hand, and urban culture’s tendency to commodify (and thus remove agency from) female sexuality on the other. Doubling Up brings the players physically closer as different pairings in octave doublings are explored. The paper concludes with a comparison between dangdut performances by working class Jakartan women and the (often highly sexualized) choreographed dance routines set to Western pop music performed by Jakartan middle class female students--performances which are never accompanied by monetary offerings from the audience. Such a comparison illuminates the central role of class distinction and the perception of economic necessity in local evaluations of performances by women in urban Indonesia. The physical staging of Brancusi's Brass Beds mirrors its compositional structure, and is an integral part of the performance. Musically and physically there is a progression from maximum differentiation to tight clustering in the center; the process is then reversed as the players complete the arch. Individual Abstracts The middle movement, Clustering, is the keystone of the work and the first to be composed. It is a long slow movement in which the harmonies are tightly compressed into tone clusters. Rondo-Vous? is an ABACA rondo in which the C-section is a complex polymetric fugue on all the themes of the quintet. The players must maintain their own tempo and pulse, ignoring each other until the rendez-vous point for the final reprise of the A-theme. The Epilogue is a condensed retrograde variant of the opening Monologues. The players are more widely dispersed this time, and the trumpets are offstage. 131 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 Washburn, Christopher Columbia University SEM "Masquerading Machismo: La India and the Staging of Chusmeria on the Salsa Scene" Foucault. In The Order of Things: An Archaeology of the Human Sciences, Foucault explored the epistemes—cultural complexes regulating the acquisition and organization of knowledge—that have underlain the discourse of the various periods of European history. Although Foucault was concerned with Europe, a Foucauldian epistemological approach offers unique advantages in identifying and distinguishing the contributions of Nahua musical style to the music of early colonial Mexico. The fluidity of identity construction is interrogated through the performances of salsa star La India's racialized and gendered body. This paper focuses on India's ambiguous manipulation of her stage(d) selves, caught in the negotiations between the affect of machismo and the excess of chusmería (Muñoz 1999), offering a critical rereading of certain controversial events in the singer's career. These incidents foreground the insidious imperative incumbent on the Latina female body to perform within a set of overly determined stereotypes. Here, La India is reconsidered for her radical abruption within a male-dominated music industry. A Nahua epistemological system can be detected in a propensity towards what James Lockhart has called cellular or modular organization—a distinctive way of understanding and organizing various modes of discourse. This cellular/modular episteme can be demonstrated in cosmology, cosmogony, political organization, visual arts, and the discursive complex formed by literature, music, and dance. Her presence on the salsa scene transcends preoccupation with simplistic binaries that fail to articulate the multiple modes of gendered subjectivity. The female viewpoint, unusual in the genre of salsa, certainly produces a displacement of the agency inherent in the gaze from man to woman, but at the same time it is brought to function as a kind of parodic overdubbing of an otherwise exclusively monologic mode of enunciation. The effect of this doubled perspective is to institute a boundary-crossing dialogue between subversive cultural theatre and hegemonic discourse, which breaks down the pretense and fixed allotment of precoded social identities. Moreover, India’s ambiguous material embodiment of Latino/a sexual politics on stage offers us a reprieve from the now stale essentialism versus constructivism debates that have long surrounded feminist stories of self-formation. Application of an epistemological approach to cellular/modular organization in Nahua culture allows the identification of some distinctive stylistic features of early colonial Mexican polyphony as evidence of native influence. Weast, Wade State University of New York at Fredonia CMS Successfully Mentoring Faculty in Music: a Road Map from Search to Retirement Mentoring systems for junior faculty members are in place at various levels in our higher educational system. Yet an alarming number of new faculty fail in one or more of the critical areas of scholarship, teaching, and service in their early careers. A successful search does not automatically yield a successful colleague, as criteria for searches are different from criteria for promotion and tenure. New faculty face a daunting array of intellectual, cultural, and professional challenges, and while others have described successful mentoring strategies to address problems related to general academic issues, this paper focuses on addressing problems specific to new music faculty. A constructivist approach to establishing a comprehensive mentoring system is described - from design to implementation and assessment for an entire faculty. This mentoring model is shown to exist as a continuum, where a recurring cycle of assistance and support is established and maintained between all members of the academic community. A successful faculty mentoring system is prepared to address each stage of an academic's career, from the search process to retirement. Implementing this system must also be adopted and supported by both the faculty and administration, and a clear understanding of how Watkins, Timothy Rhodes College SEM The [Mexican] Order of Things: A Foucauldian Approach to Music in Colonial Mexico Although the encounter between European and Nahua (Aztec) cultures had profound musical consequences, composed polyphonic music from early colonial Mexico has often been viewed as simply an extension of Iberian musical culture. Partly because there is so little specific information available regarding Nahua music of the period, scholars have been unwilling to attempt identification of possible Nahua contributions to this music.Given the paucity of information regarding specifics of Nahua musical style in the sixteenth century, other sources of evidence must be sought. One heretofore ignored possibility for the development of such evidence lies in a methodology developed by Michel Individual Abstracts 132 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 to assess it must be established. Addressing the well-being of faculty is a necessary requirement for a School of Music to realize its mission. which is able, even in the fastest - inhuman - (i.e., birdlike) passages to produce sculpted phrases and articulations perhaps not possible by live interpreters. Webster, Peter R. Illinois State University 20 Years of MIDI – Part I Weller, Ellen University of California, San Diego Andean Music and Tourism in San Diego: A Tale of Two Tinkus ATMI This two-part series spotlights MIDI and its 20 year history. In Part 1, we chronicle the history of MIDI to the present day by featuring an historical overview of MIDI and its applications to music teaching. It will be noted that MIDI’s first impact on music teaching was in its role as a “sound producer.” Key MIDI initiatives will be reviewed: General MIDI, Standard MIDI Files, General MIDI 2, and others. Part II will focus on MIDI’s importance as a “controller” of sonic events which can be viewed both physically (through external MIDI controllers) and virtually (through virtual routing of MIDI events within the software environment). We will demonstrate several new ways that MIDI is being used in software today, featuring innovative approaches that blend digital audio with MIDI data. Welbourne, Todd University of Wisconsin-Madison Messiaen's Birds: Modeling from the Source Material San Diego has become increasingly dependent on tourism to maintain its economic vitality. Much of its allure stems from its proximity to Mexico, and promoters heavily market the city’s glorious Spanish/Mexican history, keeping connections to Mexican culture safely in the past. Musicians have eagerly stepped forward to play their part in entertaining the more than ten million annual overnight visitors. While the symbolic signature of Mexican musical culture in San Diego is still the Mariachi ensemble, other Mexican and Latin American genres are becoming increasingly common. A band called “Tinku” performs what it calls “Music of the Andes” to appreciative crowds in Historic Old Town and the San Diego Wild Animal Park. Their eclectic repertoire includes traditional music of Bolivia, Peru, Argentina, Venezuela and Cuba, as well as popular tunes from Greece and the United States, played on instruments including Andean sampoñas and Cuban timbales. Complicating their cultural identity is the fact that Tinku’s musicians are Mexican, and only the leader has ever been to South America. It would be easy to be critical of their commercialized performance, invoking the condemning term “fakelore,” being concerned by the apparent lack of authenticity, and perhaps pointing out that the performers are not “culture bearers.” However, from the paradigm of cultural tourism and its stakeholders, Tinku is highly successful, and delivers several unspoken political messages about identity, exploitation and the nature of travel and authentic experience. CMS The culmination of Olivier Messiaen's fascination with bird song comes in the monumental 7-volume Catalogue d'Oiseaux for piano solo (1956-58), his largest piano work, and one of the largest works in the entire piano repertoire. Each of the pieces is a musical description of a specific location in France, the birds found in that region, even the time of day. Messiaen says, "I tried to copy exactly the song of a bird typical of a region...I am personally very proud of the accuracy of my work" . He invites performers of this music to "take a few walks in the forest, in the springtime, especially early in the morning, to familiarize (oneself) with the models." For those living in France this may be possible, but for the rest of us access to these "models" has been limited. In preparing for a recent performance of volume one I located recordings (as well as photos) of the European birds portrayed and was able to match specific passages with specific calls and allowed this information to influence the interpretation of relevant passages. By comparing the different available recorded performances of the passages with the actual recorded bird songs one can best judge the character of the interpretations and how these relate to notational problems inherent in representational music. In addition I have recorded "idealized" versions of the passages using a Yamaha Disklavier Individual Abstracts SEM Wendland, Kristen Emory University CMS CMS Advocacy Committee Panel: Advocating Music Theory, Musicology, and Ethnomusicology See Harding, Tayloe - CMS Advocacy Committee Panel: Advocating Music Theory, Musicology, and Ethnomusicology 133 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 Wendland, Kristin Emory University SEM The Argentine Tango and the Pedagogy of Music Theory and Culture Country & Western into St. Lucian society. Called ‘Mizik Manmay Lakai’ (‘Home-Children Music’) or ‘Wèstun’, the music is a modern creole taste that has spread island-wide beyond its previously typical rural / elder-generation strongholds. Western has been part of the St. Lucian soundscape since early periods of the music’s commercial dissemination in North America. Particularly popular still, to the point of standardization, is a repertoire from the classic honkytonk era, curated for its suitability for St. Lucia’s unique creolized dance style or for the storytelling in the songs, oftentimes both. Most tango publications to date focus on its historical, sociological, and cultural aspects. In this paper I propose an interdisciplinary and cross-cultural approach to music theory pedagogy that draws on the relationship between gesture and sound to illuminate both the music and the context of its culture, using tango as a case study. Audience participation is critical to this hands-on session. By translating the music’s essence into dance movement, sound, emotions, theoretical knowledge, and cultural experience become one. Participants will be able to literally feel this union for themselves when they follow my dance demonstrations. I situate the growth of Country & Western music in St. Lucia in the context of ongoing struggles of decolonization and post-colonial identity formation, and analyze the phenomenon in terms of new dimensions of creolization. The universality of Western is being utilized to bring elements of rural non-commercial Afro-St. Lucian storytelling dances out of their marginal existence vis-à-vis other more dominating Caribbean popular music forms. St. Lucian Western dancing is getting to be something St. Lucians are known for, just as they are for their creolized versions of European-originated country and court dances of the Kwadril (quadrille) complex. Western dance competitions and festivals abound as highlights of the already widespread Western dance scene. Musical creolization of Western lags the creolizing of the dancing, but has begun, and the first underground hits utilized storytelling (listwa) in French Creole. I analyze what is at stake in the process of this new creolization. First, I will demonstrate how metric and rhythmic patterns in the tango music translate into basic steps and figures of the social dance and signify traits of the Argentine milonguero (as well-seasoned tango dancers are called). These basic steps include the quarter note pulse (marcato, the solid beat to which tango is walked), eighth-note subdivision (corrida, the quicker “running” step), and sixteenth-note syncopations (síncopa, a more playful subdivision of the beat). Next I will demonstrate how the relationship between tango music and dance is evident in the phrase structure. The academic “8-count basic” pattern is ideal for this, because it physically describes the normal 4-bar groups and 8-bar phrases in the music. Wheatley, Susan Indiana University of Pennsylvania The Legacy of Gunild Keetman Although the milongueros I have danced with in Buenos Aires do not adhere to an academic structure, they do translate the essence of phrases into gestures within their stylized improvisation. Mastery of the basic social dance vocabulary is essential to both leader and follower in order to communicate their movements through the music. I will explore how tango is indeed a “conversation without words” and so portrays an important trait of the Argentine social fabric. Gunild Keetman (1904-1990) composed over 50 dance pieces in the early twentieth century. Her career began in 1924 when she read about Carl Orff, Dorothea Günther, and the much-advertised Güntherschule for music and dance located in Munich, Germany. Within two years she and 18-year-old dancer Maja Lex enrolled in the school. Together, they would become composer and choreographer, forming the Tanzgruppe Günther, a unique dance company that would win 1st place in the 3rd-German-Dance-Congress with their award-winning Barbarischen Suite. Wever, Jerry University of Iowa SEM Country and Creole: The Integration and Creolization of US Country & Western into St.Lucian Society From 1928-43, Keetman composed dozens of dance suites, created for dancers who accompanied themselves in a percussion ensemble made up of instruments fashioned in the likeness of African and Indonesian xylophones and including This paper ethnographically examines the integration and creolization of U.S. Individual Abstracts CMS 134 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 Wickstrom, Fred University of Miami CMS One Teacher's Approach to the Music of Miami's Multicultural Musical Heritage recorders. Several performances were staged throughout Europe until 1944 when the school was closed in as a result a bombing raid during WWII. Keetman?s persona as a composer is presently overshadowed by her later work as music educator. After the war, she and Carl Orff were responsible for developing the Orff-Schulwerk, a music education method for children. However, when one finally is acquainted with Gunild Keetman and her dance suites, the legacy of her talents as a composer comes into sharp focus. Her compositions contribute greatly to the repertoire available for percussion ensembles as well as material suitable for choreography as period pieces from the modern dance era of the early 1900s. In fact, Keetman?s dance compositions are so unique that they stand as the only examples of modern dance repertoire set exclusively for percussion ensemble. Wheeler, Jesse University of California, Los Angeles The Authoring of Brazil in the Ascendancy of Samba One focus of the University of Miami's course "Miami's Multicultural Musical Heritage" and this presentation is a hands on approach that involves non-music majors in the making of music. As a percussionist, the presenter's main strength is rhythm. This Clinic, Demonstration, Workshop will involve the audience in the making of music, primarily using percussion skills, that they hopefully can pass on. Specific areas that will be explored include: the pulse of music and it's subdivisions; the interaction of Music and Dance, Call and response, Textures (with emphasis on polyrhythms; Clave, the clue, where it came from, how to find it, how to use it; easy Tumbao; unique scales; and the integrated Latin rhythm section by the numbers. SEM Wilcken, Lois La Troupe Makandal SEM Artists, Scholars, and the Politics of Representation in Haitian Diaspora Performance Samba has played a central role in the writing of the Brazilian nation. Both a cultural product and a producer of culture, samba provided a central symbol around which a nation searching for an identity could coalesce. As a music of African, European and indigenous roots, it was experienced as the ideal musical component of a modernist movement concerned with finding value in Brazil's creole "authenticity." Theories of cultural anthropophagy and extreme miscegenation located the Brazilian essence in its social reproduction of the biological diversity of its tropical environment. Merely a local musical style of Rio de Janeiro in 1917, samba made the transition to national symbol within forty years. This paper examines the role samba played in the unification of the nation, and how it enunciated a vision of brasilidade, or "Brazilianness," founded on a mestiço modernity. With samba's ascendancy this version of brasilidade became "authentic,” while other identities and musics were outdetermined. It is clear that though still a national symbol today, samba is no longer heard as a voice of current identities. This paper proposes that a Spinozian "fear of the multitudes" prompted the state to support and codify samba, and asks: At what cost to the music its hegemony? It argues that a shift in authorship opened a cleavage between music and the people, both precipitating musical innovation and heralding the repression of the future military dictatorship. Ethnomusicologists have reflected increasingly on the cultural representations they produce in print, but to a somewhat lesser degree on those representations they produce by way of live and mediated public performances. Our positions as producers and presenters afford a privileged, albeit less than detached, perspective for the study of backstage performance politics. This essay will address how the stunning and dynamic performances of Caribbean music and dance companies often conceal aesthetic, ideological, and philosophical differences among those who make performances happen including artists, directors, producers, and especially scholars. As a New York City-based Haitian company worked during the Fall-Winter 2002-03 season on a three-part performance series, the conflicts that arose among participants illuminated how differently artists, producers, and scholars may perceive what is at stake in cultural performances for a general audience. The experience generated the questions that drive this study: How and why does artistic conflict brew among people claiming the same cultural roots? Can and should the scholar/producer stay above the fray? Were the areas of contention unique to this case a function of the group’s Afro-Caribbean identity? Because I was the producer of this performance series, I gathered the documentation necessary to tell its behind-the-scenes narrative including post- Individual Abstracts 135 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 Williams, Amy Northwestern University Conlon Nancarrow and his Influences performance interviews with the artists, the volunteers who worked on the series, and several members of the public. I also include a reflexive mini-study of my own investment in the series. CMS This lecture-demonstration focuses on recent transcriptions by the BugalloWilliams Piano Duo of the remarkable Studies for Player Piano by AmericanMexican composer, Conlon Nancarrow (1912-1997). Nancarrow's voluntary isolation from the larger musical world, coinciding with his emigration to Mexico in 1940, encouraged his own rigorous exploration, through a massive personal record collection, of world, classical and jazz music. The presentation centers on five Studies (#4, #6, #9, #14 and #19), selected for the diversity of compositional techniques utilized and the range of influences converging in them: temporal canons (Josquin and Ockeghem), isorhythmic ostinatos (Stravinsky and African music), polyrhythmic superimposition (Cowell, Ives and Indian music), complex contrapuntal textures (Bach and jazz), traditional forms (blues, arch), pitch rows (Bartok and Webern), and so on. The ability to isolate individual voices and speeds (not possible with the recordings of the player piano) reveals the simplicity of many of Nancarrow's ideas as well as the complexity of his realizations. Intriguing performance and interpretational issues are raised by the transcriptions, which are illustrated live with examples from these five exemplary Studies. The lecturedemonstration combines aspects of analysis, performance and musicology to present Nancarrow as an unlikely American pluralist, whose varied influences coalesce into an impressive and highly original body of work. Williams, Alan Brown University SEM That's My Life Up There: Identity, Genre and the "Real" in a CambodianAmerican Hip Hop Group Popular music scholarship has often situated hip hop music within a nexus of political subversion and subaltern identity formation. Seasia, a trio of CambodianAmerican musicians from Lowell, Massachusetts reflects, extends and challenges this position. Tricia Rose posits hip hop as African-American identity expression, only slightly modified by class and geography. As part of an Asian diasporic community, the members of Seasia embrace hip hop less for its representation of the American white/black racial dichotomy, than for the functions of most postrock and roll popular music – youth rebellion, vague challenges to authority, and the conscious construction of individual identity. Sidestepping the ongoing discourse of the "real," Seasia equally embraces pop and gangsta rap, white and black, N'Sync and Eminem as well as Tupac and Biggie Smalls. When George Lipsitz writes about diasporic populations and "new social movements," he positions these cultural actors at a distance from state power. As participants in a Cambodian Masters cultural exchange program, Seasia challenges this argument by redefining "state power," using their association with Amnesty International to enrich their own cultural capital. Seasia has twice traveled to Cambodia where they have collaborated with surviving traditional Khmer musicians, expanding their conception of hip hop as a musical genre, and transforming a locally centered formulation of "Cambodian-American" to one that reflects Arjun Appadurai's conception of a global ethnoscape, incorporating both Cambodia and America. For Seasia, "real" experience and identity is located somewhere in Phnom Penh, the Detroit of 8 Mile, and the streets of Lowell. Williams, David A. University of South Florida Placing a Degree Program On-Line CMS The face of education is changing. Present trends point to a new paradigm in teaching/learning situations, complete with a shift from what has been termed "broadcast learning" to "interactive learning." Entire universities are "on-line". It is possible in some states to attend a full time distance learning "e-high school". There are even on-line classes for elementary aged students. Music education is just beginning to experiment with learning at a distance and this session will document the experiences at two universities as they change complete degree programs to distance learning formats. The Schools of Music at Duquesne University in Pittsburgh, and the University of South Florida in Tampa are both in the process of placing their masters programs in music education in "at a distance" teaching/learning formats. This session will Individual Abstracts 136 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 overview the work that is on-going at these two institutions. The main objective of this presentation is to document the experiences of creating at-a-distance degree programs in music, and to share this information with the profession. other conservatories, the Leipzig Conservatory was to integrate theory and practice offering a balanced curriculum designed to educate well-rounded musicians. Mendelssohn also sought to build a faculty of international artists and teachers that would attract an international student body. Mendelssohn was successful in convincing Friedrich August II to dedicate funds from the estate of a Leipzig lawyer who had died in 1839 for the establishment of the conservatory, and the first students matriculated in 1843. Unfortunately Mendelssohn’s short tenure as the institution’s director ended with his premature death in 1847. The conservatory became a model institution as its graduates went on to found important conservatories, including several in the United States, based on Mendelssohn’s vision and educational ideals. Mendelssohn’s vision remains relevant in the current array of issues that shape reform in higher music education in an international context. This session will explore this work beginning with the inception of the concept, through course development and implementation. Results of completed courses will be examined, including the observed effects on student learning, and reactions from students and faculty. The session will conclude with a look at future plans for the continued development of course work and an overview of what has been learned. Williams, J. Kent University of North Carolina-Greensboro ATMI A Multimedia Introduction to Octatonic Theory and Bartók’s Octatonic Practice Williams, Sean Evergreen College It's Not Easy Being Greem: RE? Learning Irish Music in Japan This session will demonstrate a suite of multimedia documents designed specifically for introducing music majors to the “octatonic” collection of pitch classes and to four pieces based on that collection. During the initial, theoretical, stage the demonstration will proceed from more familiar to less familiar music theoretical concepts. The presenter will show Flash movies to illustrate various ways of conceiving and representing octatonic collections as well as basic properties of such collections. The demonstration will continue with analyses of four pieces from volume IV of Béla Bartók’s Mikrokosmos. These analyses enable the audience to see and hear how various properties of an octatonic collection are exploited in specific pieces. Williams, Kenneth T. The Ohio State University Mendelssohn's Vision for Music Education During the early years of Japan's Meiji Restoration (1868-1912), the political chaos engendered by the abolishment of the shogunate occurred simultaneously with the abrupt opening of the country to foreign influences and trade, including foreign music. In addition to inviting numerous foreign "experts" to serve as teachers and cultural ambassadors, the Japanese also imported sheet music, musical instruments, and entire genres. Among those genres were the strophic song forms of the British Isles and the United States. Using newly-composed Japanese lyrics, Irish melodies became fixtures of Japanese classrooms. In Japan today, some people fondly remember and can easily recall the lyrics and melodies of these songs. CMS As part of the British and American folk revival in the 1960s and 70s, "new traditional" groups began to tour Japan. In the past five years, numerous Irish and Irish-American groups have toured Japan with increasing frequency. Kyoto alone has at least three Irish-themed pubs with weekly sessions, and other cities in the Kansai area regularly feature Irish instrumental music at pubs. The initially decontextualized performance of Irish vocal music in Japanese schools has given way to a recontextualized -- and largely instrumental -- type of performance in newly "Irish" settings. This paper includes an examination of the role of Irish instrumental and vocal music in contemporary Japan, its appeal to young Japanese musicians and listeners, and the ways in which Meiji-era nostalgia feeds into the current upswing in Irish music's popularity. Felix Mendelssohn, known primarily for his contributions as a composer, conductor and pianist, made significant contributions to music education in the middle of the nineteenth century in founding and directing one of Europe’s most important conservatories, the Leipzig Conservatory. The documents relating to Mendelssohn’s efforts to raise funds for the new institution and to establish its faculty and its curriculum reveal a clear and practical vision for music education. In founding the conservatory, Mendelssohn envisioned an institution that was fundamentally different from peer institutions in other European cities. Unlike Individual Abstracts SEM 137 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 Wilson, Kathleen L. Levine School of Music CMS Music by Cuban Composers: Works by Orlando Garcia and Aurelio de la Vega Wong, Deborah University of California, Riverside Pilgrimage and Nostalgia: Taiko at Manzanar You would think that Asian Americans would be the last to draw on the power of nostalgic practices: the anger of the Asian American movement would seem to preclude any wistful look back. Asian American involvement with taiko (Japanese drumming) materialized at exactly the same historical moment that the ‘Asian American’ was assertively constituted as not Other. Yet taiko is a transnational phenomenon with a curious histoiy in Japan as a ‘nostalgia product’ (nosutarujii shôhin) that has a particular affective weight for the ‘new Japanese’ (shin Nihonjin), or the third postwar generation. A lecture-recital by soprano and musicologist, Kathleen L. Wilson, noted for research in 20th Century Latin American Art song, with a well-known Latin American composer/pianist, Max Lifchitz, will focus on the works of two important Cuban composers living in the U.S: Orlando Garcia and Aurelio de la Vega. Similarities between the two composers include having been educated and having taught in the U.S., writing extensively for orchestral, chamber, solo, and electronic media, and using extended techniques in their compositional styles. Included in the program will be a short piano work titled Recuerdos de otra musica para piano and a newly-commissioned work for voice and piano titled, Voces en la distancia, by composer, professor at Florida International University in Miami and Fulbright Scholar, Orlando Garcia. Also featured will be various songs for piano and voice, and piano work Homenagem, by internationally-known Cuban composer Aurelio de la Vega. Both composers have been invited to attend the lecture-recital in Miami. I will address taiko in the annual ‘pilgrimage’ to Manzanar, one of the Japanese American internment camps in Southern California. Whereas taiko is a nostalgia product in Japan, Japanese American taiko is doubly constructed as a practice imbued with a longing for roots, heritage, and authentic culture and, simultaneously, as a kind of politicized Asian American cultural work focused on reparations and redress. These apparently contradictory purposes came head to head in the pensive project of playing taiko at Manzanar. I will focus on the taiko group to which I belong and will consider the ways that our participation in the 2003 pilgrimage drew on the nostalgic, originary power of taiko even as we contributed to the commemorative gestures of memorializing injustice. This presentation is thus about reminiscence, memory, and Wolek, Nathan Northwestern University ATMI Music technology in higher education: different models, common issues and future trends Woodard, Kathryn Hunter College CMS Music in the Ottoman Imperial Harem: The Life of Leyla Hanimefendi With programs in music technology now located throughout the country, it seems timely to assess the different approaches to the subject found at these programs. We will present findings on the differences and similarities between some of the leading programs in this field. These findings are the result of interviews conducted by the authors with professors at each institution. In a broader context, we will explore arts technology as the potential hub for a more unified student creative practice and technology-based pedagogy can foster what some have called a “postdisciplinary” approach to the arts. Our paper will excavate the fundamental principles of post-disciplinary hybridity in the arts and offer an early glimpse at the modelMs successes and at the challenges it will face in the future. Individual Abstracts SEM Leyla Hanimefendi (1852-1936) was an influential figure in Ottoman music circles during the nineteenth century as a composer and collector/transcriber of historic Ottoman music. Raised and educated in the Imperial Harem at Cýraðan Palace as a lady-in-waiting to daughters of Sultan Abdülmecid, she witnessed the growing presence of Western music in the Ottoman court in Constantinople and was trained in both Turkish art music and Western music. Leyla Hanimefendi's life and musical training shed light on a neglected part of nineteenth-century music history. Her own memoirs serve as a primary source and provide a rare glimpse at life in the Imperial Harem and at the cosmopolitan nature of the Ottoman court that looked both East and West for its cultural influences during the nineteenth century. The presenter will discuss Leyla Hanimefendi's importance within the context of Turkish music history and will provide examples of her compositions. 138 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 Wooley, Amy The College of William and Mary SEM "Below the Radar: Gate-Keeping and the Maintenance of Authenticity in the Old-Time Revival Community" This paper examines the impact of sa-i-ku on Korean-Angeleno hiphoppers in the decade since the riots. I question how young Korean Angelenos, who are mostly first- and 1.5- generation Americans, have negotiated the complex racial terrain of post-1992 Los Angeles in their construction of a viable Korean-American identity; how black music, hiphop in particular, inflects their understanding of and identification with African American culture even in light of the conflicts that were characterized reductively by mainstream media as black versus Korean; and how their cultural practices—specifically, the production and consumption of music—have changed as a result of the riots. Using the watershed event of the 1992 uprising as a historical framework, this paper considers how music is implicated in the dynamic process of constructing race and identity in contemporary America. The current old-time music revival has its roots in the 1 970s counterculture movement, and before that, the New Lost City Ramblers, founded in 1959 as a response to the popular folk revival. In this paper, I will look at the old-time music revival as a continual act of cultural rebellion. I will be discussing the ways in which revival communities are uniquely self-aware in their quest for not only the uncommodified (or precommodified) and therefore authentic, but also the uncommodifiable. The current revival began in the 1 990s, populated by a growing number of folk, punk and metal expatriates, who have reinvigorated old-time by bringing a new rawness and distinct distaste for the romanticization, which characterizes the larger commercial revival. Drawing upon my fieldwork in the old-time community, I will look at the different periods of the old-time revival, motivating factors, and the use of recordings as sacred text in the construction and maintenance of authenticity. Finally, I will examine gate keeping mechanisms employed, ranging from the “folk police” to (re)inclusion of “non politicallycorrect” materials to specific performance and recording practices designed to guard against mainstream commodification and resultant corruption, and to maintain outsider status. Audio and video examples will be provided. Younker, Betty Anne The University of Michigan CMS Content versus Pedagogy: Realizing, Applying, and Transferring Content Across Silos in Present and Future Contexts Within the core curriculum, all music students acquire historical and theoretical, and at some universities, pedagogical, and philosophical knowledge. This knowledge is disseminated or shared within classroom settings and taught by individuals who construct syllabi at the individual level. Thus possibilities of dialogue between students and professors across courses are often minimal at best. Yang, Mina San Francisco Conservatory of Music SEM After sa-i-ku: Korean Angelenos and Black Music since the Rodney King Uprising When discussions do occur among faculty, the focus tends to be on content rather than aspects of pedagogy including the realization, application, and transfer of content across disciplines and in new contexts. Is the latter important and if so, why? Additionally how might collaborative efforts in formal and informal settings enhance realization application, and transfer? The 1992 acquittal of the police officers charged with the brutal beating of Rodney King sparked a wave of interethnic violence throughout Los Angeles. In African American communities, anger against the police and the judicial system was transferred and redirected against local, predominantly Korean storeowners, inciting mass looting and arson of neighborhood businesses. John-Steiner (2000) refers to intellectual and artistic collaboration, as “interdependence of thinkers in the co-construction of knowledge” (p. 3). Her premise is that learning and thinking is a social process, hence much influenced by social constructivism, (e.g., Vygotsky, 1978). While studies have focused on the role of collaboration in music teaching and learning (e.g., Hamilton, Murphy, and Thornton, 2002), the number is small. The first day of rioting, April 29, christened in Korean as sa-i-ku, marked a turning point in the lives of Korean immigrants. Abandoned by the police and city officials as their livelihoods went up in smoke and suddenly thrust into the national spotlight, Korean Americans were forced to confront painful realities concerning their place in American society and their relationships with other racial and ethnic groups. Individual Abstracts The purpose of this paper is two-fold: (1) to examine current learning theories as found in the psychology literature with a focus on application and transfer, and (2) 139 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 to offer alternative approaches based on collaborative models for the realization, application, and transfer of content as found in core curricular. complex system of criteria is at work in music of the literati (the repertoire of seven stringed zither qin) determined by the notation, the repertoire, the great masters who established a pai and the region in which a particular pai is widespread. Music of the plucked lute pipa operates within a system similar to that of the qin. Youssefzadeh, Ameneh Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique SEM Music and Power: The Struggle Between Religious Tendencies in Iran Except for the qin, pipa and zheng, a solo repertoire for other Chinese instruments like the two-stringed bowed lute erhu, the mouth organ sheng and dizi was developed in the early to mid 20th century. With the establishment of music conservatories in China in the 1950s, the concept of liupai has become better known among performers. To most instrumentalists, it is viewed as crucial to the development of performance traditions. In this paper, I will examine the cultural and historical contexts of liupai construction in Chinese solo instrumental traditions of the last century. Issues of social maintenance and symbolism will also be addressed. More than two decades after the establishment of the Islamic Republic of Iran the struggle between "reformers" and "conservatives," today's principal religious factions, continues to affect the social, political, economical and cultural life of the country. Music, as well as the institutions in charge of its control and supervision, are naturally involved in this conflict. Thus, even the Ministry of Culture & Islamic Guidance (Vezârat-e farhang va ershâd-e eslâmi) has to negotiate with other political authorities that sometimes can disregard its decisions and/or authorizations. Yu, Youngmin University of California, Los Angeles SEM Cultural Crossroads in Korean Catholicism: Youndo, the Chant for the Dead The status of music itself is still the object of controversy and continues to remain ambiguous. For instance, although the official policy states that women are not allowed to sing in front of a male audience unless as members of a choir, Ayatollah Khâmeneï (the Guide of the Revolution) has declared that: "as long as the voice of women is not arousing (tahrik âmiz), no restrictions are applied. The very fact that the singing is done by a woman does not make it automatically illicit." This statement, which represents a radical change, has yet to be put into practice. Korean church music clearly demonstrates westernization. Masses and worship services in every church are filled with Western hymns, regardless of denomination. However, the Korean Catholic Church still has an old tradition of indigenously Korean music, Youndo, meaning a prayer for the dead. Korean Catholics chant this prayer during the mourning period before a funeral Mass, on the way to the burial, and at the burial. Youndo is an excellent example of the reconciliation of Korean tradition and Catholic belief: it sets the text of Catholic belief to a traditional Korean tune, and embodies the combined Catholic and Korean concepts of death. It gives performative expression to what Geertz terms "a multiplicity of complex conceptual structures." This paper aims to show to what degree music is regulated by the authorities, as well as how its regulation depends on whether those who hold the reins of power in the country happen to be "reformers" or "conservatives." Yu, Siu Wah Chinese University of Hong Kong Constructing Liupai (Schools) of Chinese Solo Instrumental Music SEM Based on recent fieldwork in Korea and Los Angeles, this paper charts a critical juncture in the transmission of Youndo. For the first time, a chant-book has been published that employs Western notation, and there is pressure from the Seoul archdiocese for the traditional Korean chanting style to be changed to a westernized singing style. This process appears to represent westernization of the chant. Older people, the majority in chanting groups, dislike the change, but younger people welcome the new chant. This may provide an opportunity to spread the tradition to a younger generation, so that transmission may continue more efficiently and permanently. On a general level, all Chinese instrumental music can be grouped under two main pai (an abbreviation of liupai, literally “flowing and distributing” meaning “schools”): the northern and the southern pai. When examining the solo instrumental traditions, the criteria for distinguishing one pai from another vary from instrument to instrument. For example, various pai in bridged zither zheng music are classified by regions. In the transverse bamboo flute dizi music, it is more common to group pai under names of renowned performers. A more Individual Abstracts 140 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 Long a cultural crossroads in the reconciliation of Korean tradition with Catholic belief, Youndo itself may now be at a cultural crossroads of a different sort: that between different generations of believers. Zaimont, Judith Lang University of Minnesota Straight Talk on New Notes: Composers and Performers Together Panel Abstracts Alviso, J. Ric California State University, Northridge Issues in the Development of Multicultural Education Materials CMS In this poster session, jointly sponsored by the Applied Ethnomusicology and Education Sections, world music and dance education materials will be displayed which reflect a variety of approaches in the relationship between research and teaching. Issues that will be focused on and discussed include: research methods, authenticity, theoretical frameworks, collaboration, pedagogical techniques and strategies, and community involvement. Each presenter will display materials and discuss how the techniques and methods public and applied ethnomusicology came into play, in addition to techniques and strategies for replication and implementation by multicultural music educators. Seminar, Announcement , Open Q & A, and Recital to provide the underlying rationales for and presentation of two New CMS Initiatives. Both Initiatives have been formulated for the purpose of strengthening and widening idiomatic andpersuasive performance of newer music. The Initiatives are: [1] Formation of The CMS Players. A roster of CMS Performer members - all dedicated proponents of new music - who agree to perform works by CMS composers at the national conference within a given 3-year period. Beeman, William Brown University Music in Contemporary Iran: Official Policies and Strategies of Resistance [2] Creation of the "My Idiom" Composers Registry. Web-based 200-word guides to the essentials of each composer's style, specifically the performance lineage that best suits this music. Information also on genres and scope of each composer's catalogue, with links to other sites containing sound samples and score excerpts available on the web. searchable. Since the establishment of the Islamic Republic of Iran in 1979, its government has placed severe restrictions on the production and consumption of music in Iran. These include restrictions on women’s participation in public musical performance, and restrictions on public performance and use of many styles of recreational and popular musics. Seminar Participants - Composers Paul A. Siskind, The Crane school of music, SUNY-Potsdam David Heuser, The University Of Texas at San Antonio Judith Lang Zaimont, CMS Board Member in Composition, University of Minnesota, Scholar of the college of Liberal Arts 2002-2005 In recent years these official policies have been strongly opposed and actively resisted by many Iranians, especially the youth. In response to an ever growing public demand for change, president Khatami and his reformist government have engaged in an internal power struggle to relax some of the restrictive official policies. Seminar Participants - Performers Steven Stusek, The University of North Carolina at Greensboro Timothy Hoekman, The Florida State University Carla Connors, Tallahassee, Florida John Salmon, CMS Board Member in Performance, University of North Carolina, Greensboro Panel Abstracts This panel will explore the consequences of the music policies of Islamic Republic of Iran on the contemporary music culture of Iran under the current reformist political climate. Panelists will explore the government’s musical policies and the Iranian public’s strategies of resistance. Individual papers will discuss aspects of women’s musical participation in the public arena, the current 141 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 status and meanings of popular music in contemporary Iran, and the US Government’s use of young Iranian’s interest in popular music in its media campaign in Iran. The theatricality and enchantment of Holy Week among Catholics in Campanha, the musico-spiritual warfare of a “Heavenly Army” church in Port-au-Prince, and the multivalent deployment of Rastafari symbols at Protestant dancehall concerts in Port of Spain all constitute poignant reminders of the fluid phenomenological and discursive terrains that prevail at religio-cultural crossroads throughout Latin America and the Caribbean. The presenters in Part I of this panel concern themselves with these culturally charged spaces by considering the ways that music contributes to communal religious experience and to the forging of new cultural intersections in Brazil, Haiti, and Trinidad and Tobago. Blum, Stephen City University of New York Stylistic Portraits in Improvisation, Spontaneous Composition, and Variation This panel aims to discuss performance styles that involve improvisation or spontaneous composition, approached by analyzing the practices of one or two performers. We hope to draw attention to a number of different ways to think about the unique characteristics of individual musician’s styles in these musics as well as broader considerations of studying flexible music in general. What sorts of choices are made by musicians during performance (iterations of musical materials, forms of interaction with audience and other performers, impact of different venues), as well as outside of performance contexts (building repertoires, pedagogical resources, cultural motivations)? Evan Rapport explores variation techniques in the singing styles of Izro Malakov, a prominent Bukharian Jewish singer of Queens, New York. Carl Clements compares the playing styles of two prominent bansuri musicians, Hariprasad Chaurasia and Nityanand Haldipur, with reference to ideas of lineage and gharana. Benjamin Lapidus discusses the innovative vocal improvisations of the Puerto Rican salsa singer Carlos “Cano” Estremera within the context of competitions. All of these papers pay particular attention to parameters and boundaries of flexibility, genre-specific aesthetics and categories, and defining elements of highly varied repertoires. However, given the many differences between these styles, we also intend this panel to be a forum for highlighting different analytical frameworks in studying flexible musics. The presenters in Part II of this panel shift the focus from communities of faith to believing bodies, investigating the inscription of sub-Saharan religious systems on racialized bodies in Tunisia, the rhythm of the crossroads as a means of approaching trance at Brekete shrines in West Africa, and the intersections between ethnomusicology and neuroscience glimpsed in the experiences of both deep listeners and trancers. Each of these papers focuses on the means through which religious experience is inscribed upon individual bodies—means as varied as transSaharan religious practice, the relationship between divine horsemen and their devotees, and physiology. Part II of this panel, thus, opens onto the global, yet deeply personal, crossroads between music, belief, and culture. Bosse, Joanna Bowdoin College Embodied Self/Embodied Other: Ethnicity, Class, and Dance in the Americas In keeping with the conference theme, Cultural Crossroads, this panel proposes four papers all of which address the role of dance in constructing ideas of race, class, the self, and other in cross-cultural contexts. All dance genres represented on the panel—Salsa, Quadrille, and Lindy hop—have been the object of appropriation, claimed by competing social groups as markers of social identity, and as such have become sites for the contestation of meaning, authenticity, and the politics of representation and ownership. Studying specific historical moments, each of the authors address the various ways that dance, as a special type of embodied expression of race, class, and ethnicity, becomes the medium by which conceptions of the self and perceptions of others are constructed, disputed, and ultimately transformed. This panel engages different semiotic processes of performance in seeking to understand how dance movements and contexts provide spaces to generate cultural affinities, challenge stereotypes, and in some cases reproduce hegemonic structures. Furthermore, the panel addresses the mutually Bohlman, Philip University of Chicago Music in Religions Experience Part I: Cultural Cross Roads - Communitites of Faith The deeply religious metaphor of the crossroads—itself a creative response to cultural rupture and violent dislocation—provides the unifying trope for this panel proposal. It also highlights an absence in the suggested thematic content for the conference, an absence that this panel’s proposed theme, “Music in Religious Experience,” seeks to redress. Panel Abstracts 142 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 transformative relationship of music and dance, musician and dancer, suggesting that the social effects of dance music must be understood in connection to the bodily movement to which it is inextricably bound. With a rich variety of historical and ethnographic case studies from the Americas, the contributions to this panel provide a diversity of analytic perspectives, and a multiplicity of subject positions that challenge conventional assumptions about the relationship of scholars to their research. Three of the papers look at notions of social knowledge. Cornelius looks at the different ways in which instrumentalists and vocalists use language to tell a variety of stories in which the content may be historical or contemporary, serious or comic. lddrisu looks at the role of a special type of verbal specialist (the baanga) and demonstrates how this singer’s extensive recitations on familial lineage strengthen social fabric. Chernoff investigates the decisions the Dagbamba make in prioriti/ing their social knowledge. Cooley, Tim University of California, Santa Barbara Powerful Nostalgia: Recontextualizing the Past Both lddrisu (who was born into the Dagbamba drummer’s clan) and Chernoff address the issue of musical knowledge and training as well as notions regarding the priorities that practitioners place on the transmission of information across generations. One quality of nostalgia is that the object of desire or longing can never be obtained. Perhaps then the transient temporal quality of musicking makes it the ideal locus for the expression of nostalgic urges and its often imaginative recontextualization of the past. In this panel we offer for discussion very different examples of the ways nostalgia intersects with music to provoke new meanings for the past. First we consider the evocation of nostalgia in ethnographic fieldwork. Then with interpretations of nostalgia in two case studies, we see how history is actively argued in present-day music performance in sometimes startling ways. Finally a critique of the manipulation of nostalgia by an iconic American musical instrument manufacturer questions how cultural moments from the past are bought and sold. Our collective objective is to identify nostalgia as a driving force in cultural production and to seek new ways to account for the contradictions and caprice of musical renderings of the past-in-the-present. Both Locke and Chernoff investigate the nature of musical meaning. Locke accomplishes this through the analysis of musical sound Chernoff examines the gulf between Western and Dagbaniba thought. Dujunco, Mercedes New York University Contested Terrains of Representation and Place in Local Popular Musics Discussions about power involving the musics of developing societies and small communities outside the American mainstream frequently place them in opposition to the dominant, globalizing institutions of the West, particularly those of the U.S. Cultural imperialism is a constant theme running through numerous accounts of the Western appropriation and transformation of local or indigenous popular musics into highly profitable international commodities, with only an occasional mention of the active agency and strong resistance posed by the music practitioners. Cornelius, Steven Bowling Green State University Music and Meaning in Dagbon This panel offers four papers on separate but inter—related topics regarding the musical culture of the Dagbamba (Dagomba) people of northern Ghana. Each paper addresses notions of musical meaning and content. Yet, each approaches these issues from a different perspective. In comparison, few studies look at the hegemonic practices of groups and low-level political entities within local communities themselves and the strategies adopted by the subdominants to counter, subvert or sidestep them. The four papers featured in this panel present case studies of local popular musics from Colombia, China, Jamaica, and the U.S. and depict their implication in local power plays as parties jostle for control over knowledge, identity, legitimacy and, directly or indirectly, market access. Each one illustrates a scene of tension and contestation over the production of meaning and the representation of place, the ultimate outcome of which can be unpredictable. Individually, they show how the local mirrors the Locke and lddrisu both focus on the relation between music and dance. But, where Locke investigates the manner in which rhythmic groove affects movement, lddrisu studies the process by which singers use historical recitation as a means to inspire dancers to perform at their best. Panel Abstracts 143 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 global and, taken together, lend credence to Jocelyn Guilbault’s remark (1993:34) about global culture as a “contested terrain where there are only locals engaged in battle over transnational markets.” an ongoing project in the analysis of vocal timbre: that whatever language is used to characterize a music genre or culture, whatever level of discourse is employed to represent a micro or macro feature of performance, ultimately the descriptive object can be found in the sound itself. In regard to music, Roland Barthes asks “Are we reduced to the dilemma of either the predicable or the ineffable?” The papers in this panel will attempt to demonstrate that what has been “condemned to the adjective” or consigned to the ineffable can in fact be found in the details of spectral analysis. The project from which these case studies are drawn is designed to link broader cultural phenomena with specific acoustic features. Four papers examine issues of meaning, transnationalism, and the popular music industry in terms of the results of digital analysis of representative music. The purpose of the panel is to demonstrate a method of analysis that attaches visible features of sound to the disciplinary constructs we devise to understand musical sound that may be only vaguely and intuitively perceived. Emoff, Ron Ohio State University A Memory for Semblance On this panel we shall evoke unique methods of and reasons for performing nostalgia. Varied poetics of performative expression reveal the degree to which constructions of self in the present draw heavily upon sounds, moments, movements, and spaces from other often distant times and places. In the Philippines, appropriation of the name for a musical genre from a colonialera literary personality contributes vitally to the stabilization of political identities and the persistence of “endo-hegemony.” Such appropriation, however, veils its own aspects of culture brokerage and self-interest. Central African Republic BaAka performance has sometimes come to embody a market nostalgia for a utopian or even “savage” past. BaAka have entered, and continue to enter into our imaginaries as living iconicity of a more pure or “primitive” past with which we have lost touch. BaAka themselves have come to occupy a place for us, and perhaps among themselves as well, in between modernity and antiquity. On MarieGalante, a small island in the French Antilles which is a département of France, people nostalgically recall elements of the slavery era to perform their own particular desires and repulsions associated with slavery, and to make sense of a current situation often yet mired by the absence of nationhood. Taiko practice, a transnational performance phenomenon coined a “nostalgia project” in Japanese, combines reminiscence, memory and activist sentiment. Taiko practice takes on particularly special significance among Asian Americans in an annual performance at one of the Japanese American internment camp sites in Southern California. Fenn, John Texas A&M Teaching Applied Ethnomusicology The past decade has seen a surge of interest in applied ethnomusicology, especially among graduate students clamoring for jobs beyond the research-and-publish focus of academia. The 1992 special issue of Ethnomusicology entitled Music in the Public Interest” initiated discussions about how ethnomusicological training can impact the world, and these have grown steadily louder. Major rerelease projects of historic field recordings by Alan Lomax and others--as well as new projects by entities such as Smithsonian/Folkways-- have brought ethnomusicologists into the commercial fold as series editors, project directors, and culture brokers. And recent annual SEM meetings have witnessed an expanding Applied Ethnomusicology Section, with poster sessions, paper panels, and packed section meetings signaling growing interest in the notion of applying ethnomusicology. Such a groundswell of interest highlights increased need for training applied ethnomusicologists. Graduate students are demanding more courses at institutions around the United States, and their teachers are responding with new and exciting curricula. Undergraduate students are able to take advantage of applied training as well in some departments, and individuals outside academia continue to train colleagues and interns “on the job’ at public institutions around the country. This forum presents an opportunity for interested parties to get together and discuss strategies, issues, and frameworks pertaining to training of applied Fales, Cornelia University of California, Santa Barbara Grain of the Voice: Vocal Timbre and Cultural Aesthetics Vocal music often occupies a privileged place in music cultures, perhaps because it provides a medium not only for textual communication, but also for the nonlexical, but equally powerful expression underlying most vocal interchange. This panel consists of a series of case studies that illustrate the central premise of Panel Abstracts 144 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 ethnomusicologists. The participants will present short overviews of courses offered, approaches used, or issues encountered in teaching applied ethnomusicology. We will then move into a moderated discussion between participants, respondant, and audience. committees, in teaching and learning, and in scholarship and outreach. This conversation is aimed at learning powerful strategies for faculty search and tenure committees, graduate admissions, the retention and inclusion of minority faculty and students (i.e., ethnic minorities, women, sexual orientation, indigenous performers and scholars, etc.), and concerning the practice and discourse of community in our production of music, knowledge, and power. Fikenstscher, Kai Ramapo College Issues in Electronic Dance Music The intention of the conversation is to grasp what is at stake if things proceed in a predictable manner; how can each of us make a difference in our institution or community; and what breakthroughs are possible relative to inclusion and mentoring. Join us for this conversation with experts from other fields as well as our own. Participants in the audience will have the opportunity to share their successes. Over the past quarter of a century, electronics have helped redefine the production and consumption of dance music on a global scale. Known more often by aplethora of stylistic terms such as house, techno, or rave music, and less often by the overarching label electronica, contemporary dance music and its sites ofproduction and consumption have only recently attracted the attention of ethnomusicologists. This panel is comprised of four presentations whose authors focus onvarious aspects that help define many of the often interrelated strands of contemporary dance music, such as race, class, gender and the construction andmaintenance of (sub)-cultural identities and affinities. These examinations are part of a larger and growing discourse within ethnomusicology on the relationshipsbetween musical style, social and cultural identities, and technologies of dance and music (including electronics, the internet, and the human body). Hayes, Eileen University of North Texas Representing Blackness: From Mahalia to Motown Throughout the history of African American music, constructions of race and gender have served to define and delimit performance spaces, modes of production, and even marketing strategies. The meanings embodied in such genres as gospel music and rhythm and blues have shifted according to historical period, performance context and function. On the one hand, women artists like Mahalia Jackson, Willie Mae Ford Smith and Lucie Campbell fought against stereotypical representations of their chosen music, its associated aesthetic values, and their status as professionals. On the other hand, in the studios of Motown and Stax records, performers, producers and record company executives forged musical partnerships and hammered out distinctive sounds that simultaneously reinforced and confronted prevailing notions of black popular music. As a result, musical practices and aesthetic values long associated with African Americans moved into the mainstream popular music lexicon. This panel proposes to examine both intercultural and intracultural dynamics of race and gender in the construction and representation of blackness in African American gospel and popular musics. Gaunt, Kyra New York University Affirmative Actions: Strategies for Inclusiveness, Mentoring, Recruitment and Retention The SEM Crossroads Project (The Committee On Diversity, Difference And Under-Representation) was broadly conceived to identify strategies for the inclusion of under-represented groups and group interests in the activities and operation of the Society and our public and academic spheres of activity and engagement. This forum launches a series of ongoing conversations at meetings sponsored by The Crossroads Project. By the fall of 2003, the U.S. Supreme Court will be hand down a decision that may end the use of Affirmative Action in admissions (Gratz vs. Bollinger). Whether these policies are sustained or struck down, the foreseeable future in ethnomusicology is somewhat predictable: inadequate searches; departing faculty and students of color; disdained sexual orientations; cynicism and resignation in Panel Abstracts 145 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 Hood, Kathleen Independent Scholar Globalization & Cultural Exchange: Arab Music in the Modern Age progenitors of national performing traditions. This panel explores the space between marketing and identity, this latter as the dialectic of display and displacement. Finally, we consider the ethics of studying such long-exploited Others. The incorporation of the Arab world into the world economic system in the modern age has had a profound influence on Arab music of all types, whether secular or sacred. Although globalization with regard to music has been explored in such works as Timothy Taylor’s Global Pop (1997), this panel examines how globalization operates specifically in the context of Arab music, while offering new perspectives on the concept of globalization. Asmar’s paper explores how broadcast technologies caused fundamental changes in the musical form and content of Arab music and led to the phenomenon of the star singer. Habib’s paper looks at one such star singer, Fairuz, and investigates how her music mediates the cultural identity of Arab-Americans. His paper also illustrates the two-way nature of cultural flows in the modern age. While helping to define “home” for these immigrants, Fairuz’s music is also transformed by virtue of her production of albums directed at the Arab-American community. Frishkopf, in his paper on Egyptian Sufi singer Shaykh Yasin al-Tuhami, deconstructs the concept of “globalization.” He argues against the idea of globalization as a homogenizing force, and examines the heterogeneous reality of globalizations, or as he calls them, “global flows.” Furthermore, he breaks down these global flows into two types—economic/technological flows and cultural flows—that have contrastive effects on the music. Finally, Hood’s paper on Radio Sawa considers cultural exchange between the US and the Arab world. In this case, music is not a benign force, but a tool of cultural imperialism. Howard, Keith University of London Riding the 'Korean-Wave': Pop Music for a New Korea, Pop Music for a New Asia At the start of the new millennium, Korean popular culture suddenly became fashionable throughout East Asia and Southeast Asia. This panel tracks the ‘Korean-wave’ or ‘K-wave’ pop music phenomenon, exploring its local development during the 1990s, its resistance to domination by multinational record companies, and the ways in which it has been able to tap into the multidimensional components of Asia’s globalization. Why Korea? We first explore local dimensions. Starting in 1992, Seo Taiji and Boys led a revolution against the corporate ‘star system’ that favoured sentimental ballads (characterised as “unremarkable” in the first edition of The Rough Guide), promoting dance-oriented genres including hip-hop and rap. They politicised music at a time of declining censorship and rapid democratization, creating a cultural ideology for the ‘new generation’. As satellite and cable television broke the state’s media monopoly, pop musicians began to tap into new technology, catering, as will be discussed through an analysis of local and trans-national discourses of authenticity, for the new demands of music television. None of this need be unique to Korea, and the expanding ‘Korean-wave’ may simply suggest that Korea has leapt ahead of its neighbours in the development of popular music. To explore this more broadly, we take two case studies, first discussing Internet fansites and chat rooms in mainland China—virtual meeting places for fans to share their passions anonymously—and then looking at the complex issues involved in the importation and enjoyment of Korean popular culture in Taiwan. Hooker, Lynn Indiana University Gypsy, Sinti, Roma: Performing Other, Performing Self Ideas of “Gypsy passion” have entranced audiences around the world for centuries through music, dance, and now film. “Gypsiness” potently combines virtuosity, passion, and sensuality, generating a stereotypical yet elusive Otherness. Grasping the true sources of this Otherness can prove an endless task. In this panel, we investigate the rich contradictions of Gypsiness in three case studies: Gypsy Jazz, the Hungarian folk revival, and Spanish flamenco. In France and Germany, Gypsy (or Sinti) Jazz is a quintessential hybrid. Both Hungary and Spain appropriated the Gypsy as national emblems, ironically generating an identity crisis. The trope of “Gypsiness” allows certain artists to trade both on politically incorrect images of the Other and on their role as “authentic” Panel Abstracts 146 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 Hwang, Okon Eastern Connecticut State University Korean Ppongjjak: Authenticity and the Politics of Representation This panel proposes to examine jazz in various (Other) geographic and cultural contexts outside of the United States - namely the UK, France and Brazil - in seeking to identify some ways in which jazz music is authenticated in places where different regional and historical specificities constantly compete for authentic status, or more simply, the ways in which local musicians connect themselves, and see themselves connected, to the grander narrative ofjazz history. Since its inception in the late 1920s, ppongjjak (or tueroteu [trot]) has enjoyed a loyal following in South Korea. A popular song genre named curiously after the onomatopoetic representation of its accompaniment (duple meter modeled on the fox "trot"), ppongjjak's success has largely been credited to its aesthetical world view, a perspective that has resonated with the Korean pathos of han (sadness or suffering). Specifically, presenters will address the role of innovation and the appropriation of local musics as competing methods of authenticating jazz, anti-American sentiments and fortification of alternative nationalist jazz musics in Latin America and Europe, and the (re)writing ofjazz history as voices from the periphery continue to force jazz musicians, critics and scholars to broaden the idea of the authentic in jazz. Ppongjjak has, nevertheless, been part of a complex history due to the genre's close connection to Japanese enka and, by default, resentment related to the colonial period. Early ppongjjak songs during the Japanese occupation were favored by educated Koreans and considered trendy and stylish. By the 1960s, however, these songs were regarded by some as boorish. Moreover, some songs were deemed to exhibit more than a tolerable amount of Japanese influence, and were consequently banned by the Korean government. In the 1980s, a “Ppongjjak Debate" emerged among Korean intellectuals that aimed to legitimate the genre's enduring popularity by claiming its origin to be Korean. Indeed, some even labeled ppongjjak as "traditional popular song. Johnson, Jill Ann University of Washington Applied Ethnomusicology: Ethnomusicologists at Work, Part III In recent years the field of ethnomusicology has expanded beyond the realm of traditional academic teaching jobs. The need for ethnomusicological expertise has been increasingly acknowledged by libraries, museums, archives, historical associations, arts councils, the publishing industry, concert-producing organizations, funding agencies, as well as extensive uses on the World Wide Web. In addition, the roles and projects in many different academic departments have changed to include the need for our expertise. This panel examines ppongjjak's multifarious existence in Korea in relation to the Japanese legacy. Themes addressed include: 1) whether Koreans have had an active or passive approach to colonialism; 2) whether the activities of musicians and composers have been in sync with governmental or cultural policies; 3) how a tension between "us/Korean/traditional" and "them/other/Japanese/foreign" has manifested itself; and 4) how the meaning of ppongjjak continues to evolve. This forum, sponsored by the Applied Ethnomusicology Section, will focus on the topic of career possibilities for ethnomusicologists by looking at individuals who are active in applying technology to applied ethnomusicological work. At the 2001 SEM conference the format for this forum panel was introduced and reinforced at the 2002 SEM. It continues on in this proposal. Each year we hope to continue to cover an ever-broadening range of applied work that ethnomusicologists find themselves doing. The forum is structured with short, 15-minute presentations from four ethnomusicologists who work in the applied arena. The presentations will be followed by moderated discussion about these and other career possibilities and the challenges, in and outside of the field, when pursuing this kind of work. James, Donald University of Chicago International Jazz: Cultural Disjunctures and the Search for Authenticity Debates regarding the authentic and the authoritative in jazz music - what is inside and what is outside the jazz canon - have continued to be at the center of the struggle to write both effective jazz criticism and jazz scholarship in the U.S. The situation becomes that much more complicated in investigating jazz cultures and jazz scenes in places outside of the U.S. As a result of its success on an international front jazz music has become central to nationalist, modernist, postmodernist, and globalization discourses in various locales around the globe. Panel Abstracts 147 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 Kreiter, Maria Pondish Pennsylvania State University, Conshohoken Articulating a Clear Moral Vision and Socially Responsible Pedagogy for Multicultural Music Education Japanese performing arts, such as sôkyoku-jiuta, boast an equally imposing number of different ryûha, each of which is thought to be a distinct artistic form. The performance of sanjo on the Korean kayagum likewise has numerous schools each claiming authenticity in earlier established forms. Changing community and classroom dynamics, increasing pressures from political agendas, and emerging nations and ethnicities altering the cultural map are but a few of the forces placing pressures on music education in the ongoing debate over the substance of multicultural music education curriculum and pedagogy. Recent research and scholarly presentations identify disturbing reactions among children to events surrounding 9/11 (Campbell) and calls for the creation of a socially responsible pedagogy which will generate cultural understanding through sensitive, global, and dynamic music-making (De Quadros). Questions continuing to rise from these discussions include: To what extent do political agendas impact multicultural music education curriculum? Do these political influences dictate which cultures we teach and how these cultures are presented? Are we truly inclusive in multicultural curriculum and pedagogy or are do we ignore major cultural populations within our own country? Who defines the music(s) of a cultural and which music(s) most reliably represent the culture in the classroom? What is the most appropriate role, if any, of such professional organizations as The Society for Ethnomusicology in developing a socially responsible pedagogy for multicultural music education? In spite of a shared understanding in the Far East of the underlying meaning of liúpài, this word has taken on different connotations in each of the three countries. This panel proposes an exploration of the respective manifestations of this concept and how it has shaped and influenced the concept of tradition within each country. In examining how the meaning of liúpài has unfolded within each culture, we also seek to understand and suggest future venues of research, in this instance, how the perception of music and a musical tradition evolves in different cultures, yet still subscribes to a shared concept. Lysloff, Rene T.A. University of California, Riverside Listening to Theories of Music This interdisciplinary panel explores some of the limits and possibilities of music theory as a field of study. Drawing from different musical interests and backgrounds, our three papers examine several broad intellectual, ideological, and pedagogical problems issues inherent to musical analysis constrained by conventional discursive practices. We offer strategies for opening up music theory to reverse some of its disciplinary and disciplining gestures so that analysis might account for both historical and cultural contexts. We want to propose other music theories—ones that are reflexive, that break free of canonical constraints, and that show us not only how to see music but also how to hear it. This panel approaches these issues through an overview of current perspectives to consider in formulating pedagogical directions, an examination of an ethnomusicologist’ s struggles to negotiate politics in relation to the study of a particular culture, and a call for transforming music curricula to foster caring relationships with our students of all cultures and backgrounds through increased community involvement. Lim, Susie University of California, Berkeley Liupai: The Ebb and Flow of Traditions in China, Japan, and Korea Monson, Ingrid Harvard University Theorizing Oppression, Hegemony and Cultural Identity in Women's Performance [liúpài, ryûha, ryup'a]: for centuries, these two Chinese characters have occupied a significant place in the construction and perception of schools of thought in China, Japan, and Korea. Liú; to flow, to wander, a branch, a division, and p'ài, a faction, a tributary; when combined, these two words create a compound that customarily signifies a school of thought or artistic practice. Solo Chinese musical forms, most notably the qin and the zheng, have ancient and well-established traditions, each referred to as a specific liúpài, or school of performance. The Panel Abstracts This panel explores relationships between music and oppression, which are central to a growing literature on women's performance in ethnomusicology. In situations characterized by social inequities, power relations are often articulated, enforced, resisted and subverted through performance. 148 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 Drawing from examples across the globe (United States, Canada, Malawi and Korea), the panel explores performances as potential sites for liberation as well as oppression. Each paper focuses on a specific context in which performances get used strategically in situations of gender oppression, violence, and/or political or cultural hegemony. Because musical performances are symbolically laden, they provide marginalized women opportunity to voice their opinions or act (through song, costume/dress, movement and/or symbolic gesture) in ways that may challenge established social or legal systems. At the same time, people in dominant positions of power sometimes recognize the expressive and transformative possibilities for musical performance, and thus exploit female artists for strategic ends. Whether motivation for performance is oppressive, libratory or a combination of both, women can also perform in conformance with hegemonies while simultaneously manipulating performance for their own ends, such as expressing themselves, building identities, dealing with trauma and/or subverting power structures. Such contradictory acts of agency open up directions for theorizing music performance that encompass not just binary categories, but multifarious, complex and else wise politically fertile subject positions. The presenters in Part II of this panel shift the focus from communities of faith to believing bodies, investigating the inscription of sub—Saharan religious systems on racialized bodies in Tunisia, the rhythm of the crossroads as a means of approaching trance at Brekete shrines in West Africa, and the intersections between ethnomusicologv and neuroscience glimpsed in the experiences of both deep listeners and trancers. Each of these papers focuses on the means through which religious experience is inscribed upon individual bodies-means as varied as trans—Saharan religious practice, the relationship between divine horsemen and their devotees, and physiology. Part II of this panel, thus. onto the global, yet deeply personal, crossroads between music, belief, and culture. Pardue, Derek University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign X Conversations about One Thing: The Role of Analysis in Popular Music Studies “Music analysis” is a term marked by multiple meanings and long histories. It is both deeply entrenched and polemically divisive within the discipline of musicology. The position and practice of popular music studies raises questions that speak to foundational debates within musicology as a whole. Muller, Carol University of Pennsylvania Music in Religious Experience Part II: Theoretical Cross Roads -- Believing Bodies Taken as a generalization, music analysis has gradually disappeared from a methodological toolkit increasingly geared towards social interpretation and political representation. In its place, popular music scholars have made use of a number of theories from literary criticism and cultural studies in their efforts to approximate musical meaning and human musicality. And for good reasons. The strong association between “music analysis” and “the Western art tradition” can cause many scholars to cringe from the colonial overtones all too resonant in operating relations of power throughout the history of musicology. In addition, many popular music scholars have argued simply that “conventional” music theory is structurally ineffective in explaining musical meaning. The deeply religious metaphor of the crossroads — itself a creative response to cultural rupture and violent dislocation— provides the unifying trope for this panel proposal. It also highlights an absence in the suggested thematic content for the conference, an absence that this panel’s proposed theme, ‘Music in Religious Experience,” seeks to redress. The theatricality and enchantment of Holy Week among Catholics in Campanha. the musico—spiritual warfare of a ‘‘Heavenly Army’’ church in Port—au—Prince, and the multivalent deployment of Raslatari symbols at Protestant dancehall concerts in Port of Spain all constitute poignant reminders of the fluid phenomenological and discursive terrains that prevail at religio—cultural crossroads throughout Latin America and the Caribbean. The presenters in Part I of this panel concern themselves with these culturally charged spaces by considering the ways that music contributes to communal religious experience and to the forging of new cultural intersections in Brazi, Haiti, and Trinidad and Tobago. Panel Abstracts For researchers interested in music that is transmitted orally and aurally, does the business of social representation of music and music-making preclude such analytical endeavors? More particular to popular music studies, is there anything at the level of sound that marks commercial success or failure, genre crossover or “roots” performance, “resistance” or “sell-out”? These questions are by no means new and the above statements do not represent all popular music scholarship. However, the role of music analysis does require continual reflection to ensure that 149 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 Pruett, David Florida State University Pathways from the Ph.D.: On the Job Market in Academia musical sound, a modality of human achievement similar to language, body movement, and image, is appreciated for its specific qualities and not completely subsumed into discussions of general sociality. The SEM Student Concerns Committee organized its second roundtable at the 2002 SEM Annual Meeting, a student development panel entitled “Pathways to the Ph.D.: The Graduate School Experience.” The positive response to the panel demonstrated the imperative for creating a dialogue among students and faculty to address the more practical concerns of a career in academia. The Student Concerns Committee has therefore organized another roundtable to meet this demand, this year, however, comprised of faculty. This roundtable comprises four faculty, each at a different stage in his/her career, who will discuss their experiences and offer advice in the following areas: constructing a résumé, applying for jobs, the formal interview, surviving the first year, and acquiring tenure. The roundtable is designed to provide graduate students with the skills necessary to create a positive experience while on the job market, one that will lead to an equally successful professional career in ethnomusicology. Pettan, Svanibor University of Ljubljana National Issues in Ethnomusicology. The Slovenian Case Folk music was given an important role in the nation-building processes in several parts of the world. Consequently, many ethnomusicologists continue to be seen by the larger population as specialists whose principal role is to care for the survival of the given national heritage. This panel focuses on historical connections between the actual musical practices and the ethnomusicological approaches in Slovenia, a tiny central European country at the crossroads of Germanic, Romanic, Slavic and Ugric influences. How did political changes and the inclusion of Slovenia into various multinational states in historical perspective (Austria-Hungary, Yugoslavia) influence the activities of Slovenian ethnomusicologists? What is the impact of national ideology alike in present-day Slovenia, on the eve of joining the European Union, and how is it reflected in contemporary research and education? Ritter, Jonathan University of California, Los Angeles Authenticity, Authority and Authorship in Samba, Son and Desi Music The participants in the panel represent views from both inside and outside and belong to the realms of ethnomusicology and music education. Mari Arko Klemenc considers the formation of a national canon in arranging folk songs for choirs from the 19th century on. Svanibor Pettan traces historical changes in Slovene ethnomusicology with special regard to the familiarity of its carriers with the developments abroad. Albinca Pesek analyzes the presence of national issues in music education and evaluates the reception of multicultural topics in a country that is considered predominantly monoethnic. Authenticity, authority, and authorship have long been contested symbolic capital in the formation of national and transnational identities. Brazilian samba, South Asian-American "Desi" music, and Cuban son have each, in their own way, negotiated and traversed issues of identity and authenticity. The three papers presented in this panel strive to sharpen our understanding of how music-making participates in a politics of identity construction and representation. We recognize the sites and rites of performance as loci where the will-to-meaning of individuals and collectives is articulated, contested and affirmed. The hybridity inherent to Desi-Americans, Cubans and Brazilians finds truth of representation in music. Samba was for decades felt by many to be the authentic voice of “brasilidade,” but seems to be losing currency; non-Cuban film soundtracks depicting “cubanidad” have operated as sites of articulation where identity is negotiated between outsider description and insider ascription; and “Desi music” is the new voice of a population just beginning to define “Indian-Americanness.” This panel offers an additional insight into Slovene ethnomusicology and music education through an exhibition of the historically important and most recent books, periodicals, audio and video recordings. Panel Abstracts 150 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 Robinson, Kathy Eastman School of Music Out of the Box and into the Field: Music Teacher Education on the Move Romero, Brenda University of Colorado at Boulder Intersections of Music Theory and Ethnomusicology This panel presentation describes three university programs designed to bring music teachers and teacher-prospects into musical and social interactions with cultures different from their own. Music teacher education departments at the University of Washington, the University of Michigan and The Eastman School of Music have developed cultural immersion programs in three world communities including, the Yakama Indian in Washington state, Cape Coast in Ghana and the Kimberley community in South Africa. Expanding teachers’ musical and social frames of reference which facilitate development of culturally relevant curricula and instructional strategies in our schools is the goal of these experiences. Issues arising from these interactions including transmission, oral -aural learning, repertoire and pedagogical transformation will be explored. The intersection of music theory and ethnomusicology is emerging as a point of great potential for expanding the canon in college music teaching. Addressing the ethnomusicologist's desire for cultural contextualization and congruence as well as the theorist's concern for concepts and structural coherence, this panel focuses on various aspects of these intersections. Ethnomusicologists teach not only budding ethnomusicologists, who in turn study musical cultures as scholars, but also young musicians who can benefit from studying musical practices and concepts drawn from a variety of cultures. In this manner ethnomusicology has the potential to enrich musical application and practical musical training. The presentations focus on the usefulness of studying the theoretical principles of varying world music cultures as a tool to build practical musicianship skills; a course design that explores ways of bringing "world music" into the music theory classroom; and on specific ways in which the activity of building and playing panpipes provides a tactile point of reference for enlarging the cultural base of a course in music fundamentals. Rodel, Angela University of California, Los Angeles The Politics of Gate-Keeping: Authenticity and (Sub)Cultural Identities in 'Anti-Popular' Music This panel examines the SEM theme of "Authenticity and the Politics of Representation" from the rather unorthodox viewpoint of "subcultural" insiders. In these papers, we investigate how musicians working in non-commercialized musical genres whose musical characteristics are nevertheless in part derived from popular music genres such as jazz, electronic music, punk and folk attempt to defend and define their identities against the mainstream music industry (as well as against other non-mainstream musical communities) by employing various "gate-keeping" strategies, i.e. musical and extra-musical means to define community boundaries. In opting (or being forced) out of the mainstream of popular culture, musicians often adopt creative methods to establish "underground authenticity" and cultural identities. Examining these marginal music communities and the dynamics of their quite different relationships to the commercialized music industry raises the question of whether we, as ethnomusicologists, need to reexamine the way we use terms like "subculture" and "popular music." Sager, Rebecca Independent Scholar Performing the Nation, Performing Authenticity: Africanness, Tourism, and Folkloric Spectacle in the Caribbean At least since the 1930s, African-derived performance traditions of the Caribbean have occupied center stage of the hotly contested ideologies of nation, race, and religion. Many Caribbean genres feature complex and contested understandings of cultural issues, especially as they unfold in specific performance contexts. The papers in this panel explore four such contexts. The first paper examines religious drumming in Cuba’s Conjunto Folklorico Nacionál. Founded in the early 1960s to promote the "raceless" and "classless "ideologies of the newly victorious Cuban Revolution, all the while celebrating Cuba’ sAfricanness, the troupe now finds itself negotiating an increasingly important tourist scene. Similarly, in 1949 Haiti’s government founded La Troupe Folklorique Nationale to demonstrate the independence and vitality of Afro-Haitian performance traditions. Panel Abstracts 151 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 This troupe has inspired many others, both inside and outside Haiti. The second paper examines the challenges of "performing Vodou" outside Haiti by the New York-based La Troupe Makandal. Tensions within Makandal throw into sharp relief the difficulties of "performing the nation" for non-nationals. imaginary place suggestive of “Balkan-ness,” disembodied from history but wrapped in a nostalgic frame of an Eastern European culture now past. Seeman, Sonia University of California, Santa Barbara Rom Identity and Representation: Musical Practice in Changing Social, Political and Market Contexts In the third paper, the dances in specific performances of Puerto Rican, Dominican, and Cuban folkloric groups illustrate the challenges that communities on islands and in the diaspora face in asserting Hispano-African island identities through dance. Historically denied access to the institutions that maintain control over political, social and economic spheres, Rom communities have tended to invest much of their expressions of self and community into cultural practices to assert their existence. Such musical and social struggles have been ongoing within Roma communities. However, recent changes in political, social and economic spheres since the 1990s have heightened the importance of Rom musical expression for negotiating new terrain. In these changing circumstances, how are Roma presenting themselves vis a vis their own communities and the larger non-Roma world? And as scholars and advocates, how are we challenged to seek new epistemological approaches and paths to understanding? The fourth paper examines the work of Haitian composer Werner Jaegerhuber, who, in the 1940s and 1950s, worked to transform the African-derived songs of Haiti’s poor farmers into music palatable to the Haitian elite and to European tourists. Jaegerhuber’s attempts to blend African and European music seem to prefigure the challenges of performing the nation faced by the folkloric troupes of the first three papers. Scruggs, T.M. University of Iowa The Musical Invocation of Nostalgia and Memory To study such changes demands a reinvestigation of the dialectical relationship between musical practice and representations of self and communal identity. This panel explores these issues in light of three divergent Rom musical complexes: Bulgarian-Turkish Rom musical practice in US diaspora; Turkish Rom musical practice seeking access to world music networks; Transcarpathian Rom musical expressions of local identity in the Ukraine in relation to emergent NGO discourses. Each paper focuses on distinct segments of musical negotiation in historical and contemporary contexts at the intersection of individual, group, national, and transnational networks. In addition to arguing for an expanded understanding of Rom musical practices, the papers and discussion intend to contribute to ethnomusicological and anthropological theoretical considerations of representation and contested values of “authenticity”. This panel critically examines music’s ability to encode memory and nostalgia. The papers draw from four differing geo-cultural areas and approach the topic from diverse angles, united by an attempt to more fully understand how music can evoke a past that is, to varying degrees, both real and imagined. A central goal of the panel is to investigate the ways in which music is used to attempt to bridge the unbridgeable gap of time: how music can work to encase the filtered remembrance of a past historical moment, and key the longing for aspects of a given historical place and sensed existence. Music can be a potent organizing tool to maintain what Maurice Halbwachs refers to as “collective memories” (1992) that maintain social identity through historical continuity, examined here in the paper on elder Jewish communities in South Florida. Often, though not always or wholly, nostalgic memory is transfigured with an idealized, palliated valuation. For example, the concept of a more pleasant past existence, with connotations of wishes for a nonconflictive present, informs the Buena Vista Social Club project’s marketing outside Cuba. However, music’s invocation of a sense of longing that references a negatively perceived past can also be deliberately utilized for very contemporary social purposes, as examined in the paper on Taiwanese lao Taiyu ge. The panel further considers the analytical deconstruction of musical material that erects an Panel Abstracts Shope, Bradley Indiana University Emerging Genres and the Formation of Popular Music Numerous scholarly studies have documented musicians, recordings, and performances to better understand the characteristics of the popularization of musical genres. This panel will address 1) the manner in which a style of music can emerge within a particular social and cultural landscape, and 2) the social, cultural, 152 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 Sonneborn, Atesh Smithsonian Institution Collaboration between Producer/Recordist and Record Label: The Diffusion of Musical Knowledge via Recording Sales and political circumstances that give rise to popular music. We will investigate these issues by discussing four distinct geographic areas and time periods. Each of the four papers tie the development of a genre to a particular political, economic, and social framework, and at the same time investigate the idea and meaning of the term “popular.” While we discuss popular music in contrasting contexts, each identifies the emergence of popular music to better understand the formation and maintenance of popular culture. Beginning in Lucknow, India during the 1930s and 1940s, Brad Shope discusses the popularization of jazz and ballroom music among a minority community of Anglo-Indians. In Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, Alex Perullo documents the formation of a popular genre, dansi, within a developing urban environment during the 1920s and 1930s. In Korea, Hilary Finchum-Sung examines the recent re-emergence and popularization of two forms of folk and traditional Korean music. Finally, John Fenn discusses the creation and disappearance of Americana in the United States. What elements are needed to successfully produce an album, identify a recording label and promote a musical sound recording (from field, concert or studio) into the global capitalist marketplace? Record labels are a vital avenue of music dissemination. The panel will discuss key factors fostering successful collaboration with contributors (e.g. artists, producers, recordists, noteswriters, etc.) from the perspective of a record label, and the fundamental considerations and processes of creatmg a recording for sale to the public. Issues will include cultural significance, recording quality, advocacy, intellectual property rights, audience demographics, packaging, distribution mechanisms, marketing, economic stretagies and other considerations. This forum is planned as the first of two such events, a 2004 panel will be comprised of experienced contributors and their understandings as emergent from working with a record label. Slobin, Mark Wesleyan University Return to Afghanistan: Reports on a Musical Reawakening Stokes, Martin University of Chicago Popular Music in the Middle East From 1966 to 1977, the chair and the three panelists were the only western scholars to conduct extensive fieldwork in Afghanistan, which had only just begun to admit foreign researchers. Beginning in 1978, the country fell into a 23-year cycle of violence, culminating in the American incursion of 2001 that has at least temporarily brought Afghanistan back into the family of nations. A huge percentage of the population moved into refugee camps in neighboring Iran and Pakistan, or became emigres in Europe and the US. The Taliban period (19962001) was particularly hard on music. Residing in a region with a rich history of traditional music, popular music in the Middle East is an often-neglected topic of ethnomusicological inquiry. Its strong connections to Westernized aesthetics and modern developments often feed this bias. It is, however, popular music’s displacement of traditional musics that has perhaps done the most to marginalize its study in the ethnomusicological literature on the Middle East. But it is this domination of popular music in the region and its connection to modern developments that make its study essential to understanding music in the Middle East. It exercises an immense amount of influence on societies in the region while also bringing this region to the eyes and ears of a mass audience throughout the world. As the most common type of music consumed by audiences in the Middle East, it also provides the most important site to explore music’s relationship with regional, national and global forces. The purpose of this panel is to investigate the many important issues that popular music research in the Middle East addresses. Each of these papers looks at a different issue regarding popular music at various geographical and musical sites within the Middle East. These papers address some of the most important issues in ethnomusicology today. The importance of these topics demonstrates the many gains that come from seriously considering popular music’s position in the Middle East. The panelists have been actively keeping in touch with this unfolding story and will speak to the ethnomusicology of trauma and loss, deterritorialization, and tentative recovery. They will report on the situation in Afghanistan itself and on a newly resurgent interest in music among Afghan-Americans. Our own work has new relevance and we are working on projects of restoration and distribution, while also trying to help in the reconstruction of a music culture that has been as badly damaged as any in recent history, but which shows real signs of continuity. Panel Abstracts 153 October 1-5 Abstracts ATMI, CMS, SEM Annual Meeting 2003 Stone, Ruth Indiana University Music, Religion, and Identity in Africa ample time for discussion. Resources for teaching--bibliographies, filmographies, and references to on-line resources, including those created for or used within our classes—will be shared with session participants. In this panel the presenters address issues of music, religion, and identity in historic and contemporary African contexts. Each paper raises critical issues related to the performance of identity and the positionality assumed by music within religious social institutions. Reed addresses identity conflicts surrounding the introduction of an indigenous form of religious music into Catholic services among the Dan of Côte d’Ivoire. Barz introduces memory work and memorialization among HIV+ women associated with Muslim and Christian faith-based communities in Uganda and suggests that music passes along issues of identity to children, most of whom will become orphaned at very early ages. Summit focuses on the Abayudaya (Jewish people) of Uganda in order to present the use of music in the negotiation of Abayudaya religious and ethnic identity. The panel concludes with a response from Philip Bohiman who will raise issues concerning identity formation within musical and religious contexts. Van Buren, Thomas Center for Traditional Music and Dance International Cultural Marketing and the Politics of Representation As ethnomusicologists become increasingly involved in assisting musicians and artists in touring and promotion, they are faced with significant issues concerning presentation and representation. These include issues of creating a viable product while retaining authenticity, fair compensation for artist and management alike, and the production of marketing materials and a performance that provides a wellrounded view of the music in its cultural context. The presenters in this session will provide very different approaches in the negotiation of these difficult issues: from the perspective of ethnomusicologists who work oii a relatively small scale with a select group of musicians to that of an international cultural marketing firm with offices in Colorado and Italy that has assisted indigenous peoples around the world in international cultural marketing. Tuohy, Sue Indiana University Teaching at the Intersection of Ethnomusicology and Film Yang, Mina San Francisco Conservatory of Music Encounters Beyond the Pale: At the Intersection of African- and AsianAmerican Musical Cultures This panel addresses issues involved in teaching about film and film music within ethnomusicology. It grows out of the panelists' research on film music and our experiences teaching film courses within an ethnomusicology program. As teachers, each of us brings different perspectives and objectives to our courses on African, African American and Chinese film. And as panelists, we focus on focus on different aspects in our explorations of film and music. Uniting the papers, however, is a concern for using ethno musicological approaches in the examination of film and for teaching ethnomusicology through film. From its earliest days, American music has evolved out of the collision of various subcultures that are often politically and socially distinct, even antagonistic, with one another. The dynamics of black/white musical interactions and power plays has been explored extensively in other studies. This session expands the discussion by bringing into focus the various ways in which African- and Asian-American musicians and fans regard and influence one another, engage in aesthetic and political discourses about race and music, and place such discourses in the broader context of American life. While representation and mediation increasingly have been the subject of ethno musicological theory in recent decades, teaching about feature films brings these issues to the forefront of attention. Panelists will examine these issues through concepts such as interplay of voices and counter voices as well as the relation of filmic representations to other forms of representation of society and music. Presenters also will discuss topics such as methods for analyzing film music, the poetics and politics of film music production, and technical and pedagogic problems in teaching about/with film music. As Deborah Wong (2000) has observed, Asian American emulation and performance of African American music are loaded with political implications regarding the (mis)representation of race and (in)authentic cultural expression. The papers in this session consider these issues from varying angles, examining the aesthetic and political dimensions ofjazz and hip-hop as practiced at the intersection of African- and Asian American musical cultures. Presenters will illustrate their points with film clips, and the session will allow Panel Abstracts 154 October 1-5