
Unsichtbare Landschaften. Invisible Landscapes
Populäre Musik und Räumlichkeit. Popular Music and Spatiality
Giacomo Bottà(Editor)
Waxmann (Publisher)
1st Edition
Published on 7. April 2016
Book
Paperback/Softback
204 pages
978-3-8309-3039-6 (ISBN)
Description
Popular music is as much about places as it is about sounds.
Its production is forged in studios, rehearsal areas and bedrooms, places often mythologised in popular music history. Popular music is also recorded using studio techniques designed to recreate space, through reverb and other effects. Its collective consumption happens in concert halls, clubs and bars while its individual consumption takes place in streets, homes and at bus stops; all physical places. In addition, popular music often represents or sounds like certain urban or rural, real or imagined places of various scales. These places are often invisible, intangible and hidden behind the music, or recreated on record covers and music videos.
This is a multilingual volume, written by a group of transnational scholars, with chapters in German and English. It comprises chapters about heterogeneous popular music practices, largely, but not exclusively, from Europe. Addressing the relation between popular music practices and political struggles, postcolonialities, dense and layered urban settings and a certain understanding of cultural heritage, this volume turns noise into sound, revealing the invisible landscapes of Europe.
Its production is forged in studios, rehearsal areas and bedrooms, places often mythologised in popular music history. Popular music is also recorded using studio techniques designed to recreate space, through reverb and other effects. Its collective consumption happens in concert halls, clubs and bars while its individual consumption takes place in streets, homes and at bus stops; all physical places. In addition, popular music often represents or sounds like certain urban or rural, real or imagined places of various scales. These places are often invisible, intangible and hidden behind the music, or recreated on record covers and music videos.
This is a multilingual volume, written by a group of transnational scholars, with chapters in German and English. It comprises chapters about heterogeneous popular music practices, largely, but not exclusively, from Europe. Addressing the relation between popular music practices and political struggles, postcolonialities, dense and layered urban settings and a certain understanding of cultural heritage, this volume turns noise into sound, revealing the invisible landscapes of Europe.
Reviews / Votes
In total, this edited volume provides valuable insights into the interrelation of music and its places of production and performance. [.] This edited collection offers many interesting case studies for urban and popular music studies that can be valuable for further theoretical work.More details
Series
Language
English
German
Place of publication
Munster
Germany
Target group
Adult education
Edition type
New edition
Dimensions
Height: 23.5 cm
Width: 16.5 cm
ISBN-13
978-3-8309-3039-6 (9783830930396)
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

Giacomo Bottà
Unsichtbare Landschaften Invisible Landscapes
Populäre Musik und Räumlichkeit Popular Music and Spatiality
E-Book
04/2016
1st Edition
Waxmann Verlag GmbH
€30.99
Available for download
Persons
Editor
Giacomo Bottà is adjunct professor in urban studies at the University of Helsinki. Between 2010 and 2012 he was Von Humboldt Foundation experienced researcher at the Deutsches Volksliedarchiv in Freiburg (now Zentrum für Populäre Kultur und Musik - University of Freiburg). His main interests are urban culture and popular music in Europe at a comparative level.
ISNI: 0000 0004 2012 8474
ISNI: 0000 0004 2012 8474
Contributions
Giacomo Bottà is adjunct professor in urban studies at the University of Helsinki. Between 2010 and 2012 he was Von Humboldt Foundation experienced researcher at the Deutsches Volksliedarchiv in Freiburg (now Zentrum für Populäre Kultur und Musik - University of Freiburg). His main interests are urban culture and popular music in Europe at a comparative level.
ISNI: 0000 0004 2012 8474
ISNI: 0000 0004 2012 8474
Thomas Burkhalter ist Musikethnologe und Gründer/Chefredakteur von Norient, dem Network for Local and Global Sounds and Media Culture (www.norient.com). Sein Buch Local Music Scenes and Globalization: Transnational Platforms in Beirut ist 2013 bei Routledge erschienen, sein co-editiertes Buch The Arab Avant-Garde: Music, Politics and Modernity erschien 2013 bei Wesleyan University Press.
Christina M. Heinen ist Musikethnologin, freie Autorin und Künstlerin. Sie ist Assoziierte des Georg-Simmel-Zentrums für Metropolenforschung an der Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin. Ihre anthropologischen Untersuchungen konzentrieren sich auf den Stadtraum. Für ihre Website www.coconut-farm.org gestaltet sie Cartoons, Plattencover und Comics. Zudem wirkt sie regelmäßig als Texterin und Musikerin in diversen Musik- und Radioprojekten mit. Sie zeichnete das Titelbild für das vorliegende Buch.
Fernand Hörner ist Professor für Kulturwissenschaft, insbesondere
für Sozio-, Trans- und Medienkultur, an der Hochschule Düsseldorf. Zuvor war er Stellvertretender Kommissarischer Leiter des Deutschen Volksliedarchivs, an dessen Weiterentwicklung zum Zentrum für Populäre Kultur und Musik er maßgeblich beteiligt war. Er ist Mitherausgeber des Songlexikons.
ISNI: 0000 0000 5384 5278
ISNI: 0000 0000 5384 5278
Meri Kytö is a post-doctoral researcher in music studies at the School of Communication, Media and Theatre at the University of Tampere, Finland.
Carlo Nardi received his PhD in Sciences of Music from the University of Trento in 2005. He is Research Associate at Rhodes University and teaches at CDM - Centro Didattico MusicaTeatroDanza. His work has focused on the use of technology from a sensory perspective, authorship in relation to technological change, the organization of labour in music-making and screen sound. Between 2011 and 2013 he was General Secretary of IASPM, the International Association for the
Study of Popular Music.
Leonard Nevarez is a Professor of Sociology at Vassar College. He writes in the fields of urban studies and social theory and blogs at musicalurbanism.org
E. Sirin Özgün teaches at Istanbul Technical University (ITU), the Turkish Music State Conservatory Musicology Department and the ITU Centre for Advanced Studies in Music.
Philipp Rhensius ist Autor, Soziologe & Musikwissenschaftler (Magister), Musiker (Kl.ne, aphtc, INRA) und Redakteur (Norient Magazine, Kunst+Film). Seine Interessen umkreisen Musik, die Politik des Alltags, Filme, Literatur, Philosophie, Metanoia und Pareidolie. Seine Texte erscheinen u.a. in: Taz, Spex, Süddeutsche, FAZ und diversen Buchbänden.
Daniel Tödt hat Europäische Ethnologie, Afrikawissenschaften und Politikwissenschaft in Berlin (HU und FU) studiert. Danach war er wissenschaftlicher Mitarbeiter am SFB »Repräsentationen sozialer Ordnungen im Wandel« und promovierte im Fach Geschichtswissenschaften an der HU Berlin. Derzeit ist er Postdoctoral Fellow am Center for Metropolitan Studies an der TU Berlin.
ISNI: 0000 0004 3523 742X
ISNI: 0000 0004 3523 742X
David-Emil Wickström studied Scandinavian studies, musicology and ethnomusicology at the Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, University of Bergen and University of Copenhagen. He is currently Professor of popular music history at the Pop Academy Baden-Württemberg (Mannheim, Germany) where he also directs the Bachelor degree programme "Pop Music Design" and where he is the head of the library. He is a freelance trumpet player and a founding member of IASPM DA-CH on whose board he currently serves.
ISNI: 0000 0003 7478 4015
ISNI: 0000 0003 7478 4015