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Music and the New Global Culture From the Great Exhibitions to the Jazz Age - Big Issues in Music

$33.10

Publisher: University of Chicago Press

Author: Harry Liebersohn

Music listeners today can effortlessly flip from K-pop to Ravi Shankar to Amadou & Mariam with a few quick clicks of a mouse. While contemporary globalized musical culture has become ubiquitous and unremarkable, its fascinating origins long predate the internet era. In Music and the New Global Culture, Harry Liebersohn traces the origins of global music to a handful of critical transformations that took place between the mid-nineteenth and early twentieth century. In Britain, the arts and crafts movement inspired a fascination with non-Western music; Germany fostered a scholarly approach to global musical comparison, creating the field we now call ethnomusicology; and the United States provided the technological foundation for the dissemination of a diverse spectrum of musical cultures by launching the phonograph industry. This is not just a story of Western innovation, however: Liebersohn shows musical responses to globalization in diverse areas that include the major metropolises of India and China and remote settlements in South America and the Arctic. By tracing this long history of world music, Liebersohn shows how global movement has forever changed how we hear music-and indeed, how we feel about the world around us.
ISBN: 9780226649276
Publisher: University of Chicago Press
Imprint: The University of Chicago Press
Published date:
Language: English
Number of pages: 336
Weight: 482g
Height: 228mm
Width: 152mm
Spine width: 20mm

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