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Places and Purposes of Popular Music Education: Perspectives from the Field

Editat de Bryan Powell, Gareth Dylan Smith
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 21 mai 2024
An array of diverse perspectives regarding the what and the why of popular music education.

This book provides a variety of perspectives on popular music education. With a mixture of rants, manifestos, and punchy position pieces, the volume moves from scholarly essays replete with citations and references to descriptions of practice and straight-talking polemics. The writing is approachable in tone, and the chapters are intended to whet appetites, prime pumps, open eyes, and keep cogs turning for academics of all ages and stages.

The book will appeal to those working in popular music studies, communication studies, and education research. It also holds relevance for researchers of the music industry and music ecosystems around the world. International in reach and scope and edited by recognized voices at the vanguard of progressive music education, this is an eye-opening exploration of education in and through the widespread cultural phenomenon of popular music.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781789389579
ISBN-10: 1789389577
Pagini: 424
Ilustrații: 7 color plates
Dimensiuni: 170 x 244 x 28 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Editura: Intellect Ltd
Colecția Intellect Ltd

Notă biografică

Bryan Powell is assistant professor of music education and music technology at Montclair State University in New Jersey. He is a founding coeditor of the Journal of Popular Music Education and serves as the executive director of the Association for Popular Music Education. Gareth Dylan Smith is assistant professor of music and music education at Boston University. He is a drummer, a founding coeditor of the Journal of Popular Music Education, and the author, most recently, of Magical Nexus: A Philosophy of Playing Drum Kit.

Cuprins

Acknowledgements xi


Introduction xiii


   Gareth Dylan Smith and Bryan Powell


PART I: BEYOND THE CLASSROOM 1


1. ‘Something to Talk About’: Intersections of Music, Memory, Dialogue and Pedagogy at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame 5


   Jason Hanley


2. Learning to be Active: The Formative Power of Music as a Catalyst for Political Activism 11


   Stuart Moir


3. Mariachi Master-Apprentice Program: Familia During the COVID-19 Pandemic 17


   Sergio Alonso


4. People and Popular Music in an English Prison: Transforming Criminal Justice 24


   Natalie Betts


5. Popular Music Pedagogy in a United States Prison: Lessons from a Western Rural Facility 30


   Tiger Robison


6. Developing a Certifiable and Relevant Popular Music Curriculum for Early School-Leavers in Ireland 34


   Martin Ryan


7. Project Gametime: Hip-Hop and After-School Programmes 40


   Kenrick Wagner


8. In Conversation with Eleanor Rashid, Music Practitioner 43


   Eleanor Rashid and Gareth Dylan Smith


9. Reciprocal Benefits of Music Cities and Modern Band 46


   Bryce Merril and Tom Scharf


10. Berklee City Music Programme: Teaching and Learning Through Contemporary Popular Music 52


   Krystal Prime Banfield


11. A New Generation: An Intrinsic Case Study of a Club DJ’s Formal Learning Experiences 58


   Eva J. Egolf


12. Playing with Vocal Processing Technologies: Fostering Interaction with Children with Special Educational Needs 63


   Roshi Nasehi


13. The Oneonta Hip Hop Collective: Students Owning the Moment 68


   Joseph Michael Pignato


14. Rockway and Formal–Informal Online Music Learning in Finland 74


   Niklas Lindholm


15. How Do We Get Girls and Non-Binary Students to Play Guitar Solos? 79


   Kayla Rush


16. Learning to Become a Band, Learning Popular Music 85


   Tobias Malm


17. Popular Music is Not the Answer 90


   Abigail D’Amore


PART II: IDENTITY AND PURPOSE 97


18. Life as a Cabaret: Singing Our Ideal Self into Being 101


   Felix Graham


19. My Therapist Said It’s FINE: The Duality of Being a Music(ian) Teacher 107


   Sheena Dhamsania


20. Pursuing Popular Music Shapes Me as a Scholar, Musician and Human 110


   Christopher Cayari


21. I’ve Learned Three Chords. Now What? 115


   Roger Mantie


22. Intersections and Roundabouts: Connecting In-School and Out-of-School Experiences to Teaching Practices 120


   Steve Holley


23. Different from the Norm: Teaching Band in Alabama 126


   Shane Colquhoun


24. Popular Music Education as a Place for Emergent Pedagogies 131


   Meghan K. Sheehy


25. Think Big, Start Small: Enacting Change in Higher Education 137


   Martina Vasil


26. Becoming a Popular Music Educator: A Personal Journey 142


    Matthew Clauhs


27. Confessions of a Deadhead Music Educator: Connecting Worlds 148


   James Frankel


28. A Personal Journey with Popular Music in Paraguay 153


   Sol Elisa Martinez Missena


29. From Bowing my Double Bass to Pushing My Push: A Swedish Journey from Music Education to Popular Music Educator 157


   Erik Lundahl


30. From A. R. Rahman to Ed Sheeran: How Informal Learning Practices can Inform Music Teaching 162


   Shree Lakshmi Vaidyanathan


31. What’s Words Worth: A Short Polemic on the Citation of Lyric 168


   Andy West


32. Inclusion or Exclusion? The Disconnect Between School Music Programmes and Students’ Lived Musical Experiences 171


   Aixa Burgos


33. Finding Her Voice: A Female DIY Musician’s Pedagogical Spaces and Practices for Popular Tamil Film Music in Chennai, South India 175


   Nina Menezes


34. Teaching Queer 182


   Mia Ibrahim


35. Computer Science && Popular Music Education 187


   Jared O’Leary


36. We Are Music Technology (and How to Change Us) 192


   adam patrick bell


37. Connecting Black Youth to Critical Media Literacy Through Hip-Hop Making in the Music Classroom 198


   Jabari Evans


PART III: HIGHER EDUCATION 203


38. Crushed by the Wheels of Industry 207


   Martin Isherwood


39. Towards Popular Music Education as an Institutional Norm 213


   Lloyd McArton


40. Ideological Extrojection: The De-Neoliberalization of UK Music Education 219


   Jason Huxtable


41. On the Pulse of Change Through Popular Music Nourishing Teachers’ Professional Identities 225


   Siew Ling Chua


42. The Conservatory as Exploratory 230


   Richard Smith


43. Is Higher Popular Music Education Still Relevant? 235


   Gemma Hill


44. Music Teacher Education in the United States is Failing its Students 239


   Candice Davenport Mattio


45. Imagining a Credential for Music Technology Education 245


   Daniel Walzer


46. The Price of Admission: Amateurism, Serious Leisure and the Faculty Band 250


   Virginia Wayman Davis


47. Vocal Diversity and Evolving Contemporary Voice Pedagogy 256


   Ana Flavia Zuim


48. Student and Tutor Life Worlds and Impossible Standards in Higher Popular Music Education 261


   Hussein Boon


49. Places and Spaces of Popular Music Production Pedagogy in Higher Education 267


   Brendan Anthony


50. Fostering a Sense of Belonging in the Recruitment of Underrepresented Students at Purdue University 273


   James Dekle


51. Awakening Spirituality in Brazilian Higher Music Education 279


   Heloisa Feichas


52. Embracing Innocence, Uncertainty and Presence in Popular Music Performance 285


   Jay Stapley


53. How I Relearned to Give a Shit 290


   David Knapp


PART IV: POLITICS AND IDEOLOGY 297


54. We Are Not Neutral: Popular Music Education, Creativity and the Active Creation of a Graduate Precariat 301


   Zack Moir


55. Toward the Political Philosophy of Hip-Hop Education and Positive Energy in China 307


   Wai-Chung Ho


56. Structural and Cultural Barriers to Relevant Popular Music Education in India 314


   Nilesh Thomas and Saurav Ghosh


57. Popular Music Education as a Liberating Education 320


   Flávia Narita


58. Young, Gifted and Black Q.U.E.E.N.: Nuancing Black Feminist Thought within Music Education 326


   Jasmine Hines


59. Decolonizing Higher Music Education: Person Versus Persona 332


   Adriel E. Miles


60. My Vision for Popular Music Education 338


   Nathan Holder


61. External Examining: An Insider Perspective on a Neocolonial Practice 343


   Gareth Dylan Smith


62. Cripping Popular Music Education 349


   Jesse Rathgeber


63. Excessive Pedagogical Moments: A Deaf-Gay Intersectional Duet 355


   Warren Churchill


64. Race, Caste, American Democracy and Popular Music Education 361


   David Wish


65. The Problem of Conversion in Music Teacher Education in the United States 367


   Radio Cremata


66. Expanding the Reach of Music Education through Modern Band 373


   Scott R. Sheehan


67. Lessons from Community Music and Music Therapy: Beyond Familiar Comparisons 378


   Bryan Powell


68. Adolescence, Education and Citizenship: Tracing Intersecting Histories and Reimagining Popular Music Pedagogies 383


   Noah Karvelis


69. #SongsOfBlackLivesMatter: Co-creating and Developing an Activist Music Education Praxis Alongside Youth 389


   Martin Urbach


70. From Black Lives Matter to Black Music Matters: Crossing the Rhetorical Divide 396


   Ed Sarath


Notes on Contributors 399


Index 411