Zen Buddhist practice has its own indigenous music: the ritual chanting which, along with bells and percussion instruments, form a part of virtually every Zen ceremony and formal event, both monastic and lay. And, like the other aspects of Zen teaching and practice, the chanting of sutras, dharanis, gathas, dedications, and readings has undergone a widely varied range of adaptations as part of its migration to and continuing development in the North American context. These adaptations have been characterized by two opposing tendencies: the conservative desire to keep practices pure and unadulterated (in some cases, an idealized and simplified projection of pure ) versus the urge to individualize and innovate to fit changing contemporary North American contexts. The purpose of this book is to study in some detail how this tension plays out in different aspects of chanting. Because Zen practice in America is highly decentralized, even within the same teaching lines the degree of standardization in chanting practice varies widely, resulting in a large range of solutions to the problem of adapting a traditional Japanese religious musical practice to American contexts.
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Product Details
Format: Paperback
Weight: 666g
Publication Date: 26 Jan 2022
Publisher: Pendragon Press
Publication City/Country: United States
Language: English
ISBN13: 9781576472507
About Stephen Slottow
Stephen Slottow Associate Professor of Music at the University of North Texas. He received degrees from Cleveland State University Queens College and City University of New York. He has taught at City College Queens College Temple University and Hofstra University. A former professional fiddler and banjo player his interests include American traditional music the American ultramodernists atonal theory Schenkerian analysis and Zen Buddhist practice and ritual. He was awarded the 2000 Emerging Scholar Award by the Music Theory Society of New York and has published in such journals as Music Theory Spectrum Int???gral Theory and Practice the Journal of Schenkerian Studies Journal of the Society for American Music and the Journal of Music Theory Pedagogy.
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