Sonic Mobilities

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A01=Adam Kielman
asia
Author_Adam Kielman
caravan
Category=AVLP
Category=JBCC
Category=RGCS
chinese
cities
city
corporate
corporations
cosmopolitan
cultural
culture
eastern
economy
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eq_music
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
ethnomusicology
finance
financial
global
guangzhou
historical
history
international
jobs
maritime
migration
money
music
musical
port
power
regional
scene
silk road
sound
toy captain
tradition
urban
wealth

Product details

  • ISBN 9780226817804
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 20 Apr 2022
  • Publisher: The University of Chicago Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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A fascinating look at how the popular musical culture of Guangzhou expresses the city’s unique cosmopolitanism.
 
Guangzhou is a large Chinese city like many others. With a booming economy and abundant job opportunities, it has become a magnet for rural citizens seeking better job prospects as well as global corporations hoping to gain a foothold in one of the world’s largest economies. This openness and energy have led to a thriving popular music scene that is every bit the equal of Beijing’s. But the musical culture of Guangzhou expresses the city’s unique cosmopolitanism. A port city that once played a key role in China’s maritime Silk Road, Guangzhou has long been an international hub. Now, new migrants to the city are incorporating diverse Chinese folk traditions into the musical tapestry.
 
In Sonic Mobilities, ethnomusicologist Adam Kielman takes a deep dive into Guangzhou's music scene through two bands, Wanju Chuanzhang (Toy Captain) and Mabang (Caravan), that express ties to their rural homelands and small-town roots while forging new cosmopolitan musical connections. These bands make music that captures the intersection of the global and local that has come to define Guangzhou, for example by writing songs with a popular Jamaican reggae beat and lyrics in their distinct regional dialects mostly incomprehensible to their audiences. These bands create a sound both instantly recognizable and totally foreign, international and hyper-local. This juxtaposition, Kielman argues, is an apt expression of the demographic, geographic, and political shifts underway in Guangzhou and across the country. Bridging ethnomusicology, popular music studies, cultural geography, and media studies, Kielman examines the cultural dimensions of shifts in conceptualizations of self, space, publics, and state in a rapidly transforming the People’s Republic of China.
 
Adam Kielman is assistant professor of music at the Chinese University of Hong Kong. 
 

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