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Surinamese Music in the Netherlands and Suriname
A01=Marcel Weltak
Amerindian
Amerindians
Amsterdam
Author_Marcel Weltak
Bazuinkoor
Bigi Poku
Category=AVA
Category=NHK
Church Music
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Fra Fra Sound
George Schermacher
Hindi-Pop
Hindustani
Huge "Iko" (Lieve Hugo) Uiterloo
Java and Javanese
Javanese
Kaseko
Kaskawi
Kawina
Kid Dynamite
Kwakwa-bangi
Latin America
Military Brass Band
Music
Netherlands
Paramaribo
Pop-Jawa
Reggae
Ronald Snijders
Skratyi
Sranan Tongo
Suriname
Suripop
Twinkle Stars
Product details
- ISBN 9781496816948
- Weight: 333g
- Dimensions: 152 x 228mm
- Publication Date: 30 Jul 2021
- Publisher: University Press of Mississippi
- Publication City/Country: US
- Product Form: Hardback
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Contributions by Herman Dijo, J. Ketwaru, Guilly Koster, Arthur Lamur, Lou Lichtveld, Pondo O'Bryan, and Marcel Weltak
When Marcel Weltak's Surinamese Music in the Netherlands and Suriname was published in Dutch in 1990, it was the first book to provide an overview of the music styles originating from the land that had recently gained its independence from the Netherlands. Up until the 1990s, little had been published that observed the music of the country. Weltak's book was the first to examine both the instruments and the way in which they are played as well as the melodic and rhythmic components of music produced by the country's ethnically diverse populations, including people of Amerindian, African, Indian, Indonesian/Javanese, and Chinese descent.
Since the book's first appearance, a new generation of musicians of Surinamese descent has carried on making music, and some of their elders referred to in the original edition have passed away. The catalog of recordings that have become available has also expanded, particularly in the areas of hip-hop, rap, jazz, R&B, and new fusions such as kaskawi. This edition, in English for the first time, includes a new opening chapter by Marcel Weltak giving a historical sketch of Suriname's relationship to the Netherlands. It includes updates on the popular music of second- and third-generation musicians of Surinamese descent in the Netherlands, and Weltak's own subsequent and vital research into the Amerindian and maroon music of the interior. The new introduction is followed by the integral text of the original edition. New appendices have been added to this edition that include a bibliography and updated discography; a listing of films, videos, and DVDs on or about Surinamese music or musicians; and concise, alphabetically arranged notes on musical instruments and styles as well as brief biographies of those authors who contributed texts.
When Marcel Weltak's Surinamese Music in the Netherlands and Suriname was published in Dutch in 1990, it was the first book to provide an overview of the music styles originating from the land that had recently gained its independence from the Netherlands. Up until the 1990s, little had been published that observed the music of the country. Weltak's book was the first to examine both the instruments and the way in which they are played as well as the melodic and rhythmic components of music produced by the country's ethnically diverse populations, including people of Amerindian, African, Indian, Indonesian/Javanese, and Chinese descent.
Since the book's first appearance, a new generation of musicians of Surinamese descent has carried on making music, and some of their elders referred to in the original edition have passed away. The catalog of recordings that have become available has also expanded, particularly in the areas of hip-hop, rap, jazz, R&B, and new fusions such as kaskawi. This edition, in English for the first time, includes a new opening chapter by Marcel Weltak giving a historical sketch of Suriname's relationship to the Netherlands. It includes updates on the popular music of second- and third-generation musicians of Surinamese descent in the Netherlands, and Weltak's own subsequent and vital research into the Amerindian and maroon music of the interior. The new introduction is followed by the integral text of the original edition. New appendices have been added to this edition that include a bibliography and updated discography; a listing of films, videos, and DVDs on or about Surinamese music or musicians; and concise, alphabetically arranged notes on musical instruments and styles as well as brief biographies of those authors who contributed texts.
Marcel Weltak was a staff member of the Stichting Wetenschappelijke Informatie (Foundation for Scholarly Information) and of the daily newspapers De West and De Ware Tijd. He was also editor of Adek and arts correspondent for the Dutch daily newspapers De Waarheid and de Volkskrant. Besides publishing the first edition of Surinaamse muziek in Nederland en Suriname in 1990, he has written articles in various music and cultural magazines.
Scott Rollins has been a cultural entrepreneur for more than forty years. He has published three volumes of poetry and is translator of Surinamese Music in the Netherlands and Suriname, Boom's Blues: Music, Journalism, and Friendship in Wartime, and The Music of the Netherlands Antilles: Why Eleven Antilleans Knelt before Chopin's Heart, all published by University Press of Mississippi.
Scott Rollins has been a cultural entrepreneur for more than forty years. He has published three volumes of poetry and is translator of Surinamese Music in the Netherlands and Suriname, Boom's Blues: Music, Journalism, and Friendship in Wartime, and The Music of the Netherlands Antilles: Why Eleven Antilleans Knelt before Chopin's Heart, all published by University Press of Mississippi.
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