Big Blog II: One Last Music Culture
The time is here--our last Blog entries!
This last blog is (obviously) a Big Blog, and the scope (but not the content) will be the same as the first Big Blog. In fact, let's just copy them here:
The content will be quite different from the first Big Blog, though. As we've discussed in class, pick a music-culture that we haven't explicitly covered in class. Let your imagination run wild! You can pick a people, a country, a repertoire, or something else along those lines. The Maori of New Zealand, the Inuit of Alaska, the Tango of Argentina, the country of Madagascar, traditional Bulgarian music, Tuvan throat-singers, Chinese opera, etc. Your goal is to teach the class sort of like how I've been teaching y'all throughout the semester--give us something of a broad overview, but pick some deep pockets to expand on. It will help you if you pick a topic of medium breadth. For instance, "China" is way too big--it's a huge country with many ethnicities and traditions and a much-recorded long history. C-Pop is way too narrow--it's a fairly recent popular music genre without much real variety. Chinese opera, however, comes in lots of different styles has been around for centuries but is fairly contained--it's just right. Smaller countries--like Madagascar--that have much less of a written tradition and are therefore trickier to research are just right all by themselves.
I've been teaching you about various music-cultures all semester, so I'm not going to provide an example here. But I do have something fun to share! Our favorite Gambian griot, Sona Jobarteh, recently received an honorary doctorate from the Berklee College of Music in Boston. Here's her acceptance speech--it's pretty awesome!
Ca trù: Vietnamese vocal music
ReplyDeleteScottish music!
ReplyDeleteNorse traditional music
ReplyDeleteThe Inuit of Alaska
ReplyDeleteChina Opera
ReplyDeleteFilipino Music
ReplyDeleteKlezmer
ReplyDeleteEthiopian music and culture
ReplyDeleteFlamenco (Spain)
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