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ethnomusicology
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ethnomusicology

Expanding earlier definitions of the field as the study of non-Western musics, ‘ethnic music’ or ‘world music’, ethnomusicology is the anthropological study of music as a culture-specific phenomenon and a universal aspect of human social behaviour. It developed out of late 19th-century studies of ‘exotic’ Asian scales in Europe and studies of American Indian music in the USA. Since the 1950s there has been a gradual process of incorporation of the insights offered by comparative musicology, with its emphasis on collection, documentation, systematization, classification, transcription, and analysis with the anthropology of music, with its emphasis on extended periods of field work, participant observation, the learning of vocal and instrumental performance skills by researchers, and the search for the social functions of music.

Ethnomusicologists attempt to describe music cultures as whole systems or ‘music cultures’ but the general trend has been towards studies focused on specific theoretical problems, such as the role of music in healing, the cultural role and symbolism of musical instruments, and the relationship of musical aesthetics, values, and social power. Ethnomusicologists find themselves increasingly concerned with the ethics of fieldwork and the politics of representation, the music of migrant populations, the relationship between music, ethnicity, and identity in the construction of place, and a study of popular musics worldwide.

See: comparative musicology, organology, cantometrics.



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What makes this compilation of events so exciting is that the expertise of professional historians, linguists, musicians, ethnomusicologists, ministers, poets, writers, hymnists and composers is constantly referenced.
For ethnomusicologists, Bjork's new album could be an object of study for years to come.
More significant than this kind of reporting is the host of musical historians and ethnomusicologists who from many perspectives are investigating the whole enterprise of popular music; see, for instance, Origins of the Popular Style by Peter Van der Merwe (Clarendon, 1992); Music at the Margins edited by Deanna Campbell Robinson (Sage, 199 1); and Popular Music in Theory by Keith Negus (Wesleyan University Press, 1997).
 
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