The International
Association for the Study of Popular Music (IASPM) is pleased to announce its
14th biennial conference: ¡Que viva la musica popular!
Universidad Iberoamericana
Mexico City, Mexico
June 25-29, 2007
Popular music
remains at the heart of everyday life in many different ways. Its ability to
organise, reassure, provoke, contain or anaesthetise attests to its influence
within social life. The organisers of the 14th biennial IASPM in Mexico City
invite papers that provide theoretically grounded accounts of popular music's
role as a soundtrack to individual, collective, local, national and international
experience. This includes examination of the significant changes in popular
music consumption, with, for example, the emergence of the mobile phone and
TV talent show franchises as key links between contemporary youth audiences
and performers. Equally, in the age of the 'mash-up', innovation in digital
technologies (for example, Pro Tools and Acid Pro software) continues to challenge
prior modes of production and viability for producers in an era of industry/company
integration. While these are important issues for debate, this conference also
emphasises effect and affectivity: the astonishing ways in which popular music
moves us to different forms of expression and feeling.
The location of this conference is timely, given the rapid change in cultural
trade flows and agreements between nations, where popular music plays a major
role in debates about cultural sovereignty, and the feverish rhetoric surrounding
the 'cultural'/'creative' industries. At the same time, popular music continues
to be appropriated for specific political ends, representing particular ideologies,
and in some cases, whole nations.
As has always been the case, conference organisers welcome papers that shed
light on specific, local experiences and debates, along with wider issues of
transnational importance. In keeping with the increasingly broad scope of popular
music studies, the conference welcomes papers based on any disciplinary approach,
including musicology, semiotics, philosophical/cognitive studies, anthropology,
gender and cultural studies, sociology, literary criticism, etc.
Abstracts should be no longer than 250 words, and should include the following:
Paper Title
Surname, First Name
Institution
Email Address
Intended Stream
When attaching abstracts, please send as both an .rtf and .doc. Please use your
surname as the file name, eg: smith.rtf, jones.doc.
The conference organizers would ask that you provide three to five keywords
in order to help facilitate the organization of the schedule.
Abstracts should be sent to the following address: pop2007@iaspm.net, and should
be received no later than November 15, 2006. Presenters will be notified by
February 1, regarding acceptance.
The streams
for this year's conference as follows:
1. Songs of desire
Convenor: Franco Fabbri
fabbri@dico.unimi.it
Feelings, emotions, passion are at the same time the subject of many popular
songs (content), the factors that influence how subjects are articulated (expression),
the shared competence within a genre or across genres (code). Affect in popular
music is coded/decoded by the mind, interpreted by the body, predominantly mediated
by the voice. This stream welcomes papers based on any disciplinary approach
(musicology, semiotics, philosophical/cognitive studies, anthropology, gender
and cultural studies, sociology, literary criticism, etc.) approaching song
(individual songs, genres, idiolects) as the meeting point of thought and feelings,
the body, the human voice, for any purpose and project.
2. Performance
Convenor: Shane Homan
Shane.Homan@newcastle.edu.au
Musical performance remains one of the central rituals and pleasures of popular
music. This stream invites consideration of understandings of performance within
a range of cultures and contexts, including the re-evaluation of 'classic' performances
on the stage or screen that continue to inform contemporary practices and histories;
debates about repetition and improvisation; or performance within multimedia
environments, and the implications for the presentation and reception of the
musical text in relation to particular discourses of authenticity. We welcome
papers on the cover, tribute, or interpretation that investigates performing
the 'original', or contributions to debates about stage virtuosity, including
understandings of musical skills, training and creativity. Discussions can extend
to how famous musicians 'perform' their celebrity roles in a variety of industry
and media contexts; or how audiences 'perform' subcultures or fandom roles;
or take on the role of 'performer' themselves.
3. Technology
& industry
Convenor: Martha Tupinambá de Ulhôa
mulhoa1@gmail.com
The use of the phonogram, the disc, the tape, and now the computer archive has
changed enormously the way people produce and listen to music. Music technology
has even blurred the distinction between the spheres of music production and
consumption, as well as the notions of authorship and performance. Also the
music industry has had to adapt to new ways of consumption that bypass its control,
as the debate on copyright and the release of "historical" performances
transfers is showing. This stream welcomes papers dealing with the technological
impact on popular music practices, including studio, live and even private popular
music production and consumption questions from cultural, aesthetic, ideological,
economic, sociological, historical, legal or musicological perspectives.
4. Nation,
Region, City
Convenor: Michael Drewett
M.Drewett@ru.ac.za
This stream is concerned with popular music meanings which are specifically
located within the context of space and place, whether on the local, national,
global or glocal level, including the role of music in urban and suburban structures,
in the construction of national identities and policies and in place-related
practices of domination and resistance, such as post-colonial struggle. Papers
that place particular emphasis upon the spatial dynamics of popular music are
welcomed.
5. Popular
and Unpopular Musics
Convenor: Geoff Stahl
geoff.stahl@vuw.ac.nz
The notion of 'the popular' can be cast in multiple ways. The meaning and uses
to which 'the popular' is put means different things with regard to taste, musicians,
the industry, governments, etc. The notion of what constitutes popularity and
what that popularity may mean is fraught and contested in a number of fields,
whereby the production, distribution and consumption of music can become the
locus of many different kinds of struggles. This stream is designed to take
up many of these issues, considering the different resonances of 'the popular'
(and by inference its so-called opposite, 'the unpopular').
