African American Research Center, Library, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Notes:
The following contributions are cited separately in RILM: Godfrey BALDACCHINO, Yoko ORYU, French Caribbean: Adieu foulard, adieu madras: A sonic study in (post)colonialism (RILM ref]2011-12101/ref]); Sergio BONANZINGA, Sicily: Navigating responses to global cultural patterns (RILM ref]2011-12111/ref]); Kathryn A. BURNETT, Ray BURNETT, Scotland's Hebrides: Song and culture, transmission, and transformation (RILM ref]2011-12104/ref]); Jennifer CATTERMOLE, Fiji Islands: A sustainable future for sigidrigi? (RILM ref]2011-12107/ref]); Ijahnya CHRISTIAN, English Caribbean: When people cannot talk, they sing (RILM ref]2011-12099/ref]); Judith R. COHEN, Ibiza and Formentera: Worlds of singers and songs (RILM ref]2011-12113/ref]); Cristoforo GARIGLIANO, Aeolian Islands: Three singers, their folk songs, and the interpretation of tradition (RILM ref]2011-12112/ref]); Waldo GARRIDO, Philip HAYWARD, Chiloé: An offshore song culture (RILM ref]2011-12109/ref]); Maria HNARAKI, Crete—Souls of soil: Island identity through song (RILM ref]2011-12110/ref]); Henry M. JOHNSON, Jersey: Jèrriais, song, and language revitalization (RILM ref]2011-12105/ref]); Soraya MARCANO, Spanish Caribbean: Liquid identities (RILM ref]2011-12100/ref]); Owe RONSTRÖM, Gotland: Where folk culture and island overlap (RILM ref]2011-12114/ref]); Heather SPARLING, Cape Breton Island: Living in the past? Gaelic language, song, and competition (RILM ref]2011-12102/ref]); Deatra WALSH, Newfoundland: From Ron Hynes to Hey Rosetta! (RILM ref]2011-12103/ref]); Oli WILSON, Papua New Guinea: Popular music and the continuity of tradition—An ethnographic study of the songs by the band Paramana Strangers (RILM ref]2011-12106/ref]).
Anderson,William M., (Ed.And Pref.), Campbell,Patricia Shehan, (Ed.And Pref.), and Seeger,Anthony, (Foreword)
Format:
Book, Whole
Publication Date:
01/01; 2011
Published:
Lanham: Rowman & Littlefield Education
Location:
African American Research Center, Library, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Notes:
The following contributions are cited separately in RILM: William M. ANDERSON, Michael B. BAKAN, Patricia Shehan CAMPBELL, Jackie Chooi-theng LEW, Phong NGUYỄN, Pornprapit PHOASAVADI, Music of Southeast Asia (RILM ref]2010-13857/ref]); William M. ANDERSON, Patricia Shehan CAMPBELL, Teaching music from a multicultural perspective (RILM ref]2010-13846/ref]); William M. ANDERSON, Kuo-huang HAN, Tatsuko TAKIZAWA, Ricardo D. TRIMILLOS, Music of East Asia (RILM ref]2010-13856/ref]); William M. ANDERSON, Kristin Olson RAO, Music of South Asia: India (RILM ref]2010-13858/ref]); Sarah J. BARTOLOME, Pierre Cary (Kazadi wa Mukuna) KAZADI, Elizabeth OEHRLE, Music of sub-Saharan Africa (RILM ref]2010-13847/ref]); Bryan BURTON, Kay L. EDWARDS, Music of native peoples of North America (RILM ref]2010-13853/ref]); Milton L. BUTLER, Marvelene C. MOORE, Rosita M. SANDS, Linda B. WALKER, African American music (RILM ref]2010-13848/ref]); Patricia Shehan CAMPBELL, David G. HEBERT, World beat (RILM ref]2010-13855/ref]); Patricia Shehan CAMPBELL, Ellen MCCULLOUGH-BRABSON, Euro-American music (RILM ref]2010-13852/ref]); Patricia Shehan CAMPBELL, Music of Europe (RILM ref]2010-13851/ref]); Ann C. CLEMENTS, Peter DUNBAR-HALL, Sarah H. WATTS, Music of Oceania and the Pacific (RILM ref]2010-13854/ref]); David G. HEBERT, Jazz and rock music (RILM ref]2010-13850/ref]); Rita KLINGER, Christopher ROBERTS, George D. SAWA, Terese VOLK TUOHEY, Music of the Middle East (RILM ref]2010-13859/ref]); Dale A. OLSEN, Milagros Agostini QUESADA, Amanda C. SOTO, Music of Latin America and the Caribbean (RILM ref]2010-13849/ref]). The first edition is abstracted as RILM ref]1990-07600/ref], the second as RILM ref]1996-23510/ref].
The term "world beat music" is less than a decade old. The music is a genre defined by the heads of a number of small London-based record labels who found that their records from Africa, Latin America and the Caribbean were not finding rack space. Major record stores had no obvious place for these unclassified sounds. The average listeners have not. Today the major record chains - Spec's, Best Buy, and others - have responded to buyers' demand to make available music from Africa, Cuba, Jamaica, Brazil and Latin America. Finding releases from Senegal's Kouding Cissoko or Baaba Maal is no problem. Finding the Afro-French, hip-hop sound of Les Nubians is simple; so finding the music of Nacio from Dominica, Gilberto Gil from Brazil, or Bamboleo of Cuba.