Nigel Pegrum, 'didjeridu-friendly sections', and what constitutes an "indigenous" CD : an Australian case study of producing "world music" recordings
chapter
posted on 2017-12-06, 00:00authored byKarl Neuenfeldt
"This chapter uses a case study from Australia to explore some of the dynamics and relationships embedded in the industrial and cultural production of diverse musical styles loosely grouped under the rubric "Indigenous" (Mitchell 1(993), which often falls within the marketing niche of "world music" (Taylor 1997: 1-37). The cultural politics, ethical dilemmas, and rip-offs arising out of such recording projects have attracted considerable academic and legal attention. Less attended to, however, is the studio practice of music producers and engineers (a notable exception is Mcintjes 2003), specifically relating to how they address aesthetic, ethical, and economic factors when they impact upon notions of what is and is not an Indigenous recording and thus "authentic" (Erlmann 1996)."
Funding
Category 1 - Australian Competitive Grants (this includes ARC, NHMRC)
History
Editor
Greene PD; Porcello T
Parent Title
Wired for sound : engineering and technologies in sonic cultures
Start Page
84
End Page
102
Number of Pages
19
ISBN-10
0819565172
Publisher
Wesleyan Press
Place of Publication
Hanover USA
Open Access
No
External Author Affiliations
Faculty of Informatics and Communication; TBA Research Institute;