Trajectories and Themes in World Popular Music - Globalization, Capitalism, Identity - Simone Krüger Bridge

Trajectories and Themes in World Popular Music - Globalization, Capitalism, Identity - Simone Krüger Bridge

Neoliberalism and the Global Music Industry

Trajectories and Themes in World Popular Music - Globalization, Capitalism, Identity - Simone Krüger Bridge

Simone Krüger Bridge [+-]
Liverpool John Moores University
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Simone Krüger Bridge is a Reader [Associate Professor] in Music and Chair of the APS Faculty Research Degree Committee at Liverpool John Moores University (UK). She has published two monographs, Experiencing Ethnomusicology: Teaching and Learning in European Universities (2009) and Trajectories and Themes in World Popular Music (2018), and two co-edited collections, The Globalization of Musics in Transit: Music Migration and Tourism (2014) and Ethnomusicology in the Academy: International Perspectives (2011), and is currently working on the edited The Oxford Handbook of Global Popular Music (2 volumes) published by Oxford University Press. Her research on Paraguayan music, which focuses on guitar music culture and identity, has been presented in numerous talks, conference articles, and articles, such as in the The SAGE International Encyclopedia of Music and Culture (2021) and the Journal of the Royal Musical Association (2022). Her current research explores the social value of music participation in two comparative settings: Berta Rojas' music project Jeporeka 2021 and 2022, and Liverpool Cathedral's music outreach programme. Krüger Bridge is ceditor-in-chief of the Journal of World Popular Music, founding book series editor of Transcultural Music Studies (2015-2021), editorial board member for three academic journals, and has been co-editor of Ethnomusicology Forum (2010-2013), an Executive Committee member of the International Association for the Study of Popular Music (2019-2021), and a committee member of the British Forum for Ethnomusicology (2008-2011).

Description

Chapter 2 moves on to the phase of neoliberalism that began in the 1970s. The 1980s marked a new, most recent era and regime of globalization, which was driven by the emergence of new technologies, the “truly” global reach of transnational corporations, and the evolution of neoliberal capitalism. This period is marked by more intense globalizing tendencies, intensified musical commodification and cultural homogenization, and the consolidation of neoliberal capitalism in major industrial economies. The structures and workings of the global music industry illustrate this, dominated by the growth of transnational music corporations and their expansionist strategy in the name of corporate capitalism. Much academic thinking during the 1970s and 1980s was dominated by the idea of cultural imperialism, drawing neo-Gramscian conclusions about the resultant musical diversity, or lack thereof. The 1980s also marked a shift toward a global preoccupation with “image” (notably on Music Television) and the sexualized female form that serves to objectify women. Concepts in feminist media analyses like the “male gaze” and “controlling images” became powerful tools for analyzing and critiquing traditional white supremacist patriarchy, including the representation of black women and femininities. In considering the politics of othering in neoliberal culture, chapter 2 also highlights the way that racist identity constructions still reverberated throughout this phase. Since the early 1990s, academic thinking gradually moved toward explanations of globalizing trends through the lens of hybridization, conceptualized through the idea of “expressive isomorphism”. We now live in a world marked by global cultural interconnectedness, cultural hybridization, and musical participation, through which the global becomes received in new and different ways in different locales.

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Citation

Krüger Bridge, Simone. Neoliberalism and the Global Music Industry. Trajectories and Themes in World Popular Music - Globalization, Capitalism, Identity. Equinox eBooks Publishing, United Kingdom. p. 84-149 Mar 2018. ISBN 9781781796221. https://www.equinoxpub.com/home/view-chapter/?id=34460. Date accessed: 21 Nov 2024 doi: 10.1558/equinox.34460. Mar 2018

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