World Music and the Black Atlantic: Producing and Consuming African-Cuban Musics on World Music Stages

World Music and the Black Atlantic: Producing and Consuming African-Cuban Musics on World Music Stages

by Aleysia K. Whitmore
World Music and the Black Atlantic: Producing and Consuming African-Cuban Musics on World Music Stages

World Music and the Black Atlantic: Producing and Consuming African-Cuban Musics on World Music Stages

by Aleysia K. Whitmore

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Overview

In the mid-20th century, African musicians took up Cuban music as their own and claimed it as a marker of black Atlantic connections and of cosmopolitanism untethered from European colonial relations. Today, Cuban/African bands popular in Africa in the 1960s and '70s have moved into the world music scene in Europe and North America, and world music producers and musicians have created new West African-Latin American collaborations expressly for this market niche. World Music and the Black Atlantic follows two of these bands, Orchestra Baobab and AfroCubism, and the industry and audiences that surround them-from musicians' homes in West Africa, to performances in Europe and North America, to record label offices in London. World Music and the Black Atlantic examines the intensely transnational experiences of musicians, industry personnel, and audiences as they collaboratively produce, circulate, and consume music in a specific post-colonial era of globalization.

Musicians, industry personnel, and audiences work with and push against one another as they engage in personal collaborations imbued with histories of global travel and trade. They move between and combine Cuban and Malian melodies, Norwegian and Senegalese markets, and histories of slavery and independence as they work together to create international commodities. Understanding the unstable and dynamic ways these peoples, musics, markets, and histories intersect elucidates how world music actors assert their places within, and produce knowledge about, global markets, colonial histories, and the black Atlantic. World Music and the Black Atlantic offers a nuanced view of a global industry that is informed and deeply marked by diverse transnational perspectives and histories of transatlantic exchange.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780190083953
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Publication date: 05/26/2020
Pages: 264
Product dimensions: 9.10(w) x 6.10(h) x 0.60(d)

About the Author

Aleysia K. Whitmore is an Assistant Professor of Ethnomusicology at the Lamont School of Music, University of Denver. Her research focuses on the world music industry, globalization, and cultural policy. She has published articles in Ethnomusicology and MusiCultures, and she has taught popular music, world music, and classical music courses at Brown University, Boston College, the University of Miami, and the University of Colorado Denver. She holds a BMus from the University of Toronto and AM and PhD degrees in ethnomusicology from Brown University.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgements

Introduction

Part I Industry
Chapter 1 Setting the Scene: The World Music Industry
Chapter 2 The Art of Representing the Other

Part II Musicians
Chapter 3 Cuban Music is African Music: Musicians and their Music
Chapter 4 Musicians and the Industry

Part III Audiences
Chapter 5 Frames
Chapter 6 Experiencing Pleasure

Postlude
Moving forward and looking back: Where are We? Where are We Going?

Bibliography
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