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Books in the Chicago Studies in Ethnomusicology series

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  • - Popular Music in the Peruvian Andes
    by Joshua Tucker
    £25.49 - 74.49

    Describes the development of chimaycha, a Quechua-language music genre, over the last fifty years, in order to show how changes in performance track and drive evolving conceptions of Andean indigeneity over the same period.

  • - Music, Politics, and Pleasure in Guinea
    by Nomi Dave
    £23.99 - 66.99

  • - The Art of Collective Improvisation in Balinese Music and Beyond
    by Leslie A Tilley
    £29.99 - 83.99

  • - Contemporary Korean Drumming and the Rebirth of Itinerant Performance Culture
    by Nathan Hesselink
    £27.49 - 74.49

    In 1978, four musicians crowded into a cramped basement theater in downtown Seoul, where they, for the first time, brought the rural percussive art of p'ungmul to a burgeoning urban audience. This title traces this reinvention through the rise of the Korean supergroup.

  • - Cultural Intimacy in Turkish Popular Music
    by Martin Stokes
    £29.99 - 83.99

    Presents the voices of three musicians - queer nightclub star Zeki Muren, arabesk originator Orhan Gencebay, and pop diva Sezen Aksu - who collectively have dominated mass media in Turkey since the early 1950s. Using these three singers as a lens, the author examines Turkey's repressive politics and civil violence as well as its public life.

  • - Sundanese Dance and Masculinity in West Java
    by Henry Spiller
    £29.49 - 83.99

    In West Java, Indonesia, all it takes is a woman's voice and a drumbeat to make a man get up and dance. The author draws on decades of ethnographic research to explore the reasons behind this phenomenon, arguing that Sundanese men use dance to explore and enact contradictions in their gender identities.

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