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E-grāmata: The Bloomsbury Handbook of Popular Music Education: Perspectives and Practices

Edited by (Edinburgh Napier University, UK and the University of the Highlands and Islands, UK), Edited by (New York University, USA), Edited by (Montclair State University, USA)
  • Formāts: 504 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 04-Apr-2019
  • Izdevniecība: Bloomsbury Academic
  • ISBN-13: 9781350049437
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  • Cena: 47,33 €*
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  • Formāts: 504 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 04-Apr-2019
  • Izdevniecība: Bloomsbury Academic
  • ISBN-13: 9781350049437

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The Bloomsbury Handbook of Popular Music Educationdraws together current thinking and practice on popular music education from empirical, ethnographic, sociological and philosophical perspectives. Through a series of unique chapters from authors working at the forefront of music education, this book explores the ways in which an international group of music educators each approach popular music education. Chapters discuss pedagogies from across the spectrum of formal to informal learning, including “outside” and “other” perspectives that provide insight into the myriad ways in which popular music education is developed and implemented. The book is organized into the following sections:
- Conceptualizing Popular Music Education
- Musical, Creative and Professional Development
- Originating Popular Music
- Popular Music Education in Schools
- Identity, Meaning and Value in Popular Music Education
- Formal Education, Creativities and Assessment
Contributions from academics, teachers, and practitioners make this an innovative and exciting volume for students, teachers, researchers and professors in popular music studies and music education.

Recenzijas

The proliferation of scholarship on popular music education in recent times is exciting, but daunting. It was thus absolutely delightful to read The Bloomsbury Handbook of Popular Music Education, an eclectic but cogent collection that, as its subtitle suggests, celebrates diverse perspectives and practices. Chapter after chapter provides insights that help to bring understandings of the field into sharper focus. Highly recommended! * Roger Mantie, Associate Professor and Program Director, Music and Culture, University of Toronto, Canada * Offers a fascinating glimpse into the diverse ways we play, teach, and interact with contemporary music in a variety of contexts. I particularly appreciate hearing the voices of music educators whose perspectives are not frequently heard in the research literature. Essential for anyone interested in exploring the unique experiences of researchers and practitioners involved in popular music education. * Virginia Davis, Professor of Music Education, University of Texas Rio Grande Valley, USA * A valuable new resource on the perspectives and practices related to the use of popular music in education, this collection of essays by well-known educators and musicians addresses many significant topics, such as the conception of popular music education and creativity. These essays also offer an assessment of popular music education, musical meaning, identity, and values of popular music education and professional development in music education, ranging from formal to informal and from school to higher education in international contexts. * Wai-Chung Ho, Professor of Music Education and Sociology of Music, Hong Kong Baptist University, Hong Kong * Moir, Powell, and Smith have provided a thoughtful landscape for artists, teachers, researchers, and teacher educators to consider the different roles, settings, routines, and practices of popular music and popular music education. Presenting a variety of situations and experiences, from considering the versatility of an artists voice in popular music, to the online technological opportunities which might foster musical communities, to strategies for incorporating popular music through traditional methods such as Orff, the authors challenge us to think beyond methods and best practices that teach popular music invite us to consider frameworks for learning with and through popular music. This book is a superb contribution that combines the authors artistic expertise with practical examples for classroom applications. * Cara Bernard, Assistant Clinical Professor of Music Education, Neag School of Education, University of Connecticut, USA * This book makes a gratifying addition to the blossoming field of popular music education, shining a light on a range of key topics - from theory and literacy to songwriting, record production and beyond. A valuable resource for anyone who takes seriously the challenge of teaching popular music well. * Matt Brennan, Reader in Popular Music, University of Glasgow, UK *

Papildus informācija

Provides international perspectives from a range of academics and practitioners, on teaching, assessing, and reflecting on popular music education in a variety of educational contexts.
List of Figures
viii
Contributors ix
Foreword xviii
Joe Bennett
Acknowledgments xx
Introduction: Popular Music Education: Perspectives and Practices 1(8)
Zack Moir
Bryan Powell
Gareth Dylan Smith
Part I Conceptualizing Popular Music Education
9(72)
1 Setting the Agenda: Theorizing Popular Music Education Practice
11(18)
David Henson
Simon Zagorski-Thomas
2 Popular Music Education: A Way Forward or a New Hegemony?
29(16)
Juliet Hess
3 Considering Techne in Popular Music Education: Value Systems in Popular Music Curricula
45(14)
Mark Hunter
4 Tertiary Popular Music Education: Institutions, Innovation and Tradition
59(14)
Gavin Carfoot
Brad Millard
5 The Vanishing Stave? Considering the Value of Traditional Notation Skills in Undergraduate Popular Music Performance Degrees
73(8)
James Dean
Part II Musical, Creative, and Professional Development
81(70)
6 Learning Experiences of Expert Western Drummers: A Cultural Psychology Perspective
83(18)
Bill Bruford
7 Breaking into a "Scene": Creating Spaces for Adolescents to Make Popular Music
101(12)
Sarah Gulish
8 What the Masters Teach Us: Multitrack Audio Archives and Popular Music Education
113(14)
Kirk McNally
Toby Seay
Paul Thompson
9 Singers in Higher Education: Teaching Popular Music Vocalists
127(14)
Kat Reinhert
10 The Adapted Expressive Performance Approach: Performance Techniques for Musicians with Learning Disabilities
141(10)
Blair Kelly
Part III Originating Popular Music
151(76)
11 Songwriting Pedagogy in Higher Education: Distance Collaboration and Reflective Teaching Practices
153(18)
Andrew Krikun
Stephen Ralph Matthews
12 Of Trackers and Top-Liners: Learning Producing and Producing Learning
171(16)
Adam Patrick Bell
13 When Is a Drummer not a Drummer? Developing Coordination, Musicianship, and Creativity through Electronic Drum Performance
187(16)
Bryden Stillie
14 Sleepwalkers, Beware: Toward a Post-Structuralist Critique of Popular Music in Higher Education
203(16)
Zack Moir
John Hails
15 Facilitating Music Video Projects in the Classroom: From YouTube to Musical Playground
219(8)
Christopher Cayari
Part IV Popular Music Education in Schools
227(74)
16 Music in the School: Significance and Purpose
229(20)
John Finney
17 Nonformal Teaching and Informal Learning: Popular Music Education and Orff Schulwerk
249(14)
Martina Vasil
18 Electrifying Tonality: Teaching Music Theory with the Electric Guitar
263(12)
Steffen Incze
19 Popular Music in the Classroom: Perspectives of Preservice Music Educators
275(14)
Fraser Burke Gottlieb
20 Popular Music in the High School: Crafting and Implementing a Curriculum
289(12)
Julie Beauregard
Part V Identity, Meaning, and Value in Popular Music Education
301(72)
21 Popular Music Education: Identity, Aesthetic Experience, and Eudaimonia
303(18)
Gareth Dylan Smith
22 "I See You, Baby..." Expressive Gesture and Nonverbal Communication in Popular Music Performance Education
321(16)
Liz Pipe
23 Breaking Down Barriers to Participation: Perspectives of Female Musicians in Popular Music Ensembles
337(14)
Bryan Powell
24 "Something for All of Us": Indie Ethics in Popular Music Education
351(12)
Lloyd McArton
Nasim Niknafs
25 Children's Construction of Cultural Knowledge and Musical Identity: Beats and Rhymes (A Case Study)
363(10)
Karen Howard
Part VI Formal Education, Creativities, and Assessment
373(80)
26 Taking a Note for a Walk: Improvising Assessment/Assessing Improvisation
375(20)
Paul Kleiman
27 "How Do I Get the Grades?" Creativity and Conflicts of Motivation, Risk, and Reward
395(20)
Renee Stefanie
28 Popular Music: Benefits and Challenges of Schoolification
415(14)
Radio Cremata
29 Digital Storytelling, Reflective Teacher Inquiry, and Student Learning: Action Research via Media Technology
429(12)
Daniel A. Water
30 Techno DIY: Teaching Creativity through Music Production
441(12)
Ross Bicknell
Part VII Epilogue
453(11)
31 On the Road to Popular Music Education: The Road Goes on Forever
455(9)
John Kratus
Index 464
Zack Moir is a Lecturer in Popular Music at Edinburgh Napier University, UK and an active composer and performer.

Bryan Powell is an Assistant Professor of Music Education and Music Technology at Montclair State University, USA, founding editor of the Journal of Popular Music Education, and Executive Director of the Association for Popular Music Education.

Gareth Dylan Smith is Manager of Program Effectiveness at Little Kids Rock, Visiting Research Professor at New York University, USA, and founding editor of the Journal of Popular Music Education.