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  • MPI Ethno. Forsch.  (1)
  • English  (1)
  • Barendregt, Bart
  • Helms, Dietrich
  • Musicology  (1)
  • 1
    ISBN: 9789048534555
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 online resource (105 pages)
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als
    DDC: 306.484
    RVK:
    Keywords: Popular music-Southeast Asia-History and criticism ; Popular music-Southeast Asia-History and criticism ; Electronic books ; Criticism, interpretation, etc ; Electronic books
    Abstract: Cover -- Table of Contents -- Introduction -- Muted sounds, obscured histories -- Living the modern life -- Four eras -- Research project Articulating Modernity -- 1. Oriental Foxtrots and Phonographic Noise, 1910s-1940s -- New markets -- The rise of female stars and fandom -- Jazz, race, and nationalism -- Box 1.1 Phonographic noise -- Box 1.2 Dance halls -- Box 1.3 The modern woman -- 2. Jeans, Rock, and Electric Guitars, 1950s-mid-1960s -- Youth culture -- Moral indignation -- Local industry -- Beat goes local -- Box 2.1 Gangs -- Box 2.2 Blue Jeans -- Box 2.3 Tremolo guitar -- 3. The Ethnic Modern, 1970s-1990s -- Modern music for the Muslim Malay masses -- Pop history, as we know it -- Subversive sounds -- Making noise in the big melting pot -- What is so modern about the ethnic? -- The sound of longing for home: pop Minang -- Village girl and big city pop diva: The story of Elly Kasim -- Box 3.1 Disco -- Box 3.2 Dangdut -- Box 3.3 Going abroad (in two songs) -- 4. Doing it Digital, 1990s-2000s -- Musical revolutions: Finally indie-pendent? -- Pop, politics, and piety -- Asia around the corner -- Doing it Digital: Three apparent paradoxes -- The Malay Muslim girl-next-door: A deeper conversation with Yuna -- Box 4.1 - JKT48 -- Box 4.2 - An Indonesian indie song -- Box 4.3 - Karaoke discs -- Box 4.4 - SoundCloud communities -- Selected Bibliography -- List of Illustrations -- Illustration 1 – A Malay dondang sayang song recorded in Singapore by Pagoda Record, subsidiary of Deutsche Grammophon, c. 1935 -- Illustration 2 – Quranic text interpretation (tafsir) and translation from Arabic to Malay by a female religious expert (ustazah) recorded by Extra Records (His Master’s Voice) in Indonesia, c. 1938 -- Illustration 3 – Rajuan Irama, an Malay orchestra, c. 1935.
    Note: Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources
    URL: Volltext  (kostenfrei)
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