1st Edition

Community-based Traditional Music in Scotland A Pedagogy of Participation

By Josephine L. Miller Copyright 2023
184 Pages 23 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

184 Pages 23 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

184 Pages 23 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

This book examines the community-based learning and teaching of ‘traditional’ music in contemporary Scotland, with implications for transnational theoretical issues. The book draws on a broad range of scholarship and a local case study of a large organisation. A historical perspective provides an overview of new educational formats emerging from the mid-twentieth century folk music revival in... Read more

List of Figures

List of Music Examples

Acknowledgements

Preface

  1. Learning and teaching traditional music: Refocusing the questions
  2. Introduction

    Transmission and enculturation

    ‘Traditional’ music

    Community-based settings

    A ‘non-formal’ setting?

    Communities of practice

    Masters and apprentices

    Family

    Oral tradition and music literacy

    Socialisation

    Researching the case study

    Methods and ethics

    Notes

  3. ‘A passport into a community’: Setting the scene
  4. Learning and teaching: the revival and post-revival contexts

    Learning and teaching: formal education

    ‘Take off’: community-based organisations

    Introducing Glasgow Fiddle Workshop

    Locality: a sense of place

    Introducing the tutors

    GFW in a stylistic community of practice

    Notes

  5. ‘I’m a better learner now’: In the class
  6. Joining a class

    Learning the shared skills

    Learning and teaching a tune

    The role of listening

    Playing it through

    Varying, ornamenting and arranging tunes

    Dealing with notation

    Choosing repertoire

    Notes

  7. ‘Actually doing it’: Participating in performance
  8. Participation or presentation?

    GFW sessions

    Slow session and pre-class warm-up

    Prepare for the pub

    Very slow session

    Islay Inn session

    Concerts

    Cèilidh dances

    Member-led groups

    Notes

  9. ‘You can make it your own’: Individual musical trajectories and organisational constraints
  10. Encouraging agency at GFW

    Self-directed learning

    Making progress: reflecting on learning

    ‘Expressing’ the tune

    ‘Learners’ and ‘musicians’

    Music as leisure and levels of involvement

    Non-participation and dissent

    Musical trajectories beyond GFW

    Notes

  11. ‘A sense of who we are’: Creating a musical identity
  12. A GFW identity

    A community-based identity

    A traditional music identity

    Tensions and boundaries: ‘who we are’ vs. ‘who we are not’

    Notes

  13. Community-based learning and teaching: Towards a pedagogy of participation

Learning and teaching traditional music in a post-revival landscape

The ethos of the ‘community-based’ organisation

Repertoire

Tutors

Learning and teaching practices: between participatory ethos and individual musical trajectory

Conclusion: A pedagogy of participation

Biography

Josephine L. Miller is an ethnomusicologist and community musician based in Scotland. Her main research interest is the transmission of traditional music. She holds an MLitt from the University of Edinburgh and a PhD from the University of Sheffield. In 2017, she received the Hamish Henderson Award for Services to Traditional Music at the MG Alba Scots Trad Music Awards.

"In this deft and convincing study, Josephine Miller sets out to describe the process by which traditional music is being taught and learned in community settings in Scotland in the twenty-first century. This is achieved through a nuanced layering of extant educational theory and ethnographic data gathering, including interviews, observations, and detailed, thick descriptions of the setting… There are chapters here that provide an opportunity for the interested folk musician, whether learner or tutor, to reflect on and inform their own practice. And for those making any kind of study of post-revival folk music education the book can be added straight to the list of compulsory reading."

Matt Price, Folk Music Journal