1st Edition

Interrogating Popular Music and the City

    232 Pages 10 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    How does popular music influence the culture and reputation of a city, and what does a city do to popular music? Interrogating Popular Music and the City examines the ways in which urban environments and music cultures intersect in various locales around the globe. Music and cities have been partners in an often clumsy, sometimes accidental but always exciting dance. Heritage and immigration, noise and art, policy and politics are some of the topics that are addressed in this critical examination of relationships between cities and music. The book draws upon an international array of researchers, encompassing hip hop in Beijing; the city favelas of Brazil; from Melbourne bars to European parliaments; to heritage and tourism debates in Salzburg and Manchester. In doing so, it interrogates the different agendas of audiences, musicians and policy-makers in distinct urban settings.

    1. Introduction: Interrogating the Music City

    Shane Homan, Catherine Strong, Seamus O’Hanlon and John Tebbutt

    Part I Conceptualising the Music City

    2. Locating the City Limits: Examining Overlapping and Competing Policy Concerns in the Management and Promotion of ‘Music Cities’

    Adam Behr

    3. The Night Mayor at Work

    Shane Homan

    Part II Intersections of Music and Nationalism in the City

    4. Beijing Hip Hop: From Banal Cosmopolitanism to Nationalism in the Synchronisation with the West

    Anthony Fung and Qian Zhang

    5. The Birth, Death, and Revitalisation of Chinese Popular Music in Shanghai

    Mengyu Luo and Wenyu Zhong

    6. Other Melodies in a Modern City: The Thai Regime of Sound and Literary Imagination of Ghostly Thai Classical Music in Bangkok   

    Wanchana Tongkhampao

    Part III Movements and Music in the City

    7. The Voice of the City: Hong Kong Cantopop in the Future Continuous Tense?

    Yiu-Wai Chu

    8. Decolonial identities and DIY Music as Political and Social Resistance in the Global South

    Paula Guerra

    9. Beyond ‘Pub Rock’: Immigration, Multiculturalism and the Changing Face of Melbourne’s Live Music Scene

    Jennifer Rose and Seamus O’Hanlon

    Part IV Heritage and Music Cities

    10. Missing the Beat: The Role of Intangible Heritage for Western Urban Policy

    Beate Peter

    11. “Before They Come and Pull the Place Apart”: Venue Loss and Heritage Value in Melbourne’s Music Scenes

    Catherine Strong and Sam Whiting

    12. Ground-Truthing DC Punk History in AdamsMorgan

    Tyler Sonnichsen

    13. Screening Teenagers: Modernity and Music Television in 1960s Melbourne

    John Tebbutt

    Biography

    Shane Homan is Head of the School of Media, Film and Journalism at Monash University, Melbourne. He has published five books and many book chapters and journal articles on cultural policy, particularly intersections between the music industries and national cultural policy.

    Catherine Strong is an Associate Professor at RMIT University in Melbourne, Australia. Her research interests include cultural heritage and history, and gender issues in popular music. She is the co-editor of the journal Popular Music History.

    Seamus O’Hanlon teaches contemporary urban, social and cultural history at Monash University in Melbourne, Australia. His most recent publications include City Life: the New Urban Australia and Music City Melbourne: Urban Culture, History and Policy co-authored with Shane Homan, Catherine Strong and John Tebbutt.

    John Tebbutt has a PhD in History (University of Sydney). John is Associate Professor (Honorary), School of Media and Communication, RMIT University, Melbourne, and at the Faculty of Social Sciences, City University of Hong Kong. He is managing editor with Continuum: Journal of Media and Cultural Studies.