1st Edition

Musical Ecologies Instrumental Music Ensembles Around the World

Edited By Leon de Bruin, Jane Southcott Copyright 2023
256 Pages 9 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

256 Pages 9 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

256 Pages 9 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

Community music around the world reflects the growing and diverse ways humans collectivise and express themselves in ways that articulate our cultural, social, and environmental complexity. Revisiting, redevising, and reimagining some of the field’s approaches, ideologies, and contexts, this co-edited volume investigates beyond generalist intercultural and internationalist concepts to reveal the... Read more

List of Contributors

Foreword

1 Introduction: Redefining the Field
Leon R de Bruin and Jane Southcott

PART I
Maintaining and disrupting traditions: Cultural, political, environmental ecologies of community music practices

• Maintaining/ disrupting traditions
• Theoretical perspectives and landscapes – re- territory/deterritorialisation
• Reimagining the community music ensemble
• Innovation/ stasis/ in the community ensemble

2 Shifting the conservatory narrative: Designing university curriculum that celebrates communities’ musics
Te Oti Rakena and John Coulter

3 Optimising the feedback loop between community and community ensemble: A case study
Adam Starr

4 The Venda tshikona reed- pipe dance as community music: Mapping the ecology of a South African traditional music
Susan Harrop- Allin and Dean Salant

5 An inclusion strategy approach for deepening community music engagement in non- metropolitan Australia Graham Sattler and Phil Mullen

PART II
The Rhyzomal assemblage: Interactions and localised micro-systems of individuals’ communal existence
• Musical ecologies and ecosystems
• Multiple participation, diverse agencies and identities
• Individual and group agency
• Action and intra- action in community musicking

6 Agua! The flourishing of Latin music in Melbourne, Australia
Leon R de Bruin

7 Synthesis and embodiment: The Lowell String Project as complex musical ecosystem
Elissa Johnson- Green

8 Mount Gambier’s Generations in Jazz: The impact of community and cross- regional partnerships
Adam Hardcastle

9 Friends in Concert: Growing music teacher identities through community music-making
Yan Chen Alvyn Eng, Siew Ling Chua, and James Lee

10 Training and retaining traditions: The Grainger Wind Symphony
Jane Southcott and Leon R de Bruin

PART III
Wider meso- systems of social and cultural change, evolution and innovation
• Specific practices, interactions environments, partnerships and collaborations
• The ethics of specific instrumental community music ensembles
• Local/ glocal/ international perspectives and movements
• Creativities in instrumental community music – how is it different/ same between prof and amateur

11 The Armidale Symphony Orchestra: The ecology of a regional orchestra
Alana Blackburn

12 Friends in music: The Chao Feng Chinese Orchestra, Melbourne, Australia
Jane Southcott and Vicky Liao

13 The Golden Age Ensemble: A community music partnership
Chi Ying Lam

14 PUBlic Choir: Facilitating an emergent musicking community
Graham Sattler

15 Jazz, improvisation, community: The affective constitution of social identity
Chris Stover

16 Postlude
Leon R de Bruin and Jane Southcott

Index

Biography

Leon R de Bruin is an educator, performer, and researcher in music education, creativity, cognition, creative pedagogies, and improvisation. He is Lecturer in Music at the University of Melbourne, Conservatorium of Music, co-ordinating the Master of Music Performance Teaching degree (MMPT). He is a staunch advocate for quality music education in Australia and music teacher education, and is Australian Society for Music Education National President, and an executive of ISME Instrumental and Vocal Teaching Commission (IVMTC). He has published over 50 articles, chapters, and edited books, including Revolutions in Music Education: Historical and Social Implications, Creativities in Arts Education, Research and Practice: International Perspectives for the Future of Learning and Teaching, and Creativity in Education in the Oxford Research Encyclopaedia of Education.

Jane Southcott is a professor, Faculty of Education, Monash University, Australia. Jane researches the history of the music curriculum in Australia, America, and Europe, and she is also a hermeneutic phenomenologist researching community engagement with the arts, multicultural music education, and cultural identity with a focus on lifelong education. Jane teaches in postgraduate programs and supervises many postgraduate research students. Dr Southcott is co-editor of the International Journal of Music Education, a member of the editorial boards of international and national refereed journals, and a life member of the Australian and New Zealand Association for Research in Music Education.