Burma's pop music industry : creators, distributors, censors

Author(s)

    • MacLachlan, Heather

Bibliographic Information

Burma's pop music industry : creators, distributors, censors

Heather MacLachlan

(Eastman/Rochester studies ethnomusicology / Ellen Koskoff, series editor)

University of Rochester Press, 2011

Available at  / 2 libraries

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. [203]-211) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Burma's Pop Music Industry is the first book to explore the contemporary pop music industry in a country that is little known or understood in the West. Based on years of fieldwork in Burma/Myanmar, Heather MacLachlan's work explores the ways in which aspiring musical artists are forging a place within the highly repressive social and political context that is Burma today. It deals sensitively with issues such as negotiating local and global styles,performance contexts and practices, and, more importantly, with ethical issues such as the anonymity of informants and the place of Western ethnomusicologists in countries outside the West. Drawn from interviews conducted from 2007 through 2009 with Burmese composers, performers, producers, concert promoters, journalists, recording engineers, radio station employees, music teachers, and censors in Yangon -- Burma's largest city and the locus of all pop music production -- Burma's Pop Music Industry represents a significant contribution both to popular music studies and to Southeast Asian studies. Heather MacLachlan is Assistant Professor of Music, University of Dayton.

Table of Contents

Introduction The Creators of Burmese Pop Music The Sound of Burmese Pop Songs Learning Music in Burma Today Six Facets of the Burmese Pop Music Industry Musicians and the Censors: The Negotiation of Power Conclusion: The Significance of the Burmese Perspective

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