Tropical renditions : making musical scenes in Filipino America
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Tropical renditions : making musical scenes in Filipino America
(Refiguring American music)
Duke University Press, 2016
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Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. [207]-218) and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
In Tropical Renditions Christine Bacareza Balance examines how the performance and reception of post-World War II Filipino and Filipino American popular music provide crucial tools for composing Filipino identities, publics, and politics. To understand this dynamic, Balance advocates for a "disobedient listening" that reveals how Filipino musicians challenge dominant racialized U.S. imperialist tropes of Filipinos as primitive, childlike, derivative, and mimetic. Balance disobediently listens to how the Bay Area turntablist DJ group the Invisibl Skratch Piklz bear the burden of racialized performers in the United States and defy conventions on musical ownership; to karaoke as affective labor, aesthetic expression, and pedagogical instrument; to how writer and performer Jessica Hagedorn's collaborative and improvisational authorial voice signals the importance of migration and place; and how Pinoy indie rock scenes challenge the relationship between race and musical genre by tracing the alternative routes that popular music takes. In each instance Filipino musicians, writers, visual artists, and filmmakers work within and against the legacies of the U.S./Philippine imperial encounter, and in so doing, move beyond preoccupations with authenticity and offer new ways to reimagine tropical places.
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments ix
Flip the Beat: An Introduction 1
1. Sonic Fictions 31
2. The Serious Work of Karaoke 56
3. Jessica Hagedorn's Gangster Routes 87
4. Pinoise Rock 123
Epilogue: Rakenrol Itineraries 155
Notes 187
Bibliography 207
Index 219
by "Nielsen BookData"