ABSTRACT

Recorded Music in Creative Practices: Mediation, Performance, Education brings new critical perspectives on recorded music research, artistic practice, and education into an active dialogue.

Although scholars continue to engage keenly in the study of recordings and studio practices, less attention has been devoted to integrating these newer developments into music curricula. The fourteen chapters in this book bring fresh insight to the art and craft of recording music and offer readers ways to bridge research and pedagogy in diverse educational, academic, and music industry contexts. By exploring a wide range of genres, methods, and practices, this book aims to demonstrate how engaging with recordings, recording processes, material artefacts, studio spaces, and revised music history narratives means we can promote new understandings of the past, more creative performance in the present, and freer collaboration and experimentation inside and outside of the recording studio; enhance creative teaching and learning; inform and stimulate reform of the institutional processes and structures that frame musical training; and ultimately promote more diverse music curricula and communities of practice.

This book will be of value to educators, researchers, practitioners (performers, composers, recordists), students in music and music-related fields, recording enthusiasts, and readers with a keen interest in the subject. 

chapter |16 pages

Introduction

New approaches to integrating the study and practice of recording in higher music education

part I|68 pages

Recordings as agents of mediation

chapter 2|14 pages

Reinterpreting the history of the tenor voice

An autoethnographic study using early recordings

chapter 3|20 pages

The enchantment of phonography

Materiality and mediation in early twentieth-century children's recordings

chapter 4|18 pages

Recorded performance reviewed

Discovering classical music recordings through critics' writings

part II|69 pages

(Re)creative performances in context

chapter 6|16 pages

Performing rock in the recording studio

Agency and structure within creative practice

chapter 7|15 pages

Furrowing sound

Performance record cutting

chapter 8|18 pages

From magnetic tape to digital media

Performative approaches to the recorded contents of Constança Capdeville's experimental musical works

part III|108 pages

Educational prospects and challenges

chapter 9|19 pages

Nurturing the musical imagination

Listening to recordings for self-regulated and creative learning

chapter 10|17 pages

Early recordings and the training of performers

Lessons from a European conservatoire

chapter 11|19 pages

Teaching the rights way

The case for integrating copyright into the higher music education curriculum

chapter 12|17 pages

The analogue music studio

Education and research as heritage-in-process

chapter 14|15 pages

Afterword

Acknowledging our cyborg identities in the music history curriculum