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[Commlist] Call for Papers: Popular Music Education in Wales
Mon Jan 21 15:03:28 GMT 2019
*Call for Papers: Popular Music Education in Wales*
*
*
As noted by the likes of Hobsbawm and Ranger (1992), Ellis (2000),Hill
(2007) and Carr (2010), Wales has a unique landscape culturally,
politically, linguistically and of course musically. Like other Small
Nations, the country, which was devolved in 1998, has a distinct set of
challenges in order to ensure it exploits the full potential of Creative
Industries such as music. In terms of popular music education, this
broader landscape is/has been informed via initiatives funded by Welsh
Government (The Welsh Music Foundation), the Arts Council (Forté, the
Music Industry Development Fund, Horizons 12, Community Music Wales),
Wales Arts International (the International Development Fund) and local
councils. Cardiff Council for example are working with Sound Diplomacy,
who are developing a strategy to make Cardiff the UKs first ‘Music
City’, while Rhonnda Cynon Taff co-fund the Forté project. All of these
initiatives, some of which are co -funded by the likes of the PRS
Foundation, The British Council and the BBC, are intended at least in
part to ‘educate’ stakeholders /within/ the Welsh Music Industry, from
grass roots to international engagement.
In addition to these funded activities, a number of
musicians such as Martyn Joseph, Meic Stevens, The Super Furry Animals,
The Alarm, and Gwenno Saunders (whose recent album /Le Kov/, (2018) was
sung in Cornish) can be regarded as indicative examples of musicians
whose agendas are at least partially related to educating the /general
public/, in subject matters ranging from the importance of minority
languages, the Aberfan disaster and the impacts of Thatcherism on the
demise of the mining industry.
In terms of education, all of these practices are
positioned outside of ‘mainstream’ education, but can be regarded as
existing in tandem with discussions such as the place of popular music
in the school curriculum, which has been a minor but pervasive part of
ongoing recent debates in the Senedd. Indeed, over the last few years,
Wales has received a great deal of negative press concerning the lack of
importance the Welsh Assembly places on music and although the ‘decline
of instrumental teaching’ is by far the most pervasive subject, the
place of popular music within this landscape is an interesting subject
for popular music scholars to consider. With a recent report by the
Culture, Welsh Language and Communications Committee mentioning a
“distinct lack of infrastructure for rock, pop and folk”, suggesting
that a “separate line of enquiry” is implemented (/Hitting the Right
Note/, p. 46), it begs the questions, what would this enquiry look like
and why is popular music such a peripheral part of mainstream Welsh
education nationally? Interestingly and perhaps alarmingly, the
aforementioned recommendation by the Culture, Welsh Language and
Communications Committee was rejected by Education Minister Kirsty
Williams in her official response dated July 27^th 2018, although she
does verify the intension to “continue working with the Minister for
Culture, Tourism and Sport and the Welsh Local Government Association,
to support “less traditional forms of music, including rock and pop
ensembles”.
These examples represent indicative examples of debates
and initiatives related to popular music education in Wales, some of
which are happening now. This collection of essays for the /Journal of
Popular Music Education/ hopes to examine this complex infrastructure.
Potential essays may include, but are not limited to:
·Case Studies of good practice in Wales, in which popular music has been
used as a means of education. This could include government/Arts
Council/charity funded projects or those that are initiated by the
community. Practices could range from popular music-based exhibitions,
community plays, to funded projects such as Community Music Wales and Forté.
·Considerations of the historical practices of Welsh Government
interaction with popular music education.
·The impact of practitioners such as Martyn Joseph, American vocalist
Paul Robeson, Meic Stevens and The Super Furry Animals on educating
communities on historical and political events related to Wales’
industrial past and present.
·Analysis of the impacts (positive and negative) and infrastructures of
popular music in school, further and higher education in Wales.
·Critical considerations of the ways in which the Welsh popular music
industry has worked or could work with mainstream education systems.
·Factors considering The Welsh Language within Popular Music Education
·The impacts of popular music education on careers in Wales
Please submit a 300-word abstract of your intended area of study to
either Professor Paul Carr ((paul.carr /at/ southwales.ac.uk)
<mailto:(paul.carr /at/ southwales.ac.uk)>) or Professor Helena Gaunt by
((Helena.gaunt /at/ rwcmd.ac.uk) <mailto:(Helena.gaunt /at/ rwcmd.ac.uk)>) by March
1st 2019. Once authors have been confirmed, essays of circa 7000 words
need to be complete for December 1st 2019, for publication in the
November 2020 edition of/The Journal of Popular Music Education/.
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