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[Commlist] CFP: Symposium on the platformization of music production
Tue Oct 01 14:33:07 GMT 2024
CFP: Symposium on the platformization of music production**
/May 2–3, 2025, University of Oslo, Department of Musicology/
The PLATFORM
<https://www.hf.uio.no/imv/english/research/projects/platform/index.html>-project
at University of Oslo’s Department of Musicology invites contributions
to a symposium on the platformization of music production.
This symposium asks how contemporary platforms of music production are
developed and what their significance might be for music making. We
thereby invite explorations of platformization in terms of the
technological platforms as well as the implications for ‘platformized’
creative practice.
The basic meaning of ‘platform’ is a ‘raised level surface on which
people or things can stand’ (Oxford English Dictionary), and it has been
associated with networked services that are able to accommodate a
growing range of users and somehow transform the relationship between
them (e.g. Gillespie, 2010). The notion of platformization of music
making has perhaps primarily been associated with distribution services,
such as Spotify, and the way songwriting is influenced by recommendation
systems and mood-based playlists that promotes listening (e.g. Morris
2020, Kiberg 2023). Recent research has also engaged with the
platformization of production resources, such as online services
offering automated mastering (Landr; see Sterne and Razlogova 2020) or
royalty-free samples (Splice; see Arrieta 2021). Digital audio
workstations, such as Apple’s Logic Pro or Ableton’s Live, increasingly
resemble what Foxman (2019) calls ‘platform tools’ that are ‘integral to
the entire production process’ and able to ‘act as an intermediary
between industries and platforms.’ These technologies increasingly offer
opportunities of online production and real-time collaboration while
also providing networked distribution facilities. Social media
platforms, such as TikTok, are also integrating creative and
distributive activities in new ways, while AI-based platforms offer new
opportunities (and challenges) for music producers as well as consumers
of music.
The symposium encourages a broad approach to the platformization of
music production, including the ‘intricate interplay’ between platforms
and users, and its cultural, social and economic aspects (see Nieborg
and Poell 2018). Platforms have the appeal of being able to support a
growing range of people and practices and to somehow transform the
relationship between them, for instance within the field of
do-it-yourself musicking. Research has, however, increasingly engaged
with who and what platforms actually support and how interactions and
practices might be organized to the benefit of certain interests over
others. We want to inspire further research by drawing attention to the
rise of what we propose to call ‘platforms of production’ and to the
evolving range of digital and networked tools and services that in
various ways facilitate and restrict contemporary music production and
creative audio work in general.
We invite theoretical, empirical, analytical, critical and conceptual
contributions on topics including, but not restricted to:
* The development of contemporary technologies and platforms of
production, including digital audio workstations, plugins, AI tools,
sample libraries, etc.
* Relations between production and distribution platforms, and their
joint influence on music making.
* The platformization of creative practices and changing competency
requirements.
* The extension of platforms across sectors and markets of music. What
kinds of labor relations and roles do platforms of production invite?
* The collection and use of data through platforms, including
potential implications for creative practice (including ethical and
legal issues).
* The use of artificial intelligence in existing and emerging platforms.
* Emerging complimentary platforms and services, from specialized AI
mastering tools (e.g. Landr) to aggregate services (e.g. Splice). Do
we see the contours of a platform ecosystem of music making?
* The significance of platforms of production for music making and
sound design in audiovisual media (including interactive video games).
* The influence of platforms of production on the economy and business
of music making.
* The influence of platforms of production on musical expression and
aesthetics.
* Platformization and challenges to established notions of creativity,
ownership and copyright.
* Sociopolitical implications of the use of different kinds of
platforms, including diversity in music production culture and
practice.
With these suggested topics we encourage contributions from, and indeed
across, the scholarly fields of media studies, music research, cultural
studies, sociology, creative industries research, software studies, and
beyond.
**
*Paper format and abstracts*
We invite proposals for 20-minute presentations (with 10 minutes for
Q&A). The symposium will be organized as an in-person event, with
limited possibilities for remote presentations. Please submit abstracts
of up to 300 words via the submission form
https://nettskjema.no/a/447666 <https://nettskjema.no/a/447666> by
December 10, 2024.
Keynote talks will be announced later.
*Publication*
Based on the theme of the symposium and its paper contributions, we will
work towards publishing an edited collection with an international
academic publisher. Presenting authors will in that case be invited to
submit a full paper for peer review and inclusion as a chapter of this book.
For any questions, please contact Professor Yngvar Kjus at
(yngvar.kjus /at/ imv.uio.no) <mailto:(yngvar.kjus /at/ imv.uio.no)> or Postdoctoral
Research Fellow Emil Kraugerud at (emil.kraugerud /at/ imv.uio.no)
<mailto:(emil.kraugerud /at/ imv.uio.no)>. For more information on the PLATFORM
project, see this link
<https://www.hf.uio.no/imv/english/research/projects/platform/index.html>.
*References*
Arrieta A (2021) Splice and the platformization of hip hop production:
Navigating the online music platform for royalty-free samples, /Global
Hip Hop Studies/ 2(2), 219–236. DOI:
https://doi.org/10.1386/ghhs_00045_1 <https://doi.org/10.1386/ghhs_00045_1>
Gillespie T (2010) The politics of platforms, /New Media and
Society/ 12(3), 347–364. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1177/1461444809342738
<https://doi.org/10.1177/1461444809342738>.
Kiberg H (2023) (Plat)formatted creativity: Creating music in the age of
streaming, /Cultural Sociology/, online first. DOI:
https://doi.org/10.1177/17499755231202055
<https://doi.org/10.1177/17499755231202055>
Morris JW (2020) Music platforms and the optimization of culture,
/Social Media and Society/ 6(3). DOI: 10.1177/2056305120940690
<https://doi.org/10.1177/2056305120940690>_._
Nieborg DB and Poell T (2018) The platformization of cultural
production: Theorizing the contingent cultural commodity, /New Media and
Society/ 20(11), 4275–92. DOI:__https://doi.org/10.1177/1461444818769694
<https://doi.org/10.1177/1461444818769694>_._
Sterne J and Razlogova E (2021) Tuning sound for infrastructures:
Artificial intelligence, automation, and the cultural politics of audio
mastering, /Cultural Studies/ /35/(4–5), 750–770. DOI:
_https://doi.org/10.1080/09502386.2021.1895247_
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