Entertainment Books:

Popular Music Industries and the State

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Description

This volume studies the relationships between government and the popular music industries, comparing three Anglophone nations: Scotland, New Zealand and Australia. At a time when issues of globalization and locality are seldom out of the news, musicians, fans, governments, and industries are forced to reconsider older certainties about popular music activity and their roles in production and consumption circuits. The decline of multinational recording companies, and the accompanying rise of promotion firms such as Live Nation, exemplifies global shifts in infrastructure, profits and power. Popular music provides a focus for many of these topics—and popular music policy a lens through which to view them. The book has four central themes: the (changing) role of states and industries in popular music activity; assessment of the central challenges facing smaller nations competing within larger, global music-media markets; comparative analysis of music policies and debates between nations (and also between organizations and popular music sectors); analysis of where and why the state intervenes in popular music activity; and how (and whether) music fits within the ‘turn to culture’ in policy-making over the last twenty years. Where appropriate, brief nation-specific case studies are highlighted as a means of illuminating broader global debates.

Author Biography:

Shane Homan is Associate Professor of English, Communications, and Performance Studies at Monash University, Australia. Martin Cloonan is Professor of Popular Music Politics at the University of Glasgow, UK. Jennifer Cattermole is Lecturer in Music at Otago University, New Zealand.
Release date Australia
August 14th, 2020
Pages
260
Audience
  • Tertiary Education (US: College)
ISBN-13
9780367597979
Product ID
33466628

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