Originally posted by gradus
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"Universalism" and "Imperialism" - how does Music "spread"?
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Originally posted by doversoul1 View PostCan you think of any equivalent from non-Western music? If you are happy, clap you hands is originally a Japanese pop song but is composed in the western scale.
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Richard Tarleton
Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostAt a tangent though, when you say that Africa during the British Empire didn't contribute much to the economy, surely the slave trade was extremely profitable? and wasn't it also a prerequisite for the profits extracted from the Caribbean colonies?
Serial_Apologist
In instances of colonial conquest the means of transmssion would have been through the elders of particular societies, in whom authority was vested, with the added "legitimacy" of "yours (ships, guns) are bigger than ours (spears, bows and arrows)", and elders are subject to the lure of inducements, financial and culturally interconnected, of course, wherever they are, and thus would have commenced a chain action in which in, for example, colonised parts of Africa would "take on" aspects of Western music (instruments with their associated tunings, diatonic counterpoint, harmony and associated forms (songs)) along with their social and economic roles and performance contexts.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostBut the "western scale" didn't originate in Japan though, did it?!!
So are there any tunes from non-Western music that enough people in the West can hum along?
Or have a got you wrong?
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[QUOTE=Richard Tarleton;730178]
I'm still puzzling over the mechanics of this and would welcome an example. As I've already discussed re India, nothing could have been further from the minds of the colonisers than music, (beyond the obvious missionaries with hymns, and army teaching native regiments to play brass instruments and bagpipes in military bands....) which was not a marketable commodity until (for the most part) post-independence - unlike Indian fabrics and design, Oriental ceramics, etc., the plastic arts which would be marketed in Europe.
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Originally posted by doversoul1 View PostThat was what I meant. You can’t say that this tune is a product of non-Western culture/music.
So are there any tunes from non-Western music that enough people in the West can hum along?
Or have a got you wrong?
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostThe first thought that came to me was the theme music to the film "Tea House of the August Moon" - It would depend on what one regarded as being "non-Western music". This goes to the heart of what is a very complex issue, one which fades into the mists of time and history, and arguably nowhere better summed up than by jazz, especially black American jazz musicians, who feel in particularly painful ways the memory schism brought about by slavery to the continuities in their musical inheritance.Last edited by doversoul1; 18-03-19, 16:02.
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Originally posted by gradus View PostI didn't know it was japanese, it sounds western to me. Happy Birthday counts then as universally popular?
I’m not getting at you personally. It’s just that that is the point I am interested in.
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Not necessarily directly relevant, but:
Japanese music is of course pentatonic, and so is a great deal of non-Western music from many parts of the world, although it seems to me that Japanese pentatonic scales are more varied than in most other traditions (including the Chinese and Korean traditions from which they're descended). Moreover, the oldest surviving pitched instruments (bone flutes) also seem to use a five-note scale, as do many folk traditions in Europe, and indeed five-note scales are at the heart of the blues and jazz traditions which arose from the mixing of those folk musics with the music African slaves brought with them. Seven-note scales such as are used in most Western music go back at least to ancient Greece, although they're shared with Arabic/Persian traditions and music of the Indian subcontinent, which is where I suspect they ultimately stem from (together with the Indo-European languages of course). It would be an interesting piece of speculative musicology to try and trace musical origins in the same sort of way that linguists do.
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostNot necessarily directly relevant, but:
Japanese music is of course pentatonic, and so is a great deal of non-Western music from many parts of the world, although it seems to me that Japanese pentatonic scales are more varied than in most other traditions (including the Chinese and Korean traditions from which they're descended).
Moreover, the oldest surviving pitched instruments (bone flutes) also seem to use a five-note scale, as do many folk traditions in Europe, and indeed five-note scales are at the heart of the blues and jazz traditions which arose from the mixing of those folk musics with the music African slaves brought with them. Seven-note scales such as are used in most Western music go back at least to ancient Greece, although they're shared with Arabic/Persian traditions and music of the Indian subcontinent, which is where I suspect they ultimately stem from (together with the Indo-European languages of course). It would be an interesting piece of speculative musicology to try and trace musical origins in the same sort of way that linguists do.
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Richard Tarleton
Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostI think the example is right there in African popular music - in the harmonies, the dilutions of the rhythmic complexities, the jazz inflexions, the omnipresence of western instruments and associated arrangement models additional to or substituting for indigenous ones. Not much thought would have had to be devoted by the colonial powers as to how this was to be undetaken. As we've observed in the west, music is a very straightforward means of "mind colonisation", especially where elements of the imported forms are compatible with those already present.
It would have helped (me) to have better understood the terms of reference of this discussion. I was simplistically equating "imperialism" with "empire", and used the term "post-imperial" in the sense of "post-independence" or "post-colonial", before RB put me right . In thinking about Mr GG's original question I was merely pointing out that music played no part in the imperial (or should that be empire) project, hymns and military bands apart, that the imperialists (civilian, military or settlers) were on the whole unmusical philistines, and that unlike other art forms which were copied, exported or looted, music had no commercial value to the imperialists.
I'm a big fan of Tinariwen, by the way - who make me wonder about analogies in the natural world with things like convergent evolution, generalists and specialists, survival and extinction....also Youssou N'Dour......saw Ladysmith Black Mambazo in Cardiff ....
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Originally posted by Richard Tarleton View PostThanks, much clearer We seem to be talking about an economic and cultural dominance for which imperialism (empire) paved the way, even though it didn't for the most part express itself until empire had largely ceased to be (except in the cases of Rhodesia and S Africa,where pernicious white rule was prolonged but a lot of good music went on......)
It would have helped (me) to have better understood the terms of reference of this discussion. I was simplistically equating "imperialism" with "empire", and used the term "post-imperial" in the sense of "post-independence" or "post-colonial", before RB put me right . In thinking about Mr GG's original question I was merely pointing out that music played no part in the imperial (or should that be empire) project, hymns and military bands apart, that the imperialists (civilian, military or settlers) were on the whole unmusical philistines, and that unlike other art forms which were copied, exported or looted, music had no commercial value to the imperialists.
I'm a big fan of Tinariwen, by the way - who make me wonder about analogies in the natural world with things like convergent evolution, generalists and specialists, survival and extinction....also Youssou N'Dour......saw Ladysmith Black Mambazo in Cardiff ....
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Originally posted by doversoul1 View PostYes, from the point of the West, its music, some of it (Happy Birthday etc.) at any rate, looks universal but do you know any non-Western music/tunes that people in the West can say ‘yes, we all know it’? And if we can’t think of any non-Western tunes, then Western music is universal but nobody else’s is?
I’m not getting at you personally. It’s just that that is the point I am interested in.
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Originally posted by gradus View PostI didn't think you were and yes it would seem that Western music is as close as we can get to universal. Much the same could be said of the English language which is still I think spoken more widely than any other although by fewer people than Chinese(I think?).
A piece of Horrible History
Japan signed the Peace (and trade) Treaty with America in the mid-19 century, which was Japan’s first formal diplomatic contact with the West. Immediately after the signing, one of the first things the newly formed Japanese government did was to create its own military band, as it was so impressed by the Commander Perry’s brass band. Within a few years, the government was sending talented young men to France and Germany to study composition. The first music college was established in 1887. For many years, the band performed Western classical music at formal occasions where Western guests were present. I haven’t checked if there are any scholarly articles about this but I’m sure this was not a development America had expected. The power of music or Imperialism at work?
I am aware that brass band was always used to demonstrate the power but all the same.
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