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IASPM UK & Ireland
IASPM UK & Ireland
Online Conference 19th May - 31st July 2020
  • Information
  • Registration
  • Closing Session: How Was It for You?
  • Conference Sessions
    • Session 1: Multiculturalism and Diaspora
    • Session 2: The Virtuoso and the Dilettante – Performing Popular Music
    • Session 3: Analysing Popular Music
    • Session 4: Anti-Establishment, Rebellion and Commerce
    • Session 5: Theme: Pedagogies of Popular Music Practice
    • Session 6: Theme: Identity and Theatricality
    • Session 7: Theme: Geographies of Popular Music and Transculturalism
    • Session 8: Theme: The Industrial and Financial Mechanisms of Popular Music
    • Session 9: Theme: Live Music
    • Session 10: Theme: Music and Technology
  • FAQ

Category: Session 1: Multiculturalism and Diaspora

Alex de Lacey (Goldsmiths, University of London, UK)

May 19, 2020 Alex de Lacey 4 Comments

“Wot Do U Call it? Doof Doof”: articulations of glocality in Australian grime music [BACK] Abstract: Grime music is a vital…

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Posted in: Session 1: Multiculturalism and Diaspora

Ruth Adams (Kings College London, UK)

Ruth Adams 6 Comments

Grime – Expanding the Parameters of English Folk Music [BACK] Abstract: This paper makes the case for Grime music to…

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Posted in: Session 1: Multiculturalism and Diaspora

Lewis Kennedy (Independent Scholar, UK)

Lewis Kennedy 6 Comments

‘I grew up in Streatham’: Rap, Reactions, Comments, and Capital on YouTube [BACK] Abstract: YouTube offers unmatched variety for those…

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Posted in: Session 1: Multiculturalism and Diaspora

Christopher Doll (Rutgers University, USA)

Christopher Doll 3 Comments

Five Taken: The Rhythmic Influence of the Dave Brubeck Quartet on British-American Pop-Rock [BACK] Abstract: Considering the overwhelming majority of…

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Posted in: Session 1: Multiculturalism and Diaspora

Richard Elliott (Newcastle University, UK)

Richard Elliott 9 Comments

‘This Is Our Grime’: Encounter, Strangeness and Translation as Responses to Lisbon’s Batida Scene [BACK] Batida has come to be…

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Posted in: Session 1: Multiculturalism and Diaspora

Julia Szivak (Birmingham City University, UK)

Julia Szivak 1 Comment

‘Half Moghul, Half Mowgli’ – Desi hip hop and the representation of South Asian diasporas [BACK] Unfortunately Youtube has removed…

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Posted in: Session 1: Multiculturalism and Diaspora

Steven Gamble (BIMM Brighton, UK)

Steven Gamble 3 Comments

“This is London city, we the hottest in the world”: cultural perceptions of the London scene’s ‘grime renaissance’ [BACK] Abstract:…

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Posted in: Session 1: Multiculturalism and Diaspora

Catherine Tackley (University of Liverpool, UK)

Catherine Tackley 2 Comments

“Snakehips Swing”: Race, Nationality and Identity in British Dance Music [BACK] Abstract: The increasing identification of jazz as black music…

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Posted in: Session 1: Multiculturalism and Diaspora

Eithne Quinn (University of Manchester, UK)

Eithne Quinn 1 Comment

London drill, racism and joint enterprise criminal cases [BACK] Abstract: This paper considers the use by prosecutors of rap lyrics…

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Posted in: Session 1: Multiculturalism and Diaspora
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