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OverviewThere is growing recognition that improvisation is a vital artistic and ontological practice that can promote developments in many areas of musicianship and beyond. Although improvisation is taught and assessed in education institutions throughout the world, pedagogical research on improvisation is disparate, emerging mainly from case-specific accounts of particular musical traditions, for instance, jazz and free improvisation. Furthermore, in certain musical contexts, improvisation is often viewed primarily as a means to an end or as a method to construct musical artifacts. In contrast, this volume considers improvisation within the field of popular music education not as a ""means to an end"" but as the opportunity for liberatory praxis. Editors Gareth Dylan Smith and Zack Moir view improvisation and improvisatory thinking within education as means to enhance, challenge, rethink, or disrupt normative pedagogic approaches within popular music education. Improvisation offers liberatory potential through resisting, undermining, and refocusing many of the forces in music education and cultures of music learning that can have dehumanizing effects on learners, teachers, scholars, and practitioners alike. The editors have curated a unique collection of essays wherein improvisation as liberatory praxis works as an exploratory framework. Together these chapters--written by leading scholars, practitioners, and musicians from around the world--explore ways to consider improvisation and improvisatory thinking within education as means to enhance, challenge, rethink, or disrupt normative pedagogic approaches within and around popular music education. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Gareth Dylan Smith (Assistant Professor of Music, Music Education, Assistant Professor of Music, Music Education, Boston University) , Zack Moir (Professor of Learning and Teaching in Music, Professor of Learning and Teaching in Music, Edinburgh Napier University)Publisher: Oxford University Press Inc Imprint: Oxford University Press Inc Dimensions: Width: 15.00cm , Height: 2.00cm , Length: 22.60cm Weight: 0.363kg ISBN: 9780197754290ISBN 10: 0197754295 Pages: 280 Publication Date: 20 April 2026 Audience: College/higher education , Professional and scholarly , Tertiary & Higher Education , Professional & Vocational Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: To order Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us. Table of ContentsIntroduction: Improvisation and Pedagogical Freedom in Popular Music Education Gareth Dylan Smith and Zack Moir Chapter 1. Improvisation and Higher Popular Music Education: Onto-Epistemic heterogeneity, liberation, and counter hegemonic praxis Zack Moir Chapter 2. Playing with Failure: Improvisation as Resistance to Institutional, Ideological, and Industrial Norms in Higher Popular Music Education Robert S. McLaughlin Chapter 3. Freedom's more than ""just another word for nothing left to lose"": New musical virtuosities, healthy musical identities, and teaching improvisation Raymond MacDonald Chapter 4. Improvisation as Liberatory Praxis Frank Abrahams Chapter 5. An Unexpected Journey: The Art of Teaching as Improvisation in High School Choir Austina Lee Chapter 6. Percussive, Prosaic, Punkademic Praxis and Popular Music Education Gareth Dylan Smith Chapter 7. Improvised Teaching: Popular Music, Methodolatry, and Consciousness David Knapp Chapter 8. Reflecting on Carnivalesque Improvisation as Anti-Racist Public Pedagogy: The Case of The Rumba Madre David Diéguez Chapter 9. The Ethics of Improvisation Through the World Music Pedagogy Approach William J. Coppola and Patricia Shehan Campbell Chapter 10. Create and Connect: Improvisation as a Collaborative Learning Experience Heloisa Feichas and Sean Gregory Chapter 11. ""The Happiness is Better When It's Shared"": Reflecting on and Contextualizing the York College Community Jam Session Tom Zlabinger Chapter 12. ""You were only waiting for this moment to arise"": Dialoguing on the possibilities of improvisation pedagogy for a liberatory music education Rolf Martin Snustad and David Lines Chapter 13. Improvisation is Not a Toy: Liberating from Liberation Itself Ed Sarath IndexReviewsAuthor InformationGareth Dylan Smith is Assistant Professor of Music, Music Education at Boston University. His books include A Philosophy of Playing Drum Kit, I Drum, Therefore I Am, and Authentic Drum Kit Pedagogy. Smith is a drummer and released his duets album, Permission Granted, in 2024, followed by Pathétique with pianist Austina Lee in 2025. His research interests include drumming, punk/DIY/DIWO, and eudaimonia/hedonia. Smith is founding co-editor of the Journal of Popular Music Education, past president of the Association for Popular Music Education, and founding co-editor of the book series, Contemporary Music Making and Learning. Zack Moir is Professor of Learning and Teaching in Music at Edinburgh Napier University. His research interests are in higher popular music education, social justice, and composition/improvisation pedagogies. Moir edited The Bloomsbury Handbook of Popular Music Education, The Routledge Research Companion to Popular Music Education, and Action Based Approaches in Popular Music Education. He is also an active composer/musician, writing for saxophone and tape, and solo cello, and creating reactive generative sound art installations for the Edinburgh International Science Festival. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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