Indian Music and the West

Author:   Gerry Farrell (Lecturer in Music, Lecturer in Music, City University, London)
Publisher:   Oxford University Press
ISBN:  

9780198167174


Pages:   254
Publication Date:   09 December 1999
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
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Indian Music and the West


Overview

Indian Music and the West examines perceptions and representations of Indian music in the West over a period of two hundred years, ranging from orientalist studies of Indian history and culture in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, to the adoption of elements from Indian music in Western popular culture in the latter half of the twentieth century. Gerry Farrell charts the place of Indian music within the context of colonialism, the use of Indian imagery in Western popular songs and on the stage, and the use of the early days of the gramophone in India. Farrell also demonstrates how Indian music has been discovered and re-discovered in the West during the period discussed, and how these discoveries have reflected changing cultural, social, and political relations between India and the West.

Full Product Details

Author:   Gerry Farrell (Lecturer in Music, Lecturer in Music, City University, London)
Publisher:   Oxford University Press
Imprint:   Oxford University Press
Dimensions:   Width: 15.60cm , Height: 1.50cm , Length: 23.40cm
Weight:   0.382kg
ISBN:  

9780198167174


ISBN 10:   0198167172
Pages:   254
Publication Date:   09 December 1999
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
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 Contents

Reviews

a welcome addition to scholarship devoted to Indian colonial and post-colonial cultural production. Nilanjana Bhattacharjya, Asian Music: Fall/Winter 00/01. Farrell's ... foray into archival sources compellingly details the subtleties of power play in India's and Britain's struggle to control Indian music. It is precisely these features that will prove most interesting to those scholars outside the field of music. Nilanjana Bhattacharjya, Asian Music: Fall/Winter 00/01. This is a remarkably balanced, wonderfully objective book Yehudi Menuhin, THES Taking an historical line, Gerry Farrell has a sharp eye for the sometimes wilful, sometimes comic misuses and failures of understanding that typified the colonial experience. Robert Maycock, BBC Music intriguing book ... Indian Music and The West is a substantial piece of scholarly research, with some musical analysis and examples ... you're interested in the web of routes that led to these contemporary sounds, Farrell's book is an ideal place to start. Andy Hamilton, The Wire intriguing book ... if you're interested in the web of routes that led to these contemporary sounds, Farrell's book is an ideal place to start Andy Hamilton, Wire a fine work, ambitious in conception and meticulous in execution ... these case studies amount to nothing less than an astounding two-century historical overview of (what Farrell variously terms) musical orientalism, colonialism, and postmodern exoticism ... I applaud Gerry Farrell's truly visionary work. I think that his book may prove to be as important a resource for South Asian studies as has been Daniel Neuman's The Life of Music in North India (1980). While Neuman's work was the first major anthropological study of a South Asian art music tradition, Farrell has blazed a pathway equally important for our time, articulating the interweaving of the many strands which have constructed the relationship between Indian Music and the West. Matthew Allen, The Journal of Asian Studies the first thoroughly researched work examining the ways the West has engaged Indian music over a period extending back to the eighteenth century. There is much to applaud in Farrell's work ... Farrell's book makes a positive contribution to the ethnomusicology of cultures in contact ... an engaging work that will be of particular interest to South Asianists and to ethnomusicologists who have a particular interest in crosscultural musical interactions. Stephen Slawek, Yearbook for Traditional Music, 31/1999


Fascinating. --Choice


the first thoroughly researched work examining the ways the West has engaged Indian music over a period extending back to the eighteenth century. There is much to applaud in Farrell's work ... Farrell's book makes a positive contribution to the ethnomusicology of cultures in contact ... an engaging work that will be of particular interest to South Asianists and to ethnomusicologists who have a particular interest in crosscultural musical interactions. * Stephen Slawek, Yearbook for Traditional Music, 31/1999 * a fine work, ambitious in conception and meticulous in execution ... these case studies amount to nothing less than an astounding two-century historical overview of (what Farrell variously terms) musical orientalism, colonialism, and postmodern exoticism ... I applaud Gerry Farrell's truly visionary work. I think that his book may prove to be as important a resource for South Asian studies as has been Daniel Neuman's The Life of Music in North India (1980). While Neuman's work was the first major anthropological study of a South Asian art music tradition, Farrell has blazed a pathway equally important for our time, articulating the interweaving of the many strands which have constructed the relationship between Indian Music and the West. * Matthew Allen, The Journal of Asian Studies * intriguing book ... if you're interested in the web of routes that led to these contemporary sounds, Farrell's book is an ideal place to start * Andy Hamilton, Wire * intriguing book ... Indian Music and The West is a substantial piece of scholarly research, with some musical analysis and examples ... you're interested in the web of routes that led to these contemporary sounds, Farrell's book is an ideal place to start. * Andy Hamilton, The Wire * Taking an historical line, Gerry Farrell has a sharp eye for the sometimes wilful, sometimes comic misuses and failures of understanding that typified the colonial experience. * Robert Maycock, BBC Music * This is a remarkably balanced, wonderfully objective book * Yehudi Menuhin, THES * Farrell's ... foray into archival sources compellingly details the subtleties of power play in India's and Britain's struggle to control Indian music. It is precisely these features that will prove most interesting to those scholars outside the field of music. * Nilanjana Bhattacharjya, Asian Music: Fall/Winter 00/01. * a welcome addition to scholarship devoted to Indian colonial and post-colonial cultural production. * Nilanjana Bhattacharjya, Asian Music: Fall/Winter 00/01. *


<br> Fascinating. --Choice<br>


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