On this page you can find the readings we have discussed so far in reversed chronological order.
2024
30th September
Circuit Listening: Chinese Popular Music in the Global 1960s (2020). Andrew F. Jones. University of Minnesota Press.
28th August
29th May
YouTube and Music: Online Culture and Everyday Life. (2023). edited by Holly Rogers,
Joana Freitas, and João Francisco Porfírio. Bloomsbury.
30th April
Subcontinental Synthesis: Electronic Music at the National Institute of Design, India 1969–1972. (2024). Edited by Paul Purgas (summary here). MIT/Strange Attractor
28th March
Michael Gallope (2024). The Musician as Philosopher: New York’s Vernacular Avant-Garde, 1958–1978. (2024). Chicago.
28th February
Improvising Across Abilities: Pauline Oliveros and the Adaptive Use Musical Instrument, an open access book recently published. (find it here)
2023
29th November
- Matt St. John, Lauren E. Wilks, Stephanie Sapienza, Eric Hoyt (2023) ‘Access Amplified: Saving and Sharing a 1968 Detroit Audio Collection.’ Resonance, 4 (3): 246–259.
- Mark Anthony Neal (2022) ‘Promise that you will [tweet] about me: Black death in the digital era’; Chapter 3 from Black Ephemera: The Crisis and Challenge of the Musical Archive.
25th October
- Eric Drott. Fake Streams, Listening Bots, and Click Farms: Counterfeiting Attention in the Streaming Music Economy. American Music, vol. 38 no. 2, 2020, p. 153-175. muse.jhu.edu/article/763316.
- Gavin Williams. Shellac as Musical Plastic. Journal of the American Musicological Society, 2021; 74 (3): 463–500. doi: https://doi.org/10.1525/jams.2021.74.3.463
28th September
Consultation to choose the new format of the reading group.
31st August
Meeting facilitated by Christine Oppedisano.
- Lupton, Deborah. 2015. “Digital Bodies.” Available at SSRN.
- Piekut, Benjamin. 2014. “Actor-Networks in Music History: Clarifications and Critiques.” Twentieth-Century Music 11 (2), 191–215.
- Valiquet, Patrick. 2021. “Deep Structure: The Generative Subject in Actor-Network Theory and Musicology.” In Antoine Hennion and Christophe Levaux (eds.), Rethinking Music through Science and Technology Studies. New York: Routledge, 88-109.
3rd August
Meeting facilitated by Zach Dawson
- ‘Music 2.0 and artistic research’, up to page 59.
- Artists Re:thinking the blockchain introduction
- Convening Technologies: Blockchain and the music industry, up to section titled ‘Blockchain Dreams’
- Holly+ and further resources:https://holly.plushttps://www.researchcatalogue.net/view/1550111/1698267
29th June
Meeting facilitated by Valentina Bertolani
- Cook, Terry. “Electronic Records, Paper Minds: The Revolution in Information Management and Archives in the Post/ Custodial and Post/ Modernist Era.” Archives and manuscripts 22, no. 2 (1994): 300–328.
- Helmond, A., van der Vlist, F. (2021). “Platform and App Histories: Assessing Source Availability in Web Archives and App Repositories.” In: Gomes, D., Demidova, E., Winters, J., Risse, T. (eds) The Past Web. Springer.
- Jaillant, Lise. “How Can We Make Born-Digital and Digitised Archives More Accessible? Identifying Obstacles and Solutions.” Archival science 22, no. 3 (2022): 417–436.
22nd May
Meeting facilitated by Sam Riley
- Excerpts from Paul Steinbeck, Sound Experiments: The Music of the AACM, Chicago: University of Chicago press, 2022.