Homesick Blues : : Politics, Protest, and Musical Storytelling in Modern Japan / / Scott W. Aalgaard.

Homesick Blues explores how artists, fans, amateur practitioners, and others have used music to tell stories of everyday life in Japan from the late 1940s to 2018, a practice that the book calls "musical storytelling." At its core, musical storytelling is a political practice, presenting p...

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Place / Publishing House:Honolulu : : University of Hawaii Press, , [2023]
2023
Year of Publication:2023
Language:English
Series:Music and Performing Arts of Asia and the Pacific
Online Access:
Physical Description:1 online resource (272 p.) :; 3 b&w illustrations
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Other title:Frontmatter --
Contents --
Acknowledgments --
Liner Notes --
TRACK 1: "Friendship Through Music": Musical Storytelling and the U.S.-Japan Alliance --
TRACK 2: Takada Wataru, Kansai Folk, and the Tactical Conjuring of the Everyday --
TRACK 3: A Most Unusual "Lesson": Kagawa Ryō, Anti-Folk, and "Japan's One More Time" --
TRACK 4: Singing My Song: Karaoke Politics on the Eve of Japan's Dark Spring --
TRACK 5: Winds out of the South: Kagoshima, Crisis, and the Critical Potentials of a "Provincialized Japan" --
Overture --
References --
Discography --
Index
Summary:Homesick Blues explores how artists, fans, amateur practitioners, and others have used music to tell stories of everyday life in Japan from the late 1940s to 2018, a practice that the book calls "musical storytelling." At its core, musical storytelling is a political practice, presenting potent-if ambiguous-world-producing potentials as social actors generate and share stories of themselves and others in ways that intersect with and inform social and political life. Sometimes, musical storytelling is used by powerful entities to reinforce dominant geopolitical, cultural, or economic visions. More often, it is deployed as a means of interfering in or redirecting those visions. In all cases, attending to musical storytelling helps reveal the complex, sometimes unexpected ways that everyday life has been imagined and critiqued across disparate moments in modern Japanese history. The author pushes beyond the upheavals of the 1960s and early 1970s, challenging well-established characterization of these years as fleeting moments when critical politics in Japan-especially in music-reached an apex, and an end. Instead, Aalgaard asserts that musical storytelling is robust and ongoing, and proposes more nuanced and comprehensive understandings of critical political and cultural engagement in modern Japan.Homesick Blues is comprised of five chapters, each of which addresses specific instances of musical storytelling in the contexts of their own political, economic, and social histories. From postwar jazz to contemporary rock, from 1960s "anti-war folk" to Japanese pops (enka) and the "girls' rock" of the 1980s, the book explores the political uses of music, reassesses so-called "protest music," and grapples with the complex political-ness of artists themselves, many of whom have continued to interrogate conditions of everyday life in Japan well into the contemporary moment. Homesick Blues assembles a diverse ensemble of voices, some of whom are now appearing in English-language scholarship for the very first time, including industry stakeholders, rock stars, fans, newscasters, Kyoto-based folk singers, jazz singers, karaoke enthusiasts and even US military personnel. An equally diverse selection of scholarship and methodology, from ethnomusicology to literary studies, from philosophy to history, creates a richly interdisciplinary and accessible analysis of musical modes of politics.
Format:Mode of access: Internet via World Wide Web.
ISBN:9780824896645
DOI:10.1515/9780824896645?locatt=mode:legacy
Access:restricted access
Hierarchical level:Monograph
Statement of Responsibility: Scott W. Aalgaard.