Music History in the Deep Field of Digital Music Platforms
(2020) Music in the Age of Streaming – Nordic Perspectives- Abstract
- In this paper I want to examine whether the everyday distribution of music induces a mode of listening that modifies people’s relations to the history of music or not. It is indisputable that the diverse landscape of digital music platforms and music streaming services have an effect on how we perceive music as cultural texts, as commodities and as aesthetic objects. We listen on the go while at the same time using our playback devices for other things; we share playlists and comment on tracks on social media; and we continuously (re)discover and put attention to new connections in the music, thus recontextualizing the experience of, and meaning gathered from, the music. These kind of dealings with music have an impact on the ways our... (More)
- In this paper I want to examine whether the everyday distribution of music induces a mode of listening that modifies people’s relations to the history of music or not. It is indisputable that the diverse landscape of digital music platforms and music streaming services have an effect on how we perceive music as cultural texts, as commodities and as aesthetic objects. We listen on the go while at the same time using our playback devices for other things; we share playlists and comment on tracks on social media; and we continuously (re)discover and put attention to new connections in the music, thus recontextualizing the experience of, and meaning gathered from, the music. These kind of dealings with music have an impact on the ways our discourses of music, and of the history of music, are forming and producing knowledge. But, are they also challenging the ways we theorize music history? Through a critical examination of a dozen of qualitative interviews done with employees from the Danish Broadcast Corporation (DR) about their experiences of digital streaming services juxtaposed with their experiences of Diskoteket, which is a digital music platform accessible for employees of DR only, I will assess how we might track the influences from these types of platforms on how people talk about music and music history. The overarching aim of this paper is to ruminate on what music history in fact is, and whether there exists such a thing as a digital music history. If that is the case, how should the writing of a digital music history be done? (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/54b9a0f6-8cb6-4490-9296-a107ca51c49b
- author
- Pedersen, Andreas Helles LU
- organization
- publishing date
- 2020-06-17
- type
- Contribution to conference
- publication status
- unpublished
- subject
- keywords
- Music History, digital platforms, Listening, Qualitative interviews, Metadata, Digital Archives
- conference name
- Music in the Age of Streaming – Nordic Perspectives
- conference location
- Luleå, Sweden
- conference dates
- 2020-06-16 - 2020-06-17
- project
- Listening from within a Digital Music Archive: Metadata, Sensibilities, and Music Histories in the Danish Broadcasting Corporation's Music Archive
- Digital Cultures Research Node
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- yes
- id
- 54b9a0f6-8cb6-4490-9296-a107ca51c49b
- date added to LUP
- 2020-06-17 15:19:43
- date last changed
- 2020-06-22 11:07:03
@misc{54b9a0f6-8cb6-4490-9296-a107ca51c49b, abstract = {{In this paper I want to examine whether the everyday distribution of music induces a mode of listening that modifies people’s relations to the history of music or not. It is indisputable that the diverse landscape of digital music platforms and music streaming services have an effect on how we perceive music as cultural texts, as commodities and as aesthetic objects. We listen on the go while at the same time using our playback devices for other things; we share playlists and comment on tracks on social media; and we continuously (re)discover and put attention to new connections in the music, thus recontextualizing the experience of, and meaning gathered from, the music. These kind of dealings with music have an impact on the ways our discourses of music, and of the history of music, are forming and producing knowledge. But, are they also challenging the ways we theorize music history? Through a critical examination of a dozen of qualitative interviews done with employees from the Danish Broadcast Corporation (DR) about their experiences of digital streaming services juxtaposed with their experiences of Diskoteket, which is a digital music platform accessible for employees of DR only, I will assess how we might track the influences from these types of platforms on how people talk about music and music history. The overarching aim of this paper is to ruminate on what music history in fact is, and whether there exists such a thing as a digital music history. If that is the case, how should the writing of a digital music history be done?}}, author = {{Pedersen, Andreas Helles}}, keywords = {{Music History; digital platforms; Listening; Qualitative interviews; Metadata; Digital Archives}}, language = {{eng}}, month = {{06}}, title = {{Music History in the Deep Field of Digital Music Platforms}}, year = {{2020}}, }