Music as symbol, music as simulacrum: postmodern, pre-modern, and modern aesthetics in subcultural popular musics
- 1 May 1995
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Popular Music
- Vol. 14 (2) , 227-239
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0261143000007455
Abstract
Postmodern aesthetics has come to be recognised as a salient feature of much popular culture, including music. Urban subcultures, and especially migrant subcultures, may have inherent inclinations toward postmodern aesthetics, while at the same time retaining ties to modern and even pre-modern cultural discourses. The syncretic popular musics created by such subcultures may reflect these multiple cultural orientations by combining postmodern and more traditional characteristics. Thus, for example, punk rock and rap music can be seen to combine postmodern techniques of pastiche, bricolage and blank irony with modernist socio-political protest. Similar eclecticisms can also be found in the musics of some urban migrant subcultures, whose syncretic musics, like their senses of social identity, often self-consciously juxtapose or combine ancestral homeland traditions with the most contemporary cosmopolitan styles and attitudes. Interpretations of such musics may call for a particularly nuanced appreciation of the distinct aesthetic modes which may coexist in the same work.Keywords
This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit:
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- "Most of My Heroes Don't Appear on No Stamps": The Dialogics of Rap MusicBlack Music Research Journal, 1991