Type | Book |
Title | DISCOnnections: popular music audiences in Free Town, Sierra Leone |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2012 |
Publisher | Langaa Research, Bamenda, Cameroon |
Country/State | Cameroon |
URL | https://openaccess.leidenuniv.nl/bitstream/handle/1887/22179/ASC-075287668-3302-01.pdf?sequence=2 |
Abstract | This book is about the patterns of social connection and disconnection that the consumption of music helps to shape, to (re)create, and to defy in Freetown, the capital city of the West African country Sierra Leone. As a conceptual gateway for this work I draw on the expressive and playful metaphor from sociomusicology that “interacting sounds constitute the abstraction ‘music’ in the same way that interacting people constitute the abstraction ‘society’” (Keil 1998: 303). Hence, I aim to explore the connecting and the competing disseminations of sounds and people, the conjunctures of music practices and social affiliations, and the diverse intersections, interactions and contradictions between music and society in Freetown’s past and present. It is a truism that music unites and connects people; music dissolves boundaries of otherness; music is used to shape, to assert and to express communal and collective identity. In creating aural spaces in which members of society congregate, whether physically in discos, music halls, on the street or in rather virtual spaces created through radio broadcasts or the circulation of cassettes, music does function to integrate society. While taking part in a music performance, whether live or recorded, by dancing, by singing, by listening collectively or individually, people share experiences of sounds and grooves. Music is, in this sense, indeed bringing about a “pattern which connects” (Small 1995). |
» | Sierra Leone - Population and Housing Census 2004 |