Inter-Asia Popular Music Studies Conference 2008 in Osaka

Inter-Asia Popular Music Studies Conference 2008 in Osaka: Call For Papers

Date: 26 (Sat)-27 (Sun) July 2008
Venue: Osaka City University, Takahara Hall
(3-3-138, Sugimoto-cho, Sumiyoshi-ku, Osaka-shi, JAPAN)
http://www.osaka-cu.ac.jp/english/info/access.html

Organized by:
Inter-Asia Popular Music Studies Group (https://interasiapop.org/)
and
Urban Culture Research Centre (UCRC), Osaka City University
(http://www.lit.osaka-cu.ac.jp/UCRC/index-e.html)

Conference theme: Globalizing Music Industry in Asia

Rationale:
We are pleased to announce the first Inter-Asia Popular Music Conference in Osaka in collaboration with Osaka City University, Urban Culture Research Center (UCRC) in July 2008.

Over the last two decades, the study of popular music has been dramatically developed in the interdisciplinary fields from musicology, sociology, literature, history, education, anthropology, to media & communications and cultural studies since the establishment of the International Association for Study of Popular Music (IASPM) in 1981. A similar trend has also been observed in the Asian continent where more and more scholars are involved in the critical studies of popular music.

Today, however, we face two major problems to be considered generally among scholars of non-Western(Asian) popular music cultures: Firstly, while it has been well established academically as an distinctive field of study in Western campuses, research efforts on popular music in the Asian contexts remains largely scattered, limited without. There are currently no institutions devoted to popular music studies within Asian universities, and the more sustained interactions of scholars in this field in the region have also been hampered by language barriers. Secondly, in spite of its more globally diffused patterns of distribution, appropriation and consumption, scholarly accounts on Asian popular music has been predominantly centered within contemporary national boundaries Such existing paradigms would have to be revised in light of the recognition of the socio-cultural fluidity arising from developments in communication technologies as well as more intensified rates of human migration.

As part of our preliminary efforts to address theses issues these problems, we launched an online based, transnational research portal, Inter-Asia Popular Music Studies Group in 2007, and have also started discussions among about 40 scholars not only in Asia but also in Europe and the United States.

In the first international conference has a main theme entitled ‘Globalizing Music Industry in Asia’, by which we would like to focus on the recent situation and historical trajectory of popular music genres in Asia like rock, pop music to hip hop and dance music which have been heavily influenced by globalization of music industry, in particular, the restructuring of global capital, the radical change of distribution network including media and internet and the transformation of fan’s practices.

Possible session themes:
Music, internet and piracy (Copyright)
Beatles in Asia
Hip hop in Asia
Transnational flow and consumption of popular music
Border-crossing Pop stars and their mediation of Asian modernities
Recycling of old Asian pop in film/drama
Asians in global experimental music scenes
Transformation of creative labour in music industry
Inter-Asian collaboration/adaptation of popular music
Music consumption by/of trans-Asian migrants
iPod and mobile music
Music for Practical uses (film, drama, game soundtrack)
Asian diasporic music outside Asia

*Any other suggestions will be welcomed.

Schedule:
30 May The first deadline of application
26-27 July Conference

Call for papers
The organizers of Inter-Asia Popular Music Studies Conference 2008 in Osaka would like to invite paper presenters to send their abstracts (not more than 250 words) before 31 May, 2008 to; IAPMS2008@yahoo.co.jp

If you have any inquiries, please be free ask Yoshitaka Mori:
IAPMS2008@yahoo.co.jp

Registration Fees:
Faculty member and staff: 3000 JPY (=US$ 30)
Student:2000 JPY (=US$20)

Inter-Asia Popular Music Studies Conference 2008 in Osaka Organizing
Committee:

Shin NAKAGAWA,
Professor and Director of Urban Culture Research Center Osaka Ciity
University, Japan

Hyunjoon SHIN, Professor, Sungkonghoe University, Korea

Yoshitaka MORI, Associate Professor, Tokyo University of the Arts

Anthony FUNG, Associate Professor, Chinese University, Hong Kong

Kyoko KOIZUMI, Associate Professor, Aichi University of Education, Japan

Tunghung Ho, Associate Professor, Fu-jen University, Taiwan

Satoshi MASUDA, Associate Professor, Osaka City University, Japan

Kai Khun LIEW, Postdoctoral Fellow, National University of Singapore,
Singapore

Jung-Yup LEE, University of Massachusetts Amherst, USA/Korea

by homey81

mike_park_0804191

On the last Saturday, 19 April, I happened to be in Berkeley (exactly Albany) during stopping over my trip between Hawaii and the Netherlands. On that day, there was a concert in 924 Gilman Street (it is both the address and the name of the club). I heard the news of concert tour by Mike Park, who was one of the pioneers of “The Third Wave of ska (or skapunk)” in Bay Area, forming and disbanding of numerous bands including Skankin’ Pickle, the Chinkees and Bruce Lee Band. However, since a couple of years ago, he has become a solo singer-songwriter who sings with only the accompaniment of his acoustic guitar alone. But the show on that day was different.

The show was organized for the memorial/tribute of the late Lynette Knackstedt, a (female) guitar player in Skankin’ Pickle who died on 7 December last year.  The concert was for donating for her and her family and organized by Mike himself. [Accoding to Mike Park, other bands were the Boars(60’s garage punk featuring Lars from Pickle on Organ and vocals), The Bar Feeders(SF MISSION punks, good friends of Lynette), and Lucifer’s Strip Club Band(Lynette’s last band, playing burlesque type jazz, lounge, swing music)].

Although I (and Jaeyoung) missed Mike’s solo performance because of stupid reason, we could enjoy the performance of Skanaking Pickle’s songs like “I am in Love with a Girl named Spike,” and “I missed the Bus.” It has been long since Mike Park played with full band set and he himself seems to be inspired, swithching singing songs and blowing saxophone. I did not know that ska is so energizing and the sound was quite different from that I heard through CDs ot mp3s.

Although I could not record the show, you can enjoy Skankin’ Pickle’s live performance clip. Alas, already 15 years ago… : http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p7Z8jCWB5pM.

Joon

News from the Netherlands: Yiufai’s CD and STEIM

by homey81

Although it has already been more than one month since I began to stay in the Netherlands, nothing interesting happened. So I post what happened one month ago.

On 23 January, I visited Yiufai’s beautiful 3 storey house in Amsterdam where a part was held. There I had good dinner whuch Yiufai cooked. Please see the picture of Yiufai and Jerone, when they distibute the dishes.

yiufai_and_jerone

I could also see Yiufai’s CD, not the one he has bought and owns, but the one titled his name. It is “CD book” which contains 18 songs and written lyrics penned by him. The title of the CD is “Eighteen Changes” (as far as I know). You can buy it online at http://global.yesasia.com/en/PrdDept.aspx/code-c/section-music/pid-1005167818/

chow_yiufai-18_changes

On the next day, 24 January, there was an experimental music concert at STEIM, which is, in their words, Center for research & development of instruments & tools for performers in the electronic performance arts. Laboratory, workshop, international meeting place, artist hotel, production office, live electroacoustic music, DJ’s, VJ’s, theater and installation makers, video artists and nomad studio. [http://www.steim.nl]

byungjun_steim

There my friend Byungjun, who now studies in Royal Music Academy in Hague but used be one of the leading figure in Korean underground indie-electronica-experimental music scene. You can hear some music samples about his recent works at http://byungjun.pe.kr/. For those who are interested Korean indie music in the late 1990s and the early 2000s. Please watch the video by Pipi Longstocking produced in 1997.

pipilongstocking1997.jpg

Hope you enjoy…

HJ (a.k.a. Homey)

The 1st Inter-Asia Popular Music Studies Group Conference in OSAKA, 2008

by mouri

Dear all,We  are  now pleased to announce that we will organize the 1st Inter-Asia Popular Music Studies Group Conference on 26th & 27th July 2008 in Osaka, Japan,  jointly with Urban Culture Research Center (UCRC), Osaka City University. Please write down the date above in your diary.  As it will be a call-for-paper conference, please encourage your colleagues and friends to participate, too. The detail will be circulated soon. Wait for a further announcement.Yoshitaka Mouri, Tokyo National University of Fine Arts and Music

Kinglychee–Hong Kong Indie Hardcore Rock Band: Free CD download

by angel_lin

Hi All,

Hong Kong’s reputable indie hardcore rock band, Kinglychee (literally “King of Lychees”; lychee is a tropical fruit :)) has just released its new CD, freedownload of all songs and lyrics from the following webiste: http://www.kinglychee.com/ Kinglychee consists of mainly South East Asian artists in HK… they do their songs mainly in English; a very good indie hardcore band :)!  Enjoy! cheers, angel

A Journey Back to the Ancestral Homeland: Kite Operations’ Korea Tour Diary

by plateaux

Following is the intro of the article I posted at koreanpop.org. Click here for the full text.

(from left to right) Jie, Joe, Sung, Dave

Kite Operations: (from left to right) Jie, Joe, Sung, Dave

Kite Operations is an independent rock band based in the New York City. All four members are of Korean-American origin, sprung up from the Korean immigrant community in New York. Joseph (Joe) Kim (g, v) and David (Dave) Yang (g, v) were born in the states, while Jie Whoon Kang (b) and Sung Shin (d) belong to the ‘1.5 generation’ who came from Korea at an early age. Kite Operations is about five years old, but the actual history is longer than that as Joe and Dave formed a band named Theselah along with two other – now departed – members way back in 1994.

Theselah recorded three albums between 1999 and 2002, all under their own label, K.O.A. records. After recruiting Jie and Sung, they released two EPs under the new band name, Kite Operations, in 2003. They embarked on their full-fledged flying mission with the first Kite Operations LP ‘Dandelion Day’ (2005), followed by ‘Heart Attacks, Back to Back’ (2007). Over the past few years, Kite Operations has frequently played live gigs around the New York area, toured the Midwest and the West Coast areas, and participated in Asian American rock festivals. For more information, as well as the music samples, visit their website.

Their ‘ethnic connection’ to Korea owes a great deal to Sung, the youngest member of the band who had been immersed in Korean indie music before coming to the states. His reaching out toward the Korean indie music community started bearing fruit as the Kite Operations LPs were licensed in Korea. Finally, the band earned an invitation to play at the 2007 Korean Festival in Seoul along with other overseas ethnic Korean musicians, including the Chinese rock legend Cui Jian. Kite Operations took full advantage of the opportunity, booking a mini-tour of three Korean clubs before the festival gigs.

When I heard the news that they were going to Korea, I asked them to write a tour diary for online publication. In response, they sent me Joe’s diary accompanied with a bunch of photographs and audio-visual files. Many thanks to Kite Operations for putting them together and sharing with us, and I hope readers to enjoy their unique experiences as much as I did.

Rockin’ the Boat in Thailand

by viriya

Hello all, it is local news of members from Thailand. On January 11th, 2008 at 10th international conference on Thai Studies, Thammasat University, Bangkok Aj. Ubonrat was a chair of “Thai rock music and its culture” panel which was organized by me. The theme of panel is to discuss of Thai rock music and its culture since the 1980s within the perspective of class, gender and generation. We have 4 panelists (including me) in the panel; (1) “Which Boat is Rockin? : Rock Music and Mass Politics in Thailand” by Viriya Sawangchot, Wathansala Centre for Cultural Studies. (2) “Not Anyone Can Play My Guitar: The Study of Thai Guitar Heroes since the 1980s” By Kachachai Wichaidit, Music 499 Academy (3) “Chiang Mai ‘Indie’ Music: Local Space and Its Changing Mind” by Viparat Panritdam, Chiang Mai University (4) “I Wanna Shout but Who Is Listening?: ‘Thai Female Rocka’ and ‘His’ World” .by Siriporn Somboonburana, Walailak University.
Exactly, all panelists never attend this conference before but Aj Ubonrat mentioned that it was the first time of pop & rock music panel in three decades of Thai Studies conference. Anyway, on October 27th, 2007, we had a prior one called “For Those About to Rock” were co-organized by Wathanasala and Music 499 Academy. In this informal meeting, we had a forum discussed by cultural researchers, music business men and professional musicians on rock music scene in Thailand since the 1970s and also had a live performing at the end of the day. Aj. Ubonrat was there and had a speech on opening as well.

222

M4034S-4211

M4034S-4211

the latest English journal-issue on Taiwanese popular music

by vidieho

fountain_cover

HELLO everyone,

Long time no see.

Attached picture is the cover of latest journal Fountain issue on Taiwanese popualr music. This Journal is semi-offical , which means a ‘speaker’ for ‘Green’ governments, from former president Lee Dung-hwai to current Chen Shui-ban .

I helped as a consultant before its execution, as the chief brain is an American named David Frazier, who is free-lanced music writer for various journals and newspapers, (including Wire) who knows more about indie msuic scene but little about Taiwan’s music hisotry.

Basically he uses my PhD Dissertation as grounded reference. Although the journal does not show a criticial viewpoint, it nevertheless, would provide you good information about postwar Taiwanese popular music hisotry.

I do not know if you can get this copy in your country, please let me know if some would need a copy of it

Best

Tunghung

Ho

 

SPICES 2008: Commercialization, Contestation and Creative Culture: The 3rd International Conference on Inter-Asian Culture, Communication, Conflict and Peace

by homey81

CONFERENCE ANNOUNCEMENT
SPICES 2008: Commercialization, Contestation and Creative Culture

The 3rd International Conference on Inter-Asian Culture, Communication, Conflict and Peace
7-8 August 2008 (Thursday-Friday)

Universiti Sains Malaysia, Penang, Malaysia

Hosted and Organized by

Centre for Policy Research and International Studies (CenPRIS), Universiti Sains Malaysia
Co-organisers:

Faculty of Communication Arts, Chulalongkorn University, Thailand

Department of English and Communication, City University of Hong Kong

The Institute of East Asian Studies, Sungkonghoe University, Korea

Human Rights Studies and Social Development, Mahidol University, Thailand

INTRODUCTION

This ongoing series of international conferences was first convened in Bangkok in 2006. It was agreed in Bangkok that the organizers would host this conference annually at different venues, and in the following year, 2007, the conference was held at the City University of Hong Kong. In Hong Kong, we also agreed to henceforth name our collective SPICES – to reflect the diversity and richness of Asian cultures. Hence, SPICES 2008. This third conference, with the theme Commercialization, Contestation and Creative Culture,will be held at Universiti Sains Malaysia, Penang in August 2008.
CONFERENCE OBJECTIVES

  1. To bring together scholars and civil society workers from across Asia to debate and dialogue on the state of research and study in the area of culture, communication, conflict and peace.
  2. To discuss papers with new ideas and agenda that would move forward the trajectories of Inter-Asia culture and communication with open borders
  3. To network between research institutions and universities, and individual scholars, researchers and civil society workers of diverse experience and interdisciplinary background
  4. To create focal points for future exchange of knowledge and people who share common interests

SPICES 2008 CONFERENCE THEME

Commercialization and globalization have undoubtedly impacted on the development of cultural forms and strategies in the region. All too often the impact has been deemed ‘negative’, principally by local politicians and self-appointed cultural guardians, guided by their own political agendas. Such assertions, many times nostalgically yearning for a mythical past, assume the domination of certain cultural forms and practices and the subordination of ‘national’ cultures. Yet, despite some evidence to suggest the possible ‘levelling-down’ of cultures, at the same time, we see everywhere around us in the region the emergence and even development of alternative cultural forms and strategies. The young have been particularly adept at incorporating globalized cultural products and coming up with hybridized forms that speak of and from their own daily cultural experiences.

These developments pose contemporary challenges, both theoretically and politically.

Theoretically, these developments force us to reconsider possibly simplistic notions such as cultural domination and subordination, cultural authenticity and cultural autonomy. They also require us to analyze current cultural and communications practices and strategies and possibly come up with alternative forms of explanation which look at the linkages between the global, the national and the local.

Politically, the emergence and development of these new cultural strategies, not guided by official exhortations and often creatively challenging them, raise questions about the liberating potential of creative culture, often developed by members of civil society. Official discourses about ‘authentic’ cultures and the links with, for example, ethnicity and religion, are challenged.

Apart from addressing these developments, Spices 2008 aims to explore the sustainability of such indigenous developments and the capacities required for their expansion.

PANELS AND TOPICS

    1. Contestations and Indigenous Cultures
    2. Youth Cultures: Communicating Across Borders
    3. Popular Music: Commercialization, Cooptation and Consumption
    4. Gender and Popular Culture
    5. Big Media and Small Media: Commercialization and Independent Media
    6. Creative Culture: The Global, the National and the Local
    7. Transnational Film Culture and National Cinema
    8. Television, Genres and Authenticity
    9. Cultural Rights and the New Media

Groups or individuals who wish to propose other panels or present material related to the general theme of the conference, but not included in the above panels, are also invited to submit abstracts or panel proposal.
CALL FOR PAPERS

The organizers of SPICES 2008 would like to invite paper presenters to send in a soft copy of their abstracts (not more than 250 words) before 29 February, 2008 to SPICES2008@gmail.com

For further information please contact Soraya or Mahyuddin at:

Tel: +604 6532778 or +604 6533455

Fax: +604 659 1624

Email: SPICES2008@gmail.com

or

The Secretariat

SPICES 2008

Centre for Policy Research and International Studies (CenPRIS)

Universiti Sains Malaysia

11800, Penang

MALAYSIA