Music And Culture essay topics

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  • Generalizations About The African Music Culture
    1,667 words
    In our Western culture, we have always been entertained and pleased by the sound of music. Whether listening to the radio or going to a live concert, the music itself is usually considered a form of art or past time for the listener and the performer. While some can connect, relate to, or even "feel" the power of the music, not many westerners can comprehend "living" the music. In African tribal culture, the people have done just that since ancient times. They have spent each day using the music...
  • Culture Centered Music Therapy
    657 words
    Stige is the first Coordinator of the music therapy education program at Sogn og Fjord ane University in San dane, Norway, where he is an associate professor. With diverse experiences as a music therapist using a community based approach, Stige has written numerous articles and books on music therapy and music education. He is editor-in-chief of the Nordic Journal of Music Therapy, and co-editor (with Carolyn Kenny) of Voices: A World Forum for Music Therapy. He is one of the most insightful thi...
  • Classical Music Of Other Cultures
    901 words
    The global perspective of music: we live in an increasingly smaller global village. With advance in worldwide transportation and communication and with increasingly mobile societies, it seems not only appropriate but also necessary to develop a global perspective of music. A global perspective of music is a sense of the lifestyles, traditions, values and the music of several nations and cultures throughout the world. An awareness of the diversity within our national boundaries that has contribut...
  • Rap Music Popular Culture
    2,774 words
    RAP MUSIC Popular culture is defined as the ordinary culture people make for themselves (McLeish, 1993). From the nineteenth century onward the term popular culture took on new meaning, referring to pop culture as somewhat beneath higher culture (1993). In other words, things that the common people enjoyed were looked down upon as opposed to say, opera, cricket or intellectual pursuits. Popular culture belonged to the common man whereas the higher forms of entertainment were enjoyed by the upper...
  • Popular Music And National Identity In Brazil
    808 words
    Vianna, Her mano. The Mystery of Samba: Popular Music and National Identity in Brazil. (1999). In "The Mystery of Samba", Vianna discusses samba in a different light than other authors have. He explains that although samba has become a symbol of their culture and something they are proud of, that it was not always that way. The author is not interested in where samba originated or about the history of its players, he says "I am thinking of samba's transformation into a 'national rhythm", when it...
  • Culture
    410 words
    Within the broad, yet ever increasing issue of "tween" culture are many causes that are co-related. These sources form the foundation as to why children are becoming more and more desensitized to what once would have been considered a "moral standard" for their age sector. In this particular journal article taken from "Signs", Gayle Wald focuses on the cultural construction of female youth with a spotlight on the music industry. She introduces her readers to the world of female rockers and the w...
  • Music Business
    920 words
    An acoustic guitar strums softly in the back alley of a rock concert. Thousands of people stampede by. They flood the streets like hungry animals. It starts to rain; slowly the guitar raises and smashes into the concrete-ridden ground over and over until it is screaming, raging-a guitar madness! It breaks and cracks into millions of tiny pieces. Another dream is broken. The people don't notice. They crowd the street, standing on someone else's misery. They kick the pieces aside and enter a world...
  • Languages In Africa
    271 words
    Culture is the sum total of the behaviour al practices of a group of people. Culture includes art, music, dressing, food etc. Farming and hunting are some of the more prominent occupations in Africa. This is not to undermine the existence of the other occupation such as medicine, law pharmacy, interior decoration and so on. There are many languages in Africa such as Yoruba, Igbo, Swahili, Arabic, and so on. The languages of different parts of Africa could be influenced by the ex-colonies of that...
  • Ewe Culture And Their Music
    864 words
    The music culture model can be used to view music not as a part of culture, but culture as a part of music, which gives a better understanding to outsiders trying to comprehend another society's music. The first component of the music culture model is ideas about music; this topic is subdivided into music and the belief system, aesthetics of music, context, and history. The second aspect is activities involving music in that culture. The third facet is repertories of music, which includes styles...
  • Cuban Culture
    665 words
    A Culture of My Own The smell of the ocean, palm trees, and the sound of the salsa beats in the distance, characteristics of a beautiful culture. But is that really what My culture is. As a Cuban in America, culture is much different than that of a island native. My culture, or should I say, the culture that my family has molded into our own, is a spectacular one. It may not be the same as it was one-hundred years ago, or even twenty years ago for that matter. But one things makes that okay, cul...
  • Time Tejano Music
    1,157 words
    I. What I knew about Tejano music For me it all started out with Selena. I remember a boy in my middle school class dedicating me "Como La Flor" at one of our school dances in seventh grade. After that Tejano just sort of stuck in my head and all I ever thought of the song was that I had rejected that boy. Selena was quite a Tejano star at the time, and I was shocked with her murder two years later. She was a five star role model for Mexican-Americans to relate to and appreciate. Her songs live ...
  • Study Of Music In A Specific Culture
    1,256 words
    1. The terms use and function are described by Merriam whereas use is the concept studied is to increase factual knowledge directly. Function is an attempt to increase factual knowledge indirectly through the deeper comprehension of the significance of the phenomenon studied. (Merriam 209) Scholars in the field tend to agree with Merriams assessment for the most part. The only point in question that I gathered from the readings is that there is some discrepancy whether all the activities in a cu...
  • Music In The Church
    788 words
    Renaissance and Its Influxes on Music The Renaissance is commonly thought of as a time of renewal and rediscovery, as the definition of the word implies. In actuality, though, the Renaissance was a time of change from one the extreme of heaven, as noted in the previous faith in the Church and religion, to the opposite extreme of faith in human thinking and ideas, along the lines of science, logic, and reason. Rather than revolving around unblinking faith in the Church and what it represented, th...
  • American Writers Exploration Of Identity
    684 words
    In the second keynote address, Deborah Madsen (soon to take up the Chair of American Literature at the University of Geneva) spoke on Americanisation and Exceptionalism, a talk stimulated by a recognition that globalization is not limited to economic forces in general or even capitalism in particular, and some fear its impact as they see it upon the USA itself. Fundamentalist Christian web sites already see globalization as a multicultural threat to American exceptional ist values. The exception...
  • Music Culture And Society Of The Mbuti
    1,592 words
    When trying to compare and contrast the music-culture and society of the Mbuti and that of the Venda, it becomes difficult to comment on sound when we haven't heard any Venda music. It's easy to recognize that for the Mbuti the music embodies the heart of the forest, and for the Venda the relation to nature is the act of a mother giving birth. Thinking about concept and behavior this makes the music performed by the two cultures separate and distinguishable. This is where culture and environment...
  • Order For Their Culturally Significant Song
    1,354 words
    We live in an era in which music is one of the most powerful forces available to those wanting to initiate social change. Music is a medium for philosophy, which potentially spreads very quickly from culture to culture, especially today with the internet, and the growing popularity among mainstream audiences for multi-cultural music. More and more, mainstream music is becoming eclectic of many culturally different kinds of music, as "through the conduits of commercial culture, music made by aggr...
  • Music And Dances
    678 words
    The Arrival of the Spaniards and Their Contributions to Music by the Black American and Native People of Mexico Music and dance is a very important part of everyone's life. We all have our favorite songs, and we all like to dance. Yuma provides us with block parties that target different cultural backgrounds. I had the opportunity to attend a Black History and a Cinco de mayo block party. The difference between the two events were eye-opening. Music and song from each culture had different expre...
  • Culture
    368 words
    Culture: What it means to me. To me culture is a society's way of life. Culture is people's ethnicity and their traditions carried down from generations past. Culture is also coerced and forced into our beliefs by government, parents, religion and society. There are many different kinds of cultures all around the world. Culture is a very important part of life and I feel it is a way of thinking, feeling, and believing. Culture affects every aspect of our everyday life from the food we eat to the...
  • Music Between The Two Cultures
    532 words
    Culture is the language, beliefs, values, behaviors, and material objects that are passed on from one generation to the next. Examining and appreciating cultural differences is an important part of being a sociologist. Recognizing the uniqueness of every culture is key. People of different cultures and backgrounds have always interested me. It is fascinating learning different ways people do things, the various traditions they have, and their way of life. This paper will demonstrate how people f...
  • Different Kind Of Popular Music And Culture
    1,296 words
    Popular culture or Pop-culture is the outcome and method of mass marketing on the World's youth. It is a powerful "money making" scheme generated by the Media and doubles as a systematic approach to Globalisation. It's span of influence and control reaches into our cities, streets, cars and homes. It affects our very style of living, it controls our culture. Popular Culture derives from Youth culture or "University Culture" born in the late sixties by the "Baby Boomers" Generation. At that time ...

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