Thursday, 15 October 2015

Swedish folk music lecture at Royal Holloway


At the moment I am preparing a lecture on Swedish folk music revival, tradition and heritage, for the undergraduate course in World Music at Royal Holloway, University of London.
The idea is that throughout the course the students should meet different musics around the world, beyond the genres and styles which they may already be familiar with, in addition to getting an understanding of key concepts in ethnomusicology and music research.
It will be interesting to see how the students react to the various takes on three-beat rhythm in Scandinavian dance music, but also I hope to get them to critically engage with ambivalent concepts such as tradition and heritage in relation to music.
I am planning to use my own work as a musician as the subject for the lecture to, in a way, give a face to the real musicians who often hides behind ethnographic descriptions in journals and books.  As such it will be a kind of autoethnographic account on Swedish traditional music; which I think will be interesting for me as well as the students.
The main reading will be an article by Owe Ronström on Swedish fiddle music, tradition and heritage, and the additional reading is David Kaminsky’s article on dancing, gender and eroticism.  It is difficult to find English language academic writings on Swedish traditional music, but I think Ronström’s and Kaminsky’s very different texts will provide some interesting discussion in the seminars after the lecture. In general I find it easier to engage groups if they get to do something else in addition to listing so there will definitely be some student participation in the lecture, maybe singing or dancing, and some live music on clarinet and melodeon from me.

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