Ebook: Irish Scene & Sound: Identity, Authenticity & Transnationality Among Young Musicians
Author: Virva Basegmez
- Tags: History & Criticism, Music, Social Sciences, Communication & Media Studies
- Series: Stockholm Studies in Social Anthropology 57
- Year: 2005
- Publisher: Stockholm Universitet
- Language: English
- pdf
The study explores the making of Dublin and Galway into central places in the Irish music scene. It identifies musical links between the cities, and how for the young musicians, Dublin has become a 'springboard' and Galway a 'playground.' These cities provide the local arenas where young folks and popular musicians negotiate individual and collective lifestyles, identities and musical genres. By developing the concept of 'musical pathways,' the study shows how these mobile musicians constantly interact with different musical sounds and scenes.
The idea that Irishness has to emanate from traditional music is challenged by a diversity of musical genres and pathways of the musicians. Some musicians embrace a certain construction of Irishness while others reject it, but they are all involved in this process in one way or another. Contrary to older generations of traditional musicians, a global awareness is more important among the young musicians than a 'restricted' view of Irishness. As the young musicians are interested in multiple musical ideas and influences, they are often reluctant about a 'narrow nationalism.'
They make use of the fact that the music of the contemporary world is very much interconnected. This study discusses transnational processes of the Irish music scene in the late 1990s primarily on local and national levels in Ireland. This reveals how globalization has contributed to the popularity of Irish music yet without controlling its pathways completely. In Ireland the past is still in the present.