The Night the Mice Danced the Quadrille

The Night the Mice Danced the Quadrille
Author: Thomas Osborne
Publisher: Stoddart
Total Pages: 0
Release: 1995
Genre: Frontier and pioneer life
ISBN: 9781550461350

Written by Osborne in 1934, 60 years after his arrival in Muskoka, this book is a marvelous tale of pioneer hardship and ingenuity.

Funky Nassau

Funky Nassau
Author: Timothy Rommen
Publisher: Univ of California Press
Total Pages: 332
Release: 2011-05-19
Genre: History
ISBN: 0520265688

“Timothy Rommen has done it again. After the success of his earlier award-winning study of gospel music in Trinidad and the ethics of style, Rommen turns his attention to the complex and conflicted history of music in the Bahamas. Drawing upon extensive ethnographic and historical research, Rommen explores the interrelationships between rake-n-scrape, goombay, and Junkanoo performance, and shows how such ‘local’ musics are implicated in Bahamian understandings of national identity. In Funky Nassau, Timothy Rommen confirms his status as one of the best scholars of Caribbean music today.” —Michael Largey, author of Vodou Nation: Haitian Art Music and Cultural Nationalism "This sensitive, bittersweet account of music-making in the Bahamas shows how a small, fragmented country that has been buffeted by powerful currents emanating from both the United States and the Caribbean has managed to produce a vibrant popular music of its own. Rommen carefully maps the political and cultural economies that are integral to this story, but he keeps the musicians themselves, their aesthetics and strategies, at the center where they belong. The result is a vivid and finely nuanced portrait of a unique musical culture that deserves to be better known." —Kenneth Bilby, Center for Black Music Research, Columbia College Chicago

Carriacou String Band Serenade

Carriacou String Band Serenade
Author: Rebecca S. Miller
Publisher: Wesleyan University Press
Total Pages: 297
Release: 2024-10-08
Genre: Music
ISBN: 0819501492

Every year, on a weekend before Christmas, the small Caribbean island of Carriacou, Grenada, holds its annual Parang Festival, featuring concerts, performances of local quadrille dance, Hosannah band (a cappella singing) competitions, and the climactic string band competition. Born in the years leading up to Grenada's 1979 Socialist Revolution, the Parang Festival today offers a vehicle for Carriacouans to articulate and assert a progressive understanding of local cultural identity as well as a regional, pan-Caribbean belonging. Rebecca S. Miller examines the varying impact that factors such as cultural ambivalence, globalization, and technology have had on the performance of Carriacou's folk and traditional music and dance forms. Using archival sources and current ethnography, she illuminates the enduring significance of the Parang Festival to illustrate the social and political history of Carriacou as well as this culture's contemporary process of modernization. The book includes a web link allowing the reader to listen to a variety of musical examples.

#goals

#goals
Author: Quadrille
Publisher: Quadrille Publishing
Total Pages: 144
Release: 2018-07-03
Genre: Self-Help
ISBN: 9781787132283

"Being an adult is like trying to fold a fitted sheet." "I'm just a girl, standing in front of a salad, asking it to be a donut." "I was hot until my photoshop free-trial expired." From Instagram to Twitter, we all want to be a social media star these days. But behind your phone screen are those perfectly filtered lives all they're really cracked up to be? For millennials everywhere comes a book that says what we're all really thinking. Whether it's stuffing your face with pizza while scrolling through Gigi Hadid's feed or experiencing life at the speed of fifteen WTF's per hour, this is the real life struggle of getting that double tap and achieving #goals.

Musicological Identities

Musicological Identities
Author: Jacqueline Warwick
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 312
Release: 2017-07-05
Genre: Music
ISBN: 1351556746

No music scholar has made as profound an impact on contemporary thought as Susan McClary, a central figure in what has been termed the 'new musicology'. In this volume seventeen distinguished scholars pay tribute to her work, with essays addressing three approaches to music that have characterized her own writings: reassessing music's role in identity formation, particularly regarding gender, sexuality, and race; exploring music's capacity to define and regulate perceptions and experiences of time; and advancing new modes of analysis more appropriate to those aspects and modes of musicking ignored by traditional methods. Contributors include, in overlapping categories, many fellow pioneers, current colleagues, and former students, and their essays, like McClary's own work, address a wide range of repertories ranging from the established canon to a variety of popular genres. The collection represents the generational arrival of the 'new' musicology into full maturity, dividing fairly evenly between pre-eminent scholars of music and a group of younger scholars who have already made their mark in significant ways. But the collection is also, and fundamentally, interdisciplinary in nature, in active conversation with such fields as history, anthropology, philosophy, aesthetics, media studies, film music studies, dramatic criticism, women's studies, and cultural studies.