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28 - Cultural Anxieties, Aspirational Cosmopolitanism and Capacity Building: Music Criticism in Singapore

from Part V - New Areas

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 August 2019

Christopher Dingle
Affiliation:
Royal Birmingham Conservatoire
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Summary

This chapter by a journalist-turned-ethnomusicologist begins with a personal anecdote, channelling critic Tim Quirk’s indictment of academia and journalism’s shared and ambivalent reliance on maintaining ‘dysfunctional relationships with the truth’. Where subjectivities have recently become the focus of writings about music, an autoethnographic account of a moment in history in Southeast Asia could usefully open a narrative about musical narratives. And so a version of ‘the truth’ begins: in 1998, a music graduate freshly returned from the UK (this writer) joined the lifestyle section of a national newspaper and was dispatched to review the debut of a Singaporean violinist. The performer, sixteen years old, had been studying with a celebrated pedagogue in the United States.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2019

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