Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-pftt2 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-06-01T07:31:32.939Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Analysing performance: narrative and ideology in concerts by ¡Karaxú!

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 November 2008

Extract

In September 1974 a group of musicians came together in Paris to perform at meetings to mark the first anniversary of the 1973 Chilean coup d'état. The group took the name ¡Karaxú! which is variously translated in performance as ‘to go forward’ or as ‘a war cry’. In fact ¡Karaxú! is a Quechuasied version of the spanish carajo which colloquially can be loosely translated as ‘bugger off’ but in fact means grito de couraje y de rebeldía (a cry of courage and rebellion). This analysis focuses specifically on a set of performances by ¡Karaxú! which took place in the United Kingdom some five years later during 1978 and 1979. It differs from other studies of the music of Chilean exiles and indeed other approaches to modern urban musical concerts by focusing on the concert performance as a whole entity. I analyse the music in performance, providing an analytical framework abstracted from participant observation work with the musicians, and focusing on the negotiation of meaning through the organisation of repertoire into a performance structure.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1989

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Barraza, F. 1972. La nueva canción chilena (Santiago, Chile)Google Scholar
Baumann, R. 1977. Verbal Art as Performance (Newbury)Google Scholar
Bessière, B. 1980. La Nouvelle Chanson Chilienne en Exile (Toulouse)Google Scholar
Blacking, J. 1984. ‘The study of music as cultural system and human capability’, South African Journal of MusicologyGoogle Scholar
Blacking, J. 1985. ‘Universal validity in musical analysis’, International Council for Traditional Music UK Bulletin, 12 (12), pp. 1322Google Scholar
Clouzet, J. 1975. La Nouvelle Chanson Chilienne (Paris)Google Scholar
Fairley, J. (ed.) 1977. Chilean Song 1960–76 (Oxford)Google Scholar
Fairley, J. (ed.) 1977 b. La nueva canción chilena 1966–76, M.Phil. thesis, University of OxfordGoogle Scholar
Fairley, J. (ed.) 1980. ‘The classification of the music performed by a group of exiled Chilean musicians’, in Studies in Traditional Music and Dance, ed. Cooke, P. (Edinburgh)Google Scholar
Fairley, J. (ed.) 1983. ‘A semiological analysis of musical performances’, in Studies in Traditional Music and Dance, ed. Webber, (Edinburgh)Google Scholar
Fairley, J. (ed.) 1984. ‘La nueva canción Latinoamericana’, Bulletin of Latin American Research, 3:2, pp. 107–15CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fairley, J. (ed.) 1985. ‘Annotated bibliography of Latin-American popular music with particular reference to Chile and to nueva canción’, Popular Music, 5, pp. 305–56CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fairley, J. (ed.) 1987. ¡Karaxú!: The Music of the Chilean Resistance. An Analysis of Composition and Performance, Ph.D. thesis, University of EdinburghGoogle Scholar
Feld, S. 1981. ‘Music, cognition, metaphor: aspects of Kaluli music theory’, unpublished paper prepared for Music and the Language Mode, IFMC Colloquium(May)Google Scholar
Feld, S. 1982. Sound and Sentiment: Birds, Weeping, Poetics and Song in Kaluli Expression (Philadelphia)Google Scholar
Feld, S. 1984. ‘Sound structure and social structure’, Ethnomusicology, xxviii (09), pp. 383409.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
González, M. 1976. ‘Ideology and culture under Popular Unity’, in Allende's Chile, ed. O'Brien, P. (New York), pp. 106–27.Google Scholar
González, M. 1984. ‘The culture of the heroic guerilla: the impact of Cuba in the sixties’, Bulletin of Latin American Research, 3:2, pp. 6575.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Inti Illimani, . 1977. Canti di Lotta, d'amore e di Lavore (Rome)Google Scholar
Leach, E. 1976. Culture and Communication (Cambridge)CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Moore, and Myerhoff, (eds). 1977. Secular Ritual (Amsterdam)Google Scholar
Morris, N. 1986. ‘Canto porque es necesario cantar: The New Song Movement in Chile 1973–1983’, Latin American Research Review, 21:2, pp. 117–36.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pring-Mill, R. 1983. ‘Cantas-Canto-Cantemos: Las canciones de lucha y de esperanza como signos de reunion e identidad’, Romantisches Jahrbuch, 34, pp. 318–54.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Silverstone, R. 1981. The Message of Television: Myth and Narrative in Contemporary Culture (London)Google Scholar
Toelken, B. 1986. ‘Figurative language and cultural contexts in the traditional ballad’, Western Folklore, 55:2 (04), pp. 128–39.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Turner, V. 1969. The Ritual Process (London)Google Scholar
Turner, V. 1985. On the Edge of the Bush, Anthropology as Experience (Arizona)Google Scholar