Music on the Move: Introduction
Introduction
🧭 Overview
🧠 One-sentence thesis
Music moves through human social networks via migration and media, shaping and being shaped by the boundaries people draw around groups, traditions, and identities in ways that are constantly negotiated rather than fixed.
📌 Key points (3–5)
- Music as social activity: Music exists not as an object but as an activity embedded in social relationships, transmitted through networks that connect people across distances.
- Multiple scales of movement: Music moves at different scales—local, national, regional, and global—with migration and mediation as two primary mechanisms.
- Boundaries are negotiated, not fixed: Groups, traditions, heritage, and musical styles have boundaries that people actively draw and redraw through stories, choices, and social transactions.
- Common confusion: "Globalization" and "hybrid music" suggest clear boundaries and recent phenomena, but music has always moved and blended; what feels "global" today is actually uneven connectivity with friction points.
- Why it matters: Understanding how music moves reveals power dynamics, access inequalities, and how people use music to define identity, belonging, and relationships.
🌐 How music moves through networks
🕸️ Personal musical networks
- Most people encounter music daily—some actively seek it, others encounter it passively in public spaces.
- Your music reveals your social connections: family recommendations, religious institutions, media platforms, café playlists, online algorithms.
- Networks both expand and limit what you hear: a Chinese American pop star can fill a venue in Los Angeles yet remain invisible to other communities in the same city.
- Example: Wang Leehom performed to 17,000 fans at the Hollywood Bowl, primarily reaching Chinese and Chinese American networks, while many other Angelenos had never heard of him.
🎯 Music and social identity
Music helps people define who they are and their relationships to others:
- Internal effects: calming, energizing, challenging
- Social positioning: feeling "cultured," hip, or cutting-edge; conferring status
- Network roles: being the first to hear new music, recommending songs to others, demonstrating collector expertise
- Connection to groups: singing traditional songs at sporting events, choosing family wedding or funeral music
🗺️ Geographic and media access
How you encounter music depends on:
- Family history: Recent immigrants may maintain strong ties to music from their place of origin
- Population density: Toronto, New York, Los Angeles have more cross-cultural contact than less populated areas
- Travel and migration: College, missionary work, vacation expose people to unfamiliar music
- Media access: Radio, television, internet, recordings bring distant music (Japanese animé soundtracks, Jamaican reggae) without physical travel
🔄 Globalization and interconnection
📡 What "globalization" means
Globalization: A collection of "flows" of people, goods, and ideas; "complex connectivity" rather than a blanket covering the world; a "dream space" for imagining one's place in the world.
The term captures multiple phenomena:
- Feeling-based: "time-space compression" from easier travel and faster communications (1960s–present)
- Economic: Increased interdependence of financial markets, cross-border corporations (early 1980s)
- Political: International institutions (World Bank 1944, United Nations 1945), extended government reach, national branding through music
Don't confuse: The term is fuzzy, not specific—different lenses (political, economic, musical) yield different definitions and starting dates.
🧱 Friction in the network
The network is not frictionless:
- Some music moves easily; other music gets lost
- Some routes are encouraged, others discouraged
- Access is uneven: some people create, some listen, some have no access at all
- The "World Wide Web" reaches only slightly over half the world's people
- What you see through your networks is never all that exists—only a fraction
⚖️ Scales of activity
Worldwide trends affect local experiences and vice versa:
- A neighborhood parade in the United States may reflect a national holiday (Independence Day fife and drum) or a holiday from across the globe (Chinese New Year parade in New York)
- Local practices can be absorbed into national, regional, or global action
🚶 Migration as music transmission
🧳 Historical context
- Music has moved since there were humans to make musical sounds
- Migration has been persistent throughout human history: Polynesian seafarers 4,000 years ago, Jewish exile, Greek colonization
- Environmental crises, economic ambitions, political conflicts, or exploration drive migration—by choice or by force
🎵 Music moves with people
When populations move, they establish new connections with lasting effects:
- Migrants bring music to new places
- They adapt their music to new situations
- They influence the music of those who receive them as neighbors
- Example: Romani people migrated to Europe and the Middle East hundreds of years ago; their music-making became part of European music while they changed their playing to adapt
🎬 Mediation and technology
📻 What mediation means
Mediation: The various factors that help music get from its makers to its listeners.
- Media need not be new or high-tech: a musical instrument is a medium, as is printed music
- Mediation is built into the nature of music—all music requires some making or performance process
- Transmission: Bringing music or messages from one place to another
🎞️ 20th-century developments
Political, social, and technological changes brought new possibilities:
- Long-playing records, film, television, cassette tape recorders, digital media
- United States and Soviet Union actively increased communication globally to build alliances
- Music was both "pulled" and "pushed" across borders—in person, on recordings, by broadcasting
- These channels formed a foundation for today's rapid cross-border music movement
🔗 Migration and mediation together
People who have moved use both travel and media to maintain contact with faraway homelands.
🏛️ Boundaries, tradition, and heritage
🧩 How boundaries work
Boundaries between groups are meaningful to insiders and outsiders:
- They are imaginary (exist in people's thoughts) yet real (shape behavior)
- They create solidarity and belonging but can also divide and diminish
- They are movable and loosely defined, produced through transactions, arguments, negotiations
- People argue about what behaviors are "inside the lines" for their group
Warning: Defining groups can lead to seeing the "other" as fixed and incapable of change ("I know them, that's the way they are"). Strong group identity combined with hate speech and state power has been a precondition of genocide.
📜 Tradition
Tradition: That which is handed down from one person to another, along with stories about why we do this, who taught it, and what it has meant.
- The tradition is in both the song and the story
- Traditional music "teaches, reinforces, and creates the social values of its producers and consumers"
- Saying music is "part of our tradition" increases its value by connecting today's musician to people in the past
- A song need not be very old to be traditional
🏺 Heritage
Heritage: A tradition passed down among a family or kinship group, requiring a sense of kinship through shared historical experiences and usually ethnic or genetic ties.
- Stories told today about heritage define the heritage—people can change ideas about it in the present
- Acknowledging heritage strengthens belief in ethnic and genetic ties
- Example: Repatriating Native American artifacts to tribes is based on heritage—recipients have a claim because of belonging in a particular tribe, ethnically and historically
- Nation: A very expansive kinship group imagined as coherent across a territory, united by customs, language, shared musical heritage, or history
🎭 Stereotypes and reality
- We imagine "nations" or "cultures" as unified wholes, yet they are not
- Example: Céline Dion songs play a vital role in Ghanaian popular music; some Slovenians enjoy salsa dancing
Stereotypes: Simplified versions of reality used as "good enough" approximations; the hazard is inaccuracy leading to errors in judgment.
Principle: "What you see is not all there is."
🌱 Why "hybrid" is problematic
Some scholars write about "hybrid" musics (combining two or more source musics), but this biological analogy is flawed:
- It assumes source musics have clear boundaries, but musicians freely imitate and adopt from others constantly
- Blending is the norm, not the exception—like borrowing words between languages
- Musicians choose styles self-consciously for the stories or group membership they suggest
- Choices can stretch or redraw boundaries of musical styles and groups
Better approach: Describe musicians who mix or blend musics, recognizing their purposeful choices rather than treating it as genetic accident.
🖊️ Borders are negotiable
- Scholars, makers, and listeners all draw borders around types of music to name and discuss them
- These borders are human-made and negotiable, not fixed
- Where people draw boundaries reflects evaluative categories: good/bad, ours/not ours
- Music changes with every performance and over time; it gains new meanings as new listeners interpret it differently