Affiliation:
1. Leeds Metropolitan University, Leeds, United Kingdom
Abstract
The recording studio has been somewhat neglected as a site for ethnographic fieldwork in the field of ethno-musicology and, moreover, the majority of published studies tend to overlook the specific concerns faced by the researcher within these contexts. Music recording studios can be places of creativity, artistry, and collaboration, but they often also involve challenging, intimidating, and fractious relations. Given that recording studios are, first and foremost, concerned with documenting musicians’ performances, we discuss the concerns of getting studio interactions “on record” in terms of access, social relations, and methods of data collection. This article reflects on some of the issues we faced when conducting our fieldwork within British music recording facilities and makes suggestions based on strategies that we employed to address these issues.
Subject
Urban Studies,Sociology and Political Science,Anthropology,Language and Linguistics
Reference66 articles.
1. Bates Eliot. 2008. “Social Interactions, Musical Arrangement, and the Production of Digital Audio in İstanbul Recording Studios.” PhD diss. University of California, Berkeley.
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12 articles.
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