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Dive into the research topics where Byron Dueck is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Byron Dueck.


Archive | 2013

Musical intimacies and indigenous imaginaries : aboriginal music and dance in public performance

Byron Dueck

Musical Intimacies and Indigenous Imaginaries explores several styles performed in the vital aboriginal musical scene in the western Canadian province of Manitoba, focusing on fiddling, country music, Christian hymnody, and step dancing. In considering these genres and the contexts in which they are performed, author Byron Dueck outlines a compelling theory of musical publics, examines the complex, overlapping social orientations of contemporary musicians, and shows how music and dance play a central role in a distinctive indigenous public culture.


Cultural Trends | 2015

Networks of value in electronic music: SoundCloud, London, and the importance of place

Daniel Allington; Byron Dueck; Anna Jordanous

While recent debate has often focused on a reified “cultural value” (whether opposed to or aligned with monetary value), this article treats “value” as a verb and investigates the acts of valuing in which people engage. Through ethnographic research in Londons electronic music scene and social network analysis of the SoundCloud audio sharing website (which is dominated by electronic dance music and, to a lesser extent, hip hop), it uncovers substantial patterns of geographical inequality. London is found at the very centre of a network of valuing relationships, in which New York and Los Angeles occupy the next most privileged locations, followed by Berlin, Paris, and Chicago. Cities outside Western Europe and the Anglophone world tend to occupy peripheral positions in the network. This finding suggests that location plays a major role in the circulation of value, even when we might expect that role to have been curtailed by an ostensibly “placeless” medium for the distribution and valuing of music. While there are reasons for the metropolitan emplacedness of dance music – given the importance of the relationship between production, consumption, and live DJing – the privileging of particular cities also mirrors patterns of inequality in the wider cultural economy. That London should appear so supremely privileged reflects both the exporting strength of British creative industries and the imbalanced nature of the UKs cultural economy.


Archive | 2013

Experience and Meaning in Music Performance

Martin Clayton; Byron Dueck


Ethnomusicology | 2007

Public and intimate sociability in first nations and Métis fiddling

Byron Dueck


ICCC | 2015

Measuring cultural value using social network analysis: a case study on valuing electronic musicians

Anna Jordanous; Daniel Allington; Byron Dueck


Archive | 2014

Using online networks to analyse the value of electronic music

Anna Jordanous; Daniel Allington; Byron Dueck


Black Music Research Journal | 2013

Jazz Endings, Aesthetic Discourse, and Musical Publics

Byron Dueck


Archive | 2006

'Suddenly a sense of being a community': Aboriginal square dancing and the experience of collectivity

Byron Dueck


Archive | 2014

Online Networks and the Production of Value in Electronic Music

Anna Jordanous; Daniel Allington; Byron Dueck


Archive | 2012

'No heartaches in Heaven': a response to aboriginal suicide

Byron Dueck

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Daniel Allington

University of the West of England

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