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Featured researches published by Lauri Väkevä.


International Journal of Music Education | 2006

Teaching popular music in Finland: what's up, what's ahead?

Lauri Väkevä

This article describes the history and current situation of popular music pedagogy in Finland. While popular music is widely accepted in the curriculum, there are differences in its application in the comprehensive schools and music institutions. Popular styles were first introduced into Finnish music education by secondary school music teachers; however, today the most rapid development in the field appears to be taking place in the professional schools of music. Some aspects and future possibilities of popular music education are examined, with a suggestion that there is more work ahead in the field of general music education. For instance, the didactic implications of different learning cultures of popular music and the musical understandings and practices prevalent in ‘urban’ and ‘electronic’ styles present new challenges for traditionally trained music educators, even those with a popular music background.


British Journal of Music Education | 2010

Garage Band or GarageBand[R]? Remixing Musical Futures

Lauri Väkevä

In this paper, I suggest that it is perhaps time to consider the pedagogy of popular music in more extensive terms than conventional rock band practices have to offer. One direction in which this might lead is the expansion of the informal pedagogy based on a ‘garage band’ model to encompass various modes of digital artistry wherever this artistry takes place. This might include: in face-to-face pedagogical situations, in other contexts of informal learning, and in such open networked learning environments as remix sites and musical online communities. The rock-based practice of learning songs by ear from records and rehearsing them together to perform live or to record is just one way to practice popular music artistry today. Such practices as DJing/turntablism; assembling of various bits and pieces to remixes; remixing entire songs to mash-ups in home studios; collective songwriting online; producing of ones own music videos to YouTube; exchanging and comparing videos of live performances of Guitar Hero and Rock Band game songs – all of these indicate a musical culture that differs substantially from conventional ‘garage band’ practices. The global eminence of digital music culture can be taken as one indication of the need to reconsider music as a transformative praxis. By examining the ways in which music is produced and used in digital music culture, we can prepare for new forms of artistry that have yet to emerge from the creative mosaic of digital appropriation. Thus, we expand and redefine our notions of informal music pedagogy. This paper concludes with consideration of several themes that Afrodiasporic aesthetics suggest to the understanding of this artistry.


Action, criticism, & theory for music education | 2009

The World Well Lost, Found: Reality and Authenticity in Green's "New Classroom Pedagogy"

Lauri Väkevä


Action, criticism, & theory for music education | 2007

The "Method" of Democracy in Music Education.

Lauri Väkevä; Heidi Westerlund


Action, criticism, & theory for music education | 2007

Art Education, The Art of Education and the Art of Life: Considering the Implications of Dewey's Later Philosophy to Art and Music Education.

Lauri Väkevä


British Journal of Music Education | 2011

Who needs theory anyway? The relationship between theory and practice of music education in a philosophical outlook

Heidi Westerlund; Lauri Väkevä


Philosophy of Music Education Review | 2003

Music Education as Critical Practice: A Naturalist View

Lauri Väkevä


Archive | 2012

Philosophy of Music Education as Art of Life: A Deweyan View

Lauri Väkevä


Archive | 2017

Inclusive Popular Music Education

Alexis A. Kallio; Lauri Väkevä


Action, criticism, & theory for music education | 2017

Social Innovations in Music Education: Creating Institutional Resilience for Increasing Social Justice.

Lauri Väkevä; Heidi Westerlund; Leena Ilmola-Sheppard

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Heidi Westerlund

University of the Arts Helsinki

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Anne Pässilä

Lappeenranta University of Technology

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Kai Lehikoinen

University of the Arts Helsinki

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Marja-Leena Juntunen

University of the Arts Helsinki

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Tuulikki Laes

University of the Arts Helsinki

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