
Melodious Panpipes And Kena Flutes. The Shimmering Strums Of A Charango. Poncho-clad Musicians Playing El Cóndor Pasa At Subway Stops Or Street Corners While Selling Their Recordings. These Sounds And Images No Doubt Come To Mind For Many World Music Fans When They Recall Their Early Encounters With Andean Music Groups. Ensembles Of This Type Known As Andean Conjuntos Or Pan-andean Bands Have Long Formed Part Of The World Music Circuit In The Global North. In The Major Cities Of Latin America, Too, Andean Conjuntos Have Been Present In The Local Music Scene For Decades, Not Only In Peru, Bolivia, And Ecuador (i.e., In The Andean Countries), But Also In Argentina, Chile, Colombia, And Mexico. It Is Solely In Bolivia, However, That The Andean Conjunto Has Represented The Preeminent Folkloric-popular Music Ensemble Configuration For Interpreting National Musical Genres From The Late 1960s Onward. Despite Its Frequent Association With Indigenous Villages, The Music Of Andean Conjuntos Bears Little Resemblance To The Indigenous Musical Expressions Of The Southern Andes. Created By Urban Criollo And Mestizo Folkloric Artists, The Andean Conjunto Tradition Represents A Form Of Mass-mediated Folkloric Music, One That Is Only Loosely Based On Indigenous Musical Practices. Panpipes & Ponchos Reveals That In The Early-to-mid 20th Century, A Diverse Range Of Musicians And Ensembles, Including Estudiantinas, Female Vocal Duos, Bolero Trios, Art-classical Composers, And Mestizo Panpipe Groups, Laid The Groundwork For The Andean Conjunto Format To Eventually Take Root In The Bolivian Folklore Scene Amid The Boom Decade Of The 1960s. Author Fernando Rios Analyzes Local Musical Trends In Conjunction With Government Initiatives In Nation-building And The Ideologies Of Indigenismo And Mestizaje. Beyond The Local Level, Rios Also Examines Key Developments In Bolivian National Musical Practices Through Their Transnational Links With Trends In Peru, Argentina, Chile, Mexico, And France.
This book investigates the historical development and cultural significance of the Andean conjunto as the preeminent folkloric-popular music ensemble in Bolivia from the late 1960s onward. Fernando Rios, an expert in ethnomusicology, utilizes a combination of archival research, musical analysis, and socio-political history to examine how urban criollo and mestizo artists synthesized various musical traditions. He argues that the ensemble format is a product of mass-mediated folkloric practices rather than a direct continuation of indigenous musical expressions, shaped heavily by state-led nation-building initiatives and ideologies like indigenismo and mestizaje.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars and ethnomusicologists recognize this work as a rigorous examination of the construction of national musical identity in Bolivia. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose and the author's meticulous attention to the transnational influences that shaped the Andean conjunto tradition.
Page Count:
272
Publication Date:
2020-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190692294
ISBN-13:
9780190692292
No comments yet. Be the first to share your thoughts!