Description
The study begins with a review of the various approaches in ethnomusicology. He then suggests a useful and simple research model: ideas about music lead to behavior related to music and this behavior results in musical sound. He explains many aspects and outcomes of this model, and the methods and techniques he suggests are useful to anyone doing field work. Further chapters provide a cross-cultural round-up of concepts about music, physical and verbal behavior related to music, the role of the musician, and the learning and composing of music.
The Anthropology of Music illuminates much of interest to musicologists but to social scientists in general as well.
About the Author
Alan P. Merriam held the position of Professor of Anthropology at Indiana University. He died in 1980.
Reviews
For the broad perspective it provides of man as music-maker, as also for the lucid resume of past and present appraoches to this subject which it presents, Merriam's new book should, I think, be treated as essential reading both within the social sciences and the humanities." -Man
"With great thoroughness, Merriam has pointed out to anthropologists how much they can contribute to our general knowledge of music as human experience." -American Anthropologist
"...Merriam's book, seen from the viewpoint of anthropology, is deserving of the highest respect." -Ethnomusicology
"With great thoroughness, Merriam has pointed out to anthropologists how much they can contribute to our general knowledge of music as human experience." -David P. McAllester, Wesleyan University American Anthropologist 1965-04-15
Book Information
ISBN 9780810106079
Author Alan P. Merriam
Format Paperback
Page Count 370
Imprint Northwestern University Press
Publisher Northwestern University Press
Weight(grams) 507g