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Glossary›Ethnomusicology

Glossary

Ethnomusicology

The scholarly study of music in its cultural context, examining how musical traditions embody social values, ritual practices, and collective identity across diverse cultures.

What is Ethnomusicology?

Ethnomusicology is the academic discipline devoted to the study of music as a cultural phenomenon. Rather than focusing solely on musical structure or Western art music traditions, ethnomusicologists investigate how music functions within specific social contexts—examining performance practices, transmission methods, ritual uses, and the meanings communities ascribe to their musical traditions. The field combines methods from musicology, anthropology, folklore studies, and cultural studies to understand music as lived experience. Practitioners engage in participant observation, often learning to perform the music they study, while analyzing recordings, interviewing musicians, and documenting endangered musical traditions. Ethnomusicology challenges the notion of “music” as a universal category, recognizing instead that different cultures conceptualize sound, performance, and aesthetic value in fundamentally different ways.

Origins & Lineage

The term “ethnomusicology” was coined in 1950 by Dutch scholar Jaap Kunst, though the comparative study of musical cultures emerged decades earlier. German musicologist Carl Stumpf established the Berlin Phonogramm-Archiv in 1900, creating one of the first systematic collections of non-Western music recordings. Comparative musicology (vergleichende Musikwissenschaft), the field’s predecessor, flourished in early 20th-century Europe with scholars like Erich von Hornbostel and Curt Sachs developing instrument classification systems still used today.

The discipline transformed significantly in mid-century America. Alan Merriam’s The Anthropology of Music (1964) shifted focus from musical artifacts to music as human behavior, emphasizing fieldwork and cultural context. Merriam defined ethnomusicology as “the study of music in culture,” later refined by others to “music as culture.” Mantle Hood at UCLA pioneered bi-musicality—the expectation that scholars should gain performance competency in the traditions they study. Bruno Nettl, John Blacking, and Anthony Seeger further developed theoretical frameworks examining music’s role in social organization, cognition, and political resistance. Since the 1980s, the field has grappled with its colonial legacy, with scholars like Kofi Agawu and Beverley Diamond critiquing Western-centric analytical frameworks and advocating for decolonized methodologies.

How It’s Practiced

Ethnomusicology is fundamentally a fieldwork-based discipline. Researchers typically spend extended periods within communities, participating in musical life while documenting practices through audio/video recording, transcription, and interviews. Many ethnomusicologists learn to perform the music they study—a gamelan player might train for years in Javanese court music, or a scholar of Carnatic music might apprentice with a master vocalist. This embodied knowledge informs analysis in ways observation alone cannot.

Research questions vary widely: How does qawwali singing facilitate Sufi spiritual states? What role do women’s work songs play in Ethiopian social cohesion? How have digital technologies transformed Indian classical music pedagogy? Scholars analyze musical structure using both Western notation (where applicable) and culture-specific analytical frameworks, while examining broader issues of identity, power, diaspora, and globalization. The discipline now encompasses applied ethnomusicology—collaborative projects addressing cultural preservation, intellectual property rights, and community development through music.

Ethnomusicology Today

Most major universities offer ethnomusicology programs, and the Society for Ethnomusicology (founded 1955) publishes peer-reviewed research and hosts annual conferences. Contemporary scholarship addresses hip-hop as diasporic practice, music and climate activism, soundscape ecology, and disability studies. Archives like the British Library Sound Archive and Smithsonian Folkways preserve vast collections of field recordings, many now digitized and accessible online.

Seekers encounter ethnomusicology through world music courses, concert lecture-demonstrations, and cultural festivals that contextualize performances. Documentary films like Genghis Blues and podcasts exploring global music traditions make ethnomusicological perspectives accessible to general audiences. Applied projects bring ethnomusicologists into public schools, refugee resettlement programs, and heritage preservation initiatives. Streaming platforms have democratized access to recordings once available only in specialized archives, though debates continue about appropriate compensation and cultural ownership.

Common Misconceptions

Ethnomusicology is not simply the study of “exotic” or “ethnic” music—the field examines all musical cultures, including Western classical, rock, and electronic dance music. It is not music therapy, though some scholars study music’s healing roles in specific contexts. The discipline does not seek to “preserve” cultures in amber; ethnomusicologists recognize that musical traditions constantly evolve, and attempts to fix them in “authentic” forms often reflect outsider romantic notions rather than community needs.

Ethnomusicology is not cultural tourism or appropriation. Responsible scholarship requires long-term relationships, linguistic competency, and reciprocal collaboration. The field has moved away from extractive research models toward participatory methods where communities shape research questions and outcomes. Not all ethnomusicologists are performers, and performance training does not automatically confer scholarly insight—intellectual rigor and critical analysis remain central.

How to Begin

For academic study, Bruno Nettl’s The Study of Ethnomusicology: Thirty-Three Discussions offers an accessible, comprehensive introduction to the field’s methods and debates. Timothy Rice’s Ethnomusicology: A Very Short Introduction provides a concise overview. The Society for Ethnomusicology website lists graduate programs and publishes directories of scholars by regional/topical specialization.

For general readers, explore Smithsonian Folkways Recordings, which pairs field recordings with detailed liner notes contextualizing the music. University world music ensembles often welcome community members to study gamelan, Ghanaian drumming, or other traditions under expert guidance. Attend ethnomusicology department lecture-concerts where scholars present research through live performance. Read ethnographies like John Miller Chernoff’s African Rhythm and African Sensibility or Bonnie Wade’s Music in India to understand how deep cultural listening transforms musical experience. The key is approaching musical traditions with humility, curiosity, and recognition that every culture’s music embodies sophisticated knowledge systems worthy of serious study.

Related terms

world musicsacred musicsound healingkirtandevotional musicmusicology
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