- Front Matter
- 10.1017/s1752196325000094
- Aug 1, 2024
- Journal of the Society for American Music
- Front Matter
- 10.1017/s1752196325000082
- Aug 1, 2024
- Journal of the Society for American Music
- Research Article
- 10.1017/s175219632400021x
- Aug 1, 2024
- Journal of the Society for American Music
- María Elena Cepeda
- Research Article
- 10.1017/s1752196324000245
- Aug 1, 2024
- Journal of the Society for American Music
- Audrey M Wozniak
Abstract Renowned for its 400-year-old Ottoman/Turkish/Armenian past and produced by “America's oldest family-run business,” the Zildjian cymbal is paradoxically rendered an unremarkable “humble object” in its assumed inclusion in orchestras and bands around the world. Tracing the lineages of the Zildjians and their cymbals through historical documentation, ethnography, and the materiality of the instruments themselves, I first discuss the cymbal's shifting musical contexts and functions in Ottoman Janissary mehter bands, European orchestras, American jazz bands, and many other ensembles over the past four centuries, as well as the role of the Zildjians in this musical expansion. Then, I examine how twentieth-century negotiations of Zildjian kinship emerged in contentions over the authenticity and ownership of cymbal production. Finally, I consider how the assimilatory pressures of nation-states shaped narratives of cymbal production as well as the Zildjians’ mobilities, particularly in the context of the ethnoracialization of minority populations in the late Ottoman Empire and Turkish Republic as well as the struggle of Armenian migrants to the United States to be recognized as valid U.S. American citizens at the turn of the twentieth century. By approaching the cymbal itself as the main interlocutor of this exploration, I aim to foreground the ways in which cymbals have sounded and resounded the mobility and kinships of its human creators. In doing so, I regard musical instruments as essential mediators of histories of cultural and musicological development as well as constructions of human identity and relationship, glimpsing how such objects may both reify and unsettle our epistemologies and the institutions of modern life.
- Research Article
- 10.1017/s1752196324000221
- Aug 1, 2024
- Journal of the Society for American Music
- Dane-Michael Harrison
- Research Article
- 10.1017/s1752196324000208
- Aug 1, 2024
- Journal of the Society for American Music
- David S Carter
- Research Article
- 10.1017/s175219632400004x
- May 1, 2024
- Journal of the Society for American Music
- Ruthie Meadows
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- Research Article
- 10.1017/s1752196324000129
- May 1, 2024
- Journal of the Society for American Music
- Reed Williams
An abstract is not available for this content so a preview has been provided. Please use the Get access link above for information on how to access this content.
- Front Matter
- 10.1017/s1752196324000142
- May 1, 2024
- Journal of the Society for American Music
The submission itself should be anonymous throughout the text and notes. Articles should range from 5,000 to 10,000 words (excluding notes). Longer articles will be considered but may be edited for length. The submission should use 12-point type and double-spaced with one-inch margins. The Journal of the Society for American Music employs humanities style for citations. JSAM follows The Chicago Manual of Style, 17th edition. Use footnotes for explanatory notes that need not appear in the main body of the article. Provide a complete list of works cited and a separate discography if appropriate. All musical examples, figures, tables, and appendices should be numbered and contain a caption, and the text should indicate by use of a callout, e.g., <FIG. 1 ABOUT HERE>. Callouts should be placed on a new line after the paragraph where the figure or example is mentioned. A separate list of all captions should be included. Contributors are responsible for obtaining permission to reproduce any material for which they do not hold copyright and for ensuring that the appropriate acknowledgments are included in their typescript. The cost of permissions and of reproducing color illustrations will be the responsibility of the author. Upon acceptance of a submission, authors will be asked to assign copyright to the Society for American Music. JSAM does not review articles that are being considered for publication in another journal. For additional information on preparing submissions, please visit <www.journals.cambridge. org/sam> or <www.american-music.org> to download a current PDF copy of the complete Instructions for Contributors.
- Research Article
- 10.1017/s1752196324000063
- May 1, 2024
- Journal of the Society for American Music
- Adriana Martínez Figueroa
Abstract Since the late nineteenth century, the “Indian” as symbol has been a recurring trope in the art music of Mexico and the United States. Composers in both countries have often turned to representations of Indigenous Peoples as symbolic of nature, spirituality, and/or aspects of the national Self. This article seeks to place James DeMars's opera Guadalupe, Our Lady of the Roses (2008) in the context of two major cultural trends: Indianism in the U.S., and the representation of Mexico by U.S. composers. DeMars's use of Indigenous instruments in Guadalupe, including Mexican pre-Hispanic percussion, and flutes performed by famed Navajo-Ute flutist R. Carlos Nakai, continues the Indianist tradition of associating the Indigenous cultures of both countries with nature, spirituality, and authenticity. Similar associations emerge in the development and reception of both “world music” and the Native American recording industry since the 1980s, as exemplified by Nakai's career. DeMars uses these instruments in combination with Plains Native American features and generic exoticisms to represent both the Mexican Indigenous Peoples and the spiritual message of the opera. The sympathetic treatment of Indigenous cultures in Guadalupe nevertheless exists in tension with their exoticism and Otherness; in this the work is representative of U.S. cultural responses to Mexico stretching back throughout the long twentieth century.