12 research outputs found
Alcohol and Club Drug Use Among Same-Sex Attracted Young People: Associations With Frequenting the Lesbian and Gay Scene and Other Bars and Nightclubs
Gayborhoods: Economic Development and the Concentration of Same-Sex Couples in Neighborhoods Within Large American Cities
New Zealand Journal of music therapy
However cartographies of music are constructed, they invariably suggest some authentic relationship between particular sites of vernacular musical creativity and a social and economic context that has contributed to a certain distinctiveness. Thus, the literature is replete with accounts of supposedly distinctive Mersey and Otago sounds, New Orleans jazz or Nashville country, and the \u27mutually generative relations of music and space\u27 (Leyshon et al., 1995, p. 424). In the conventional narrative, styles are generally deemed to have originated from particular individual and collective scenes associated with key musicians and bands, and talked up as a means of promoting these styles and places. Local ties engender credibility as expressions of local identity and distinctiveness, and \u27credible places invest music with commodity value\u27 (Connell and Gibson, 2003, p. 116). However, music creation and reception are more often little to do with place, and yet music still gains some degree of success even in circumstances where it would seem to oppose any notion of a link to locality. A particularly extreme and unusual example of this is the association between Elvis Presley and the small Australian country town of Parkes. This chapter examines how that particular and peculiar relationship emerged, and how it has been sustained and nurtured. In the process, we challenge notions of creativity and its role in local development
