Research Output
Curating popular music: authority and history, aesthetics and technology
  The practice of curation in popular music may be seen as a form of historical enquiry that works in a similar way to the critical projects of the ‘new museology’. Self-curation can be employed by musicians to re-present their work as a historiographical project of popular music and as an intervention in dominant critical accounts of the musicians’ creative practices. The challenge to conventional historiography can be understood as a project of archaeology in the Foucauldian sense, where discourses surrounding objects and their histories may be contested and reinvigorated through a process of recollecting/re-collecting that resembles Walter Benjamin’s challenge to historicism. Using the work of Robert Fripp and King Crimson as an example of musician-curated recordings, the paper argues that legal and economic control may become a basis for aesthetic control, through which histories of creativity may be rewritten. The act of recollection/re-collection becomes a route through which musicians are able to engage with critical contexts and genre formations, and to contribute actively to the material culture of their own history.

  • Type:

    Article

  • Date:

    28 August 2014

  • Publication Status:

    Published

  • Publisher

    Cambridge Journals Online

  • DOI:

    10.1017/S026114301400035X

  • ISSN:

    0261-1430

  • Library of Congress:

    M1 Music

  • Dewey Decimal Classification:

    780 Music

Citation

Atton, C. (2014). Curating popular music: authority and history, aesthetics and technology. Popular Music, 33, 413-427. https://doi.org/10.1017/S026114301400035X

Authors

Keywords

Popular music; new museology; curation; historiography;

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