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Title Musikens politiska ekonomi : lagstiftningen, ljudmedierna och försvaret av den levande musiken, 1925–2000
Author/s Rasmus Fleischer
Department/s Department of History
Full-text Full text is not available in this archive
Defence date 2012-09-17
Defence time 10:00
Defence place MA 624, Södertörns högskola, Alfred Nobels allé 7, Huddinge
Opponent fil dr Orsi Husz
Publishing year 2012
Pages 630
Document type Dissertation
Language Swedish
Publisher Ink bokförlag
Popular science abstract Swedish Under 1900-talet förändrades musiklivets villkor i grunden. Bruket av nya elektroniska ljudmedier innebar att musik kunde framföras utan musikers faktiska närvaro. En av konsekvenserna var att ”levande musik” myntades som begrepp. Såväl fackföreningar som proggaktivister och kulturpolitiker ville försvara den levande musiken mot dess förmenta motsats, ”mekanisk musik”. Det var dock inte alltid självklart var gränsen skulle dras mellan människa och maskin, eller mellan konst och teknik.

"Musikens politiska ekonomi" tar ett brett historiskt grepp om musiklivets reglering under 1900-talet. Här förenas estetik och ekonomi, politiska ideologier och tekniska medier. Boken berör allt från stumfilmens försvinnande till idén om musiken som upplevelseindustri. Den visar hur det fascistiska Italien gav stöd åt skivbolagens intressen och förklarar varför Musikerförbundet ville införa en särskild diskoteksavgift. Den skildrar förhistorien till vår tids konflikter om musikens digitalisering.
Abstract English As indicated by the subtitle – “legislation, sound media and the defence of live music” – this thesis explores the intersections of politics and technology, economy and aesthetics. It concerns the changing preconditions for the commodification of music during the 20th century, caused by the use of loudspeakers and radio broadcasting, primarily in Sweden.

It was around 1930 that “live music” (levande musik) became a concept, strictly opposed to that of “mechanical music”, suggesting a kind of “aura” in the common presence of musicians and audience. About the same time, cinema musicians lost their employment and musicians’ trade unions began to fear that the “mechanization of music” would have disastrous consequences. The thesis explores how and why musicians – but also record companies – were granted legal rights to compensation for the use of recorded music, internationally standardized in the Rome Convention (1961). This led to new institutions of economic redistribution for the benefit of musicians. A recurrent problem was derived from the ambivalent status of musicians as royalty-earning artists and/or wage-earning workers.
Another problem was the practical impossibility of monitoring the actual use of loudspeaker music. The thesis shows how legislators have avoided the hardest decisions, preferring to delegate these to collecting societies. Furthermore, it highlights the influential role of Fascist Italy as an early partner of the record industry lobby. Musicians’ unions, on the other hand, allied themselves with the ILO (International Labour Organization), in opposition to the record industry.

In the 1960s, the “aura” of musical performance was questioned by avantgardists and bureaucrats. However, the trend changed in the 1970s with the rise of a leftist-radical music movement. Its idea about authenticity was absorbed by government agencies and by the Musicians’ union. The years 1977–82 marks a peak in the unionist struggle against “mechanical music”, with a brief but heated conflict between disc-jockeys and instrumentalists. The last empirical chapter examines the sudden rise of interest in “music export” within the context of the “new economy” of the 1990s.

Empirically, this thesis draws on a wide range of sources covering the period of 1925–2000: governmental investigations, publications from the Swedish Musicians’ Union, and archival material. The theoretical basis may be described as critical theory, which is combined with materialist media theory in the attempt to clarify how “music” can be sold as a commodity, while at the same time remain as an activity outside of the market. ”The political economy of music” is thus defined as a process of mediation, which may be understood as a dialectic of industrialization and aestheticization.
Subject History and Archaeology
Cultural Sciences
Business and Economics
Performing Arts
Keywords commodification, aestheticization, copyright, corporatism, critical theory, cultural political economy, discjockeys, history, industrialization, liveness, media theory, music, musicians, performers’ rights, radio, record industry, reproducibility, trade unions
ISBN/ISSN/Other ISBN: 9789197846943
Supervisor Elisabeth Elgán
Additional info Contains a summary in English.

 

 

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