(First published on Ethnomusicology Review blog on March 5, 2018)
It
was not always obvious to me that I was going to able reach the point where I
am in my scholarly trajectory. I have spent the past few years developing my
dissertation, which focused on avant-garde music in Singapore, into a monograph
project that conducts a comparative study of the contemporary music scene in
Singapore and China, exploring the core issues of globalization, modernity,
race, and musical hybridity. Framed using concepts drawn from the writings of
the French philosopher Gilles Deleuze, the project allows me to do the kind of
deeply committed intellectual work I love best. I am lucky in that my position
at Soochow University (Suzhou, China) allows me access to research materials
such as musical scores of contemporary Chinese avant-garde composers (thus
allowing me to expand beyond my dissertation work on Singapore), as well as the
time to conduct interviews and ethnography in the city of Suzhou.
An
early version of my book project, which was closely related to my dissertation
on Singaporean avant-gardism (and did not touch on China), sparked the interest
of the music editor of a highly prestigious British university press, but was ultimately
rejected because it was deemed to have too small of a market of interested
readers. This was possibly because the vast majority of the music publications
of the press focus on Western art music, which is conceptually organized around
North America and Europe, as well as composers from those milieus. The creation
of Western art music (WAM) so far outside of the Western heartland was possibly
considered to be of little interest to the musicological public, not to mention
the general public. (Examples of non-Western WAM include works such the Yellow River piano concerto, which is in
the style of common practice era music, as well as avant-garde music, by e.g.
Tan Dun’s contemporaries in China, such as Ye Xiaogang.)
At
many turns, I’ve faced this kind of disciplinary rejection from musicology.
I’ve enquired about a job position for Western music, and received a polite
reply that my specialty in Western music in Asia is not considered to be
appropriate for the position. I’ve been informed by a journal editor that I
might publish my work in the home country of the composer I write about, where
there might be more interest in the music I discuss. I’ve gone through arduous
editorial revisions where readers emphasized the methodological import of my
articles (framed using Deleuzian ideas) to the extent of completely
overshadowing the actual composer and music being discussed. This is a
situation which I find highly questionable: Can we really leave vast swaths of
the e.g. racist or orientalist repertoire unstudied once musical academia
decides that its time to move on to a more innovative paradigm?
Outside the musicological world, I
have not found a home in ethnomusicology with ease, even if my research
interests in Singapore and China would appear to be in accord with the usual
non-Western geographical ambit of ethnomusicology. Further complicating the
issue is the problematic social ascription of appropriate research areas to me
based on my Chinese ethnicity, such that my research and I are either “too
Chinese” or “not Chinese enough.” Conventional assumptions were evident when I
described my research interests in the Western art music of Singapore and China
to one of the top musicologists in the field, and he queried, “That’s ethnomusicology, isn’t it?” But how many
articles on global (Japanese,
Egyptian etc.) composers in the genre of Western
art music have you seen in the journal of the Society for Ethnomusicology (SEM)?
Not so long ago, I heard a member of the top leadership of SEM declare that
“we” must continue to push back against Western art music. It would appear that
composers like Ye Xiaogang in China or Joyce Koh in Singapore are positioned at
the margins of legitimate ethnomusicological research at best. Even when my
research papers are located safely within the boundaries of conventional
ethnomusicological concerns, such as Chinese audiences’s global imagination, I
am faced with another wall between the vast majority of researchers on the
music scene in China versus the handful of researchers on Singapore (a
Chinese-majority nation in Southeast Asia). I have had my knowledge of Chinese
music “tested” on one occasion, when I politely recited my Chinese music
syllabus to my interlocutor. I’ve been called laowai in China, a derogatory term normally used for white
Westerners, which applies to me because the literal meaning is “foreigner.”
Ethno/musicological tensions aside, my
work on music analysis of avant-garde music from Singapore has led to various
forms of rejection from musicology and ethnomusicology. A musicology journal
found that the extended music analysis in my article does not fit with its
state mission. Some ethnomusicologists see me as “the theorist.” On the plus
side of things, I am sometimes seen as versatile: I was a job candidate for a
position that required the teaching of courses in ethnomusicology and music
theory, and have taught anything from music aesthetics and Schubert’s Lieder,
to Chinese opera and musical globalization, to form and analysis in my current
position. At other times, however, I am pressured to “Pick one!” among
musicology, ethnomusicology, and music theory. I’ve been questioned on the
level of expertise I can develop across such a varied range of topics, each
with its dedicated literature. (“Well, you’re going do it by working really
hard!”—was the response from an encouraging colleague.) Is it so difficult to
conceive of research in a particular soundscape, such as that of the global
Sinophone world of Singapore and China, as requiring a multitude of methodologies including historiography, ethnography,
music theory, hermeneutics, and philosophy? Complicating the problem of my
scholarly marginality are troubling interpersonal issues. How do I deal with
the inevitable awkwardness with North American colleagues who are on the most
part unfailingly polite but for whom my otherness renders me somehow beyond the
boundaries of natural camaraderie? Or am I just paranoid? I’ll never know for
sure.
Working at the site of disciplinary
boundaries means that I’ve had to make a home of my own at the margins, cobbling
together willing colleagues from multiple disciplines to form support networks
and platforms for interdisciplinary intervention. In the past 4 years, I’ve
collaborated with 50 scholars across musicology, ethnomusicology, and music
theory in conferences and conference panels that I organized. At a broader
scale, I’m heartened by evidence of society-wide and cross-society disciplinary
realignments among the major scholarly organizations. There is an emerging
global consciousness within both the American Musicological Society (AMS) and
Society for Music Theory (SMT), which makes me hopeful that in the future,
researchers who study the history and theory of Western art music from the non-West,
or even all genres of traditional and popular music around the globe, may find
a home within these societies. The recent founding of the SMT Analytical
Approaches to World Music interest group and SMT Global New Music interest
group (of which I am co-chair) are promising, as are the existence of the
Ibero-American and Jewish Studies groups of AMS and plans for the formation of
the AMS Global East Asian Music study group. Ethnomusicologists are establishing
alliances across music societies, as seen in the activities of the SEM chapter
of the research group on Analytical Approaches to World Music, as well as cross-society
collaboration in the Race-ing Queer Music Scholarship symposium of 2016 among
the LGBTQ groups of AMS, SEM and SMT. I have been inspired by scholars who have
led the way in conducting research that reconfigures dominant paradigms by
crisscrossing the music disciplines—a partial list includes Lawrence Kramer (hermeneutic
windows that are located at structural pressure points), Fred Everett Maus (explication
of music theory practices in terms of sexuality), Georgina Born (ethnography of
IRCAM), Michael Tenzer (theory and analysis of gamelan music), Jonathan
McCollum (historical ethnomusicology), Reinhard Strohm (global music history),
and Barbara Mittler (“global new music”[1]).
I believe that musicology and ethnomusicology are at the cusp of an imminent
convergence due to the critical mass of interdisciplinary research that is
about to burst the disciplinary levees, much as musicology and music theory
became intertwined in what was known as New Musicology in the 1990s.
I continue to ponder the
disciplinary investments of vast swaths of musical academia. These rigidly
fixed boundaries and attendant gate-keeping have been devastatingly at times,
but also energizing at others. I’m one of those people who want to do something
all the more if you say it can’t be done. Living at research interstices has
meant that I’ve had to smoothen virtually every single surface I have come into
contact with using conceptual saw files. In the endeavor of crafting a personal
space, I was lucky in that I found a job position in China and developed
research interests in the music scene here, because I think it is quite
possible that “Singaporean avant-gardism” would have remained at best
insignificant to many people—and, at worst, incomprehensible. There are certain
phrases which still have not quite clicked
into place academically: “Western art music composers in the non-West,” “theory
and analysis of non-Western music,” “Singaporean music”—is “Singaporean” an
ethnicity? (It’s not. Singapore is an island-nation in Islamic Southeast Asia,
with a Chinese majority and large Malay and Indian minority groups.) In this
context, I have enjoyed the advantage of being able to utilize the heavy
rhetorical and material weight of China in the context of the comparative work
that I’m doing on Singapore and the Chinese city of Suzhou. I also lovingly remember
the multiple interdisciplinary platforms that I’ve built for myself, across
Chinese music studies, global music history, global avant-gardism, queer
studies, and affect theory, and the hard work that I’ve done developing
expertise in a multitude of fields because I had to.
To
you, the reader, I would make the case that each of us should stop saying “This
is not musicology,” “This is not ethnomusicology,” or “This is not music
theory,” and instead embrace a multitude of methodologies and musical genres.
I’m suggesting that we remember the criticisms of each discipline that has been
made in the past while moving forward in an interdisciplinary fashion that
preserves the insights afforded by each methodology, whether we are examining
archives, sounds, or social worlds. It is possibly by engaging everything that we might best avoid the
trappings of each discipline, trappings that have been variously described as
“elitist,” “formalist,” or “too focused on the contemporary and on small-scale
communities.” Let’s see where this will take us.
[1] See my post on “Global New Music: From Avant-Garde to Rock, Korea to
Estonia,” Musicology Now, Februrary 6,
2018.