This article examines the normative expectations freelance jazz musicians have about the material conditions of live performance work, taking London and Paris as case studies. It shows how price norms constitute an important reference point for individual workers in navigating the labour market. However, only rarely do they take ‘stronger’ form as a collective demand. Two further arguments are made: first, that the strength of norms varies very widely across labour markets, being much stronger on jobs where other qualitative attractions (such as the scope for creative autonomy) are weak. Second, in the Paris case, an ostensibly solidaristic social insurance mechanism (the Intermittence du Spectacle system) had the seemingly paradoxical effe...
This article looks at early-career jazz musicians working in London. It links sociological literatur...
This chapter examines the evolving nature of work patterns and income streams for contemporary Music...
This thesis explores the precarious nature of backstage work within the live music industry. Live mu...
This paper looks at the way in which collective norms about the material conditions of work form on ...
Live music is a growing industry, but players are poorly paid and lead insecure careers, argues Char...
This article examines the labour market for ‘function’ musicians in London. It shows how the market ...
This chapter focuses on freelance musicians in London, Paris and Ljubljana, most of whom are self-em...
The proliferation of the American music business has created a power elite which shapes and controls...
In artistic and cultural work, where unions and formal industrial relations institutions have weak i...
Despite its ubiquity in everyday life and non-Eurocentric musics, improvisation is discursively cons...
This article looks at early-career jazz musicians working in London. It links sociological literatur...
This article examines music auditions in jazz education and the artistic valuation of music performa...
Publication en ligne - Published onlineInternational audienceThis article examines the links between...
The primary purpose of this thesis is to provide a causal explanation of the emergence of the UK ear...
This article offers a sociological account of the labour of jazz musicians. The first part is concer...
This article looks at early-career jazz musicians working in London. It links sociological literatur...
This chapter examines the evolving nature of work patterns and income streams for contemporary Music...
This thesis explores the precarious nature of backstage work within the live music industry. Live mu...
This paper looks at the way in which collective norms about the material conditions of work form on ...
Live music is a growing industry, but players are poorly paid and lead insecure careers, argues Char...
This article examines the labour market for ‘function’ musicians in London. It shows how the market ...
This chapter focuses on freelance musicians in London, Paris and Ljubljana, most of whom are self-em...
The proliferation of the American music business has created a power elite which shapes and controls...
In artistic and cultural work, where unions and formal industrial relations institutions have weak i...
Despite its ubiquity in everyday life and non-Eurocentric musics, improvisation is discursively cons...
This article looks at early-career jazz musicians working in London. It links sociological literatur...
This article examines music auditions in jazz education and the artistic valuation of music performa...
Publication en ligne - Published onlineInternational audienceThis article examines the links between...
The primary purpose of this thesis is to provide a causal explanation of the emergence of the UK ear...
This article offers a sociological account of the labour of jazz musicians. The first part is concer...
This article looks at early-career jazz musicians working in London. It links sociological literatur...
This chapter examines the evolving nature of work patterns and income streams for contemporary Music...
This thesis explores the precarious nature of backstage work within the live music industry. Live mu...