As a professional bassist who identifies as female and queer, I have my share of horror stories about experiences in the music industry. But I also have a solid peer group that is actively working to improve things, and with whom I have an ongoing dialogue. Specifically, in the last year, we started to observe the radical behavioural changes we've made as a society in response to the COVID-19 pandemic, and how these protocols could be viewed with an anti-oppressive lens. I started to think about my values as an improvising musician, and how they provide an analogy and a framework for broader social interaction. I used the writing of this article as an opportunity to speak with some of my musical peers about their individual experiences and ...
Music therapy in the UK has faced challenges to practice during lockdown. In this empirical study, ...
What does the music world three months into a pandemic look like to an Irish fiddler (Liz Knowles), ...
As Michel Serres states, “The one who has power is the one who has the source and emission of sound”...
The COVID-19 pandemic turned the music industry upside-down overnight and impacted music-making at a...
Introduction: In the wake of COVID-19 restrictions and lockdowns in the southern states of Australia...
The Covid-19 pandemic severely limited collaboration among musicians in rehearsal and ensemble perfo...
The radical disruption of live performance that began in 2020 and continues in 2021 raises a fundame...
Women are seriously underrepresented in the field of music production because of a number of social ...
How can a musician maintain her sense of self in quarantine, a self that is constructed by intertwin...
This article documents experiences of Glasgow Improvisers Orchestra’s virtual, synchronous improvisa...
This article documents experiences of Glasgow Improvisers Orchestra’s virtual, synchronous improvisa...
This collection analyses the remaking of culture and music spaces during the ongoing COVID-19 pandem...
This article follows the pandemic practice of The London Improvisers Orchestra between April and Jun...
The era of COVID-19 has profoundly shaken the foundations of our lives. Our event venues have closed...
Special issue edited by Daniel Fischlin, Laura Risk, and Jesse Stewart. This special issue of Critic...
Music therapy in the UK has faced challenges to practice during lockdown. In this empirical study, ...
What does the music world three months into a pandemic look like to an Irish fiddler (Liz Knowles), ...
As Michel Serres states, “The one who has power is the one who has the source and emission of sound”...
The COVID-19 pandemic turned the music industry upside-down overnight and impacted music-making at a...
Introduction: In the wake of COVID-19 restrictions and lockdowns in the southern states of Australia...
The Covid-19 pandemic severely limited collaboration among musicians in rehearsal and ensemble perfo...
The radical disruption of live performance that began in 2020 and continues in 2021 raises a fundame...
Women are seriously underrepresented in the field of music production because of a number of social ...
How can a musician maintain her sense of self in quarantine, a self that is constructed by intertwin...
This article documents experiences of Glasgow Improvisers Orchestra’s virtual, synchronous improvisa...
This article documents experiences of Glasgow Improvisers Orchestra’s virtual, synchronous improvisa...
This collection analyses the remaking of culture and music spaces during the ongoing COVID-19 pandem...
This article follows the pandemic practice of The London Improvisers Orchestra between April and Jun...
The era of COVID-19 has profoundly shaken the foundations of our lives. Our event venues have closed...
Special issue edited by Daniel Fischlin, Laura Risk, and Jesse Stewart. This special issue of Critic...
Music therapy in the UK has faced challenges to practice during lockdown. In this empirical study, ...
What does the music world three months into a pandemic look like to an Irish fiddler (Liz Knowles), ...
As Michel Serres states, “The one who has power is the one who has the source and emission of sound”...