Untraditional Folk: Difference between revisions
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As an MPhil student in Music, Rachel Sweeney explored use of the Web as site for conjunction of academic and popular fan discourse around new cultural/genre movements. Her action research case study focused on the genre then described as "nu-folk". | This project created an interactive model for analysing alternative-popular folk music with a research-based web community database. | ||
As an MPhil student in Music, [[Rachel Sweeney]] explored use of the Web as site for conjunction of academic and popular fan discourse around new cultural/genre movements. Her action research case study focused on the genre then described as "nu-folk". | |||
Products of the research included the Untraditional Folkmusics website (last access in July 2011), a prototype tangible authoring system for exploration and annotation of multimedia critical discourse, and a large-scale mixed media visualisation of perspectives in critical musicology. | Products of the research included the Untraditional Folkmusics website (last access in July 2011), a prototype tangible authoring system for exploration and annotation of multimedia critical discourse, and a large-scale mixed media visualisation of perspectives in critical musicology. | ||
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* [[Alan Blackwell]] (co-supervisor of dissertation) | * [[Alan Blackwell]] (co-supervisor of dissertation) | ||
* [[Tim Regan]] (large scale visualisation) | * [[Tim Regan]] (large scale visualisation) | ||
* Alex | * [[Alex Kuscher]] (tangible authoring system) | ||
[[Category: Projects]] |
Latest revision as of 05:31, 6 September 2014
This project created an interactive model for analysing alternative-popular folk music with a research-based web community database.
As an MPhil student in Music, Rachel Sweeney explored use of the Web as site for conjunction of academic and popular fan discourse around new cultural/genre movements. Her action research case study focused on the genre then described as "nu-folk".
Products of the research included the Untraditional Folkmusics website (last access in July 2011), a prototype tangible authoring system for exploration and annotation of multimedia critical discourse, and a large-scale mixed media visualisation of perspectives in critical musicology.
http://www.untraditionalfolkmusics.co.uk/
Collaborators:
- Nicholas Cook (co-supervisor of dissertation)
- Alan Blackwell (co-supervisor of dissertation)
- Tim Regan (large scale visualisation)
- Alex Kuscher (tangible authoring system)