Summary |
Popular music, in the philosophical literature, refers to the broad class of musical traditions which emerged out of the music recording industry. This includes, but is not limited to, genres like pop, EDM, rap, R&B, country, and rock, along with their various subgenres (e.g., punk, metal, etc.). These can be understood in contrast to western classical music, various form of folk music, and, to a lesser degree, blues and jazz. While we might expect the theories, lessons, and debates of philosophy of music in general to apply to popular music in particular, differences between western classical music (which has long dominated the attention of philosophers of music) and recording industry practices have shown popular music to present its own puzzles and conceptual issues. Importantly, the philosophy of popular music is quite disunified. Much of the field concerns problems which arise within the various popular music genres (e.g., the concept of 'heaviness' in philosophy of metal, amateurism in the philosophy of punk, etc.). However, some issues seem to apply more generally (for example, the nature of hooks, groove, singing, authenticity, artistic personas, and versioning). The literature also cuts across the standard categories of philosophy, with work being done on aesthetic, ontological, and ethical questions in popular music practice. |