Listening without boundaries―Total Access to the music of the world. Music doesn’t stop at the border, and neither should your textbook. This text gives students a global sense of music and its significance across cultures by introducing them to a diverse repertoire and developing listening skills applicable to all music. An accessible three-part model for listening―sound, setting, and significance―facilitates comparisons of various musical styles and meanings, and with Total Access, Soundscapes provides the digital resources students need to discover new music in a digitally connected world.
read for my Music 101 class, so of course this is on on the totally opposite side of the spectrum from “reading for enjoyment.” the course was only six weeks so I had to rush through the book, but what I did get from it was fascinating. I guess I’d never thought of music on a broad scale such as this, or maybe I never really paid attention. I enjoyed many of the listening guides that were presented in the eBook
This books offered quite an broad introduction to world music and used marvelous examples. It didn't underestimate the reader and was thorough enough to really give a sense of the complexity and interconnections of the music world. I'd recommend it to anyone interested in world music, or who is open to finding new music genres for their own listening pleasure.
A good introduction to enthnomusicology, the anthropology of music. Shelemay does a good job explaining various music traditions in terms or the cultures and cultural forces that shape them. This book at the same time serves as a good introduction to anthropology as a whole.
I read this book for one of my classes. Did not like this textbook at all. I found it overly long and not very meaningful. It had a tendency to have a bit of a eurocentric view as well, spending disproportionate amounts of text on western music forms and just giving glances into other music.
I enjoyed learning about the origins of music and how they influence each other across the world. Probably the the most fascinating textbook I've read for any college course.