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E-raamat: Studies in Maltese Popular Music

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This book examines the diverse facets of popular music in Malta, paying special attention to ghana (Malta’s folk song), the wind band tradition, and modern popular music.

This book examines the diverse facets of popular music in Malta, paying special attention to ghana (Malta’s folk song), the wind band tradition, and modern popular music. Ciantar provides intriguing discussions and examples of how popular music on this small Mediterranean island country interacts with other aspects of the island’s life and culture such as language, religion, history, customs, and politics. Through a series of ethnographic vignettes, the book explores the music as it takes place in bars, at festivals, and during village celebrations, and considers how it is talked about in the local press, at group gatherings, and on social media. The ethnography adopted here is that of a native musician and ethnomusicologist and therefore marries the author’s memories with ongoing observations and their evaluation.

Introduction
1 Studies and Snippets in Maltese Popular Music
2 Gana: Legacy, Meanings, and New Directions
3 Gana and its Parallels in the Mediterranean: Music, Expression, and
Performance
4 Saints, Wind Bands, and Meanings
5 The Process of Musical Translation: Composing a Maltese Festa Band March
from Libyan Malf Music
6 The Singer as Individual: Pop Singers, Music, and Political Propaganda in
Contemporary Maltese Electoral Campaigns
Epilogue
Glossary
References
Audio and Visual Musical Examples
Index
Philip Ciantar is a senior lecturer in music at the School of Performing Arts, University of Malta. His research interests include Maltese popular music, world music analysis, and North African music. He is the author of The Ma'lf in Contemporary Libya: An Arab Andalusian Musical Tradition (Ashgate 2012; Routledge 2016) and various articles in ethnomusicology.