Dedication
Acknowledgements
Chapter One: Introduction
Chapter Two: The Steelband Movement and Music
Chapter Three: An Unlikely Instrument
Chapter Four: The National Instrument
Chapter Five: Dropping the Bomb
Chapter Six: A Showcase for Pan
Chapter Seven: Rise of the Arranger
Chapter Eight: Community Participation
Chapter Nine: Contest and Control
Chapter Ten: Writing Their Own Tunes
Chapter Eleven: From Panman to Pannist
Chapter Twelve: Popular culture and Nationalism
Appendix I: Instruments
Appendix II: Repertoire
Appendix III: Panorama Winners
Bibliography
Recordings Cited
Index
Shannon Dudley is Associate Professor of Ethnomusicology at the University of Washington, and author of several articles and books on the music of Trinidad including Carnival Music in Trinidad: Experiencing Music, Expressing Culture (OUP, 2003). He also researches popular music in Puerto Rico. As a performer on the steel pan, he has played with leading steelbands in both Trinidad and the United States.
"Dudley sets the tone and a very high standard for future
scholarship. His focus on musical processes and individual agency
relative to cultural context and constraints provides a model for
discourse about the post-independence era relevance of pan. In
short, this is a literal 'must read' for anyone interested in the
steelband movement." --the world of music
"The material...is handled with great skill and insight. This book
is strongly recommended to scholars and students in music and
Caribbean studies and to anyone with an interest in artistic
achievements in pan." --New West Indian Guide
"Finally, a work that brings the sophisticated musical
sensibilities of steelbands to the centre and investigates the
powerful hold that competition has over steelband aesthetics!
Dudley's book is an insightful romp through the world of pan from
the yards to the Savannah, but his ear is keenly tuned to the
arrangements, style, and, most generally, sound of pan ensembles.
This is an important book about creativity and passion for music in
a developing,
postcolonial nation." --Gage Averill, Dean of Music, University of
Toronto
"Dr. Dudley's Music from behind the Bridge is an elegant study of
Trinidad's steel pan, the best written thus far. In this book, Dr.
Dudley demonstrates a rare understanding of, and much respect for,
the West Indies in general and Trinidad in particular. Readers of
Music from behind the Bridge will learn not only about the
emergence and evolution of the steel pan as a musical instrument,
but will also grasp the social and political
significance of steel bands and of the music they play. Dr. Dudley
writes beautifully about peoples, situations and events that liken
Trinidad to other Caribbean countries/nations. Music from behind
the Bridge fosters a unique
understanding of music in Caribbean societies, not just in
Trinidad. A masterpiece." --Dominique Cyrille, Assistant Professor
of African and African American Studies at Lehman College
(CUNY)
"Shannon Dudley reveals to us in new ways the human depth and sonic
richness of Trinidad and Tobago's steelband tradition. His study
does much more than show how a vernacular music became a critical
part of a nation-building project based on ideas of modernist
reform in a postcolonial setting; it presents a beautifully
balanced picture of the tensions inhering in this process. Tacking
between "elite" and "folk" perspectives and aesthetics, giving
equal time
to ideologies and values inherited from the past and the nuanced
musical thinking of individual performers and arrangers creating in
the present, Dudley triumphs over the reductionist tendencies
that
often hamper discussions of the relationship between music and
politics. Through it all, the artistry and sheer creative energy of
the practitioners of pan shine through." -- Kenneth Bilby,
Rockefeller Fellow at the Center for Black Music Research, Columbia
College Chicago
"Finally, a work that brings the sophisticated musical
sensibilities of steelbands to the centre and investigates the
powerful hold that competition has over steelband aesthetics!
Dudley's book is an insightful romp through the world of pan from
the yards to the Savannah, but his ear is keenly tuned to the
arrangements, style, and, most generally, sound of pan ensembles.
This is an important book about creativity and passion for music in
a developing,
postcolonial nation." --Gage Averill, Dean of Music, University of
Toronto
"Dr. Dudley's Music from behind the Bridge is an elegant study of
Trinidad's steel pan, the best written thus far. In this book, Dr.
Dudley demonstrates a rare understanding of, and much respect for,
the West Indies in general and Trinidad in particular. Readers of
Music from behind the Bridge will learn not only about the
emergence and evolution of the steel pan as a musical instrument,
but will also grasp the social and political
significance of steel bands and of the music they play. Dr. Dudley
writes beautifully about peoples, situations and events that liken
Trinidad to other Caribbean countries/nations. Music from behind
the Bridge fosters a unique
understanding of music in Caribbean societies, not just in
Trinidad. A masterpiece." --Dominique Cyrille, Assistant Professor
of African and African American Studies at Lehman College
(CUNY)
"Shannon Dudley reveals to us in new ways the human depth and sonic
richness of Trinidad and Tobago's steelband tradition. His study
does much more than show how a vernacular music became a critical
part of a nation-building project based on ideas of modernist
reform in a postcolonial setting; it presents a beautifully
balanced picture of the tensions inhering in this process. Tacking
between "elite" and "folk" perspectives and aesthetics, giving
equal time
to ideologies and values inherited from the past and the nuanced
musical thinking of individual performers and arrangers creating in
the present, Dudley triumphs over the reductionist tendencies
that
often hamper discussions of the relationship between music and
politics. Through it all, the artistry and sheer creative energy of
the practitioners of pan shine through." -- Kenneth Bilby,
Rockefeller Fellow at the Center for Black Music Research, Columbia
College Chicago
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