Consider running wild and free at this summer’s music festivals – without your phone.
Nicholas Green/Unsplash
The habit of using our phones while at a summer music festival can negatively impact our experiences.
iTunes is being replaced by three separate applications on the new iOS operating systenm.
Shutterstock/PixieMe
Apple’s decision to end iTunes for its new desktop operating system is an attempt to retain and regain market share from rival media platforms.
Lee was able to communicate that disability is a part of humanity – not separate from it.
America's Got Talent/YouTube
Lee, who is blind and autistic, upended the assumption, held by many, that people with disabilities lack rich interior lives.
Juan de Dios Mateos as Cavalier Belfiore and Ruth Iniesta as Corinna in Opera Australia’s 2019 production of Il Viaggio a Reims at Arts Centre Melbourne.
Jeff Busby
Gioachino Rossini’s opera was originally meant as a satire of royalist France. A new production updates the work for a modern audience, setting the drama in a museum where the paintings come to life.
A billboard in Nairobi for Safaricom, Kenya’s largest mobile service provider, featuring veteran rapper and producer Jua Cali.
Andrew J Eisenberg
The political economy of music distribution goes unchecked. Despite increased digital revenues, also across Africa, music markets remain characterised by bottlenecks between musicians and audiences.
Marcantonio Raimondi’s 1505 engraving may show Leonardo da Vinci playing an instrument called a lira da braccio.
Cleveland Museum of Art.
A lot has been said about Leonardo and music, much of it speculation. But what do we know for sure?
The burnt ruins of the St. Mary Baptist Church, one of three that recently burned down in Louisiana.
AP Photo/Gerald Herbert
When three African American churches were burned down in southern Louisiana, the man accused was said to be linked to black metal, a subgenre of heavy metal with a history of violence.
Like a finely tuned jazz musician.
Africa Studio/Shutterstock
We often spend time thinking about how we can change ourselves rather than rejoicing in what makes us truly unique.
Learning how we respond to rhythm can lead to therapeutic applications.
Omar Lopez/Unsplash
Why and how do we groove? Researchers are investigating how we respond to music, with applications for therapy.
The Walker Brothers performing in 1965.
Starstock/Photoshot
The music of Scott Walker was central to the Golden Age of songwriters. It has inspired a multitude since, from David Bowie to Thom Yorke.
Gurindji singers Thomas Monkey Yikapayi, Ronnie Wavehill Wirrpa and Topsy Dodd Ngarnjal sing ‘Wanji-wanji’.
Brenda L Croft
Wanji-wanji’s lyrics have remained unchanged over thousands of kilometres and the past 150 years.
Preliminary drawing of title page for ‘Where the Wild Things Are’ (New York: Harper & Row, 1963), 26:7, The Maurice Sendak Collection.
Archives & Special Collections at the Thomas J. Dodd Research Center, University of Connecticut Library. © The Maurice Sendak Foundation.
The book took eight years from conception to publication. In the earliest dummy, the monsters that millions have grown to love actually started out as horses.
Funky pigeon.
Stockphotomania/Shutterstock
Can animals find the beat in music and dance along?
Stokkete/Shutterstock
People with auditory implants often experience music as horrible buzzes and beeps. New research may be able to help.
First page of Liszt's opera Sardanapalo, GSA 60 / N4. Photo © Klassik Stiftung Weimar
Should unfinished art remain so?
A cover song can both enhance and diminish the legacy of the original artist.
PrinceOfLove/Shutterstock.com
Some covers are recorded as a nod to the legacy of the original, only to end up becoming the definitive version of the song.
At some point, jazz went from the music of youthful rebellion to that of the cultured elite.
Freedom Master/shutterstock
Jazz used to be experienced on a dance floor. But over time, it became something to dissect and analyze.
Shutterstock
Unlike many of his predecessors, the US president is no vulture of culture.
A performance at one of hip hop scenes in Wijilan, Yogyakarta.
The Conversation Indonesia/Edi Dwi Riyanto
Theoretically, nothing is “authentic” in hip hop culture.
Virtual Reality technology opens up new experiences and possibilities in music for people with disabilities.
Performance Without Barriers
Tailored VR technology is helping creating digital musical instruments that musicians with disabilities can play.