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Mek Some Noise

Gospel Music and the Ethics of Style in Trinidad

Timothy Rommen author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:University of California Press

Published:4th May '07

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Mek Some Noise cover

"Mek Some Noise", Timothy Rommen's ethnographic study of Trinidadian gospel music, engages the multiple musical styles circulating in the nation's Full Gospel community and illustrates the carefully negotiated and contested spaces that they occupy in relationship to questions of identity. By exploring gospelypso, jamoo ('Jehovah's music'), gospel dancehall, and North American gospel music, along with the discourses that surround performances in these styles, he illustrates the extent to which value, meaning, and appropriateness are continually circumscribed and reinterpreted in the process of coming to terms with what it looks and sounds like to be a Full Gospel believer in Trinidad. The local, regional, and transnational implications of these musical styles, moreover, are read in relationship to their impact on belief (and vice versa), revealing the particularly nuanced poetics of conviction that drive both apologists and detractors of these styles. Rommen sets his investigation against a concisely drawn, richly historical narrative and introduces a theoretical approach which he calls the 'ethics of style' - a model that privileges the convictions embedded in this context and that emphasizes their role in shaping the terms upon which identity is continually being constructed in Trinidad. The result is an extended meditation on the convictions that lie behind the creation and reception of style in Full Gospel Trinidad.

"A remarkably rich and nuanced ethnographic work that breaks important new ground." World Of Music "The author's treatment of Trinidadian musical styles is exemplary." Journal Of American Folklore

ISBN: 9780520250680

Dimensions: 229mm x 152mm x 15mm

Weight: 318g

230 pages