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The Sounds of Latinidad

Immigrants Making Music and Creating Culture in a Southern City
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The Sounds of Latinidad explores the Latino music scene as a lens through which to understand changing ideas about latinidad in the New South. Focusing on Latino immigrant musicians and their fans in Charlotte, North Carolina, the volume shows how limited economic mobility, social marginalization, and restrictive immigration policies have stymied immigrants' access to the American dream and musicians' dreams of success. Instead, Latin music has become a way to form community, debate political questions, and claim cultural citizenship. The volume illuminates the complexity of Latina/o musicians' lives. They find themselves at the intersection of culture and politics, often pushed to define a vision of what it means to be Latino in a globalizing city in the Nuevo South. At the same time, they often avoid overt political statements and do not participate in immigrants' rights struggles, instead holding a cautious view of political engagement. Yet despite this politics of ambivalence, Latina/o musicians do assert intellectual agency and engage in a politics that is embedded in their musical community, debating aesthetics, forging collective solidarity with their audiences, and protesting poor working conditions. Challenging scholarship on popular music that focuses on famous artists or on one particular genre, this volume demonstrates how exploring the everyday lives of ordinary musicians can lead to a deeper understanding of musicians' role in society. It argues that the often overlooked population of Latina/o musicians should be central to our understanding of what it means to live in a southern U.S. city today.
v Contents Preface vii Acknowledgments xi Introduction 1 1. Charlotte, a Globalizing City 17 2. The Latin Music Scene in Charlotte 41 3. Bands Making Musical Communities 59 4. "Thursday Is Bakalao's Day!" Bands at Work and Play 85 5. The "Collective Circle": Music and Ambivalent Politics in Charlotte 107 6. Shifting Urban Genres 141 7. Race and the Expanding Borderlands Condition 165 8. The Festival: Marketing Latinidad 189 9. Musicians' Ethics and Aesthetics 217 Conclusion 237 Notes 255 Bibliography 265 Index 281 About the Author 287
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