Theodore Levin is the Arthur R. Virgin Professor of Music at Dartmouth College. He first visited Central Asia in 1974 and has been traveling there ever since. As an advocate for music and musicians from other cultures, he has written books, produced recordings, curated concerts and festivals, and contributed to international arts initiatives, including, since 2000, the Aga Khan Music Programme. His previous books include Where Rivers and Mountains Sing: Sound, Music, and Nomadism in Tuva and Beyond; The Hundred Thousand Fools of God: Musical Travels in Central Asia (and Queens, New York); and, as lead editor, The Music of Central Asia.
Description
Accessing Audiovisual Materials Acknowledgments Note on Transliteration List of Acronyms Preface Prologue: The Conundrum of Cultural Heritage 1. The Prince and the Ethnomusicologist 2. Revitalizing Central Asian Music 3. The Little NGO that Could: Centre Ustatshakirt and the Future of the Past in Kyrgyzstan 4. Putting Central Asian Music on the World Stage 5. Measuring Music's Impact 6. The Aga Khan Master Musicians (AKMM): Pluralists, Orientalists, Cultural Appropriators, or All of the Above? 7. Inventing a Music Prize: The Aga Khan Music Awards 8. Taking Stock: The Ethnography of Impact Epilogue Notes References Index