Abstract
This essay examines “Cantopop electronic dance music,” a term that
collectively designates the several sub-genres of electronic dance music
which originated in Hong Kong. This electronic dance music emerged in
1998 and became the dominating club music in Greater China in the early
2000s. While scholars have positively appraised numerous aspects and
subgenres of Cantopop they have never paid attention to local genres of
electronic dance music. Popular music critics and professional musicians
in Greater China also dismiss Cantopop electronic dance music as
insincere or incompetent imitations of global (i.e., European and
American) electronic dance music. In this essay I show that Cantopop
electronic dance music has valuable sociocultural characteristics and I
elaborate on what they are. Although this dance music has not inherited
the many desirable sociocultural properties of Western electronic dance
music, it has gained new ones through processes of cultural
hybridization. I will illustrate, through analyzing a range of clubbing
practices that hybridize singing with dancing, how Cantopop electronic
dance music empowers local audiences by giving them a central role in
music reproduction. Through examining the remixing of electronic dance
tracks by local DJs and the rewriting of lyrics of dance tracks by local
clubbers, I will explicate how local actors ingeniously hybridize,
appropriate and re-articulate local and global musical materials.
Original language | English |
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Title of host publication | Hybrid Hong Kong |
Editors | Kwok-bun Chan |
Place of Publication | Oxon; New York |
Publisher | Routledge |
Chapter | 11 |
Pages | 186-198 |
Number of pages | 13 |
Edition | 1st |
ISBN (Electronic) | 9781135755003, 9780203723296 |
ISBN (Print) | 9780415695541, 9780415754712 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 7 Mar 2012 |
Scopus Subject Areas
- Social Sciences(all)