Popular Songs, Melodies from the Dead: Moving beyond Historicism with the Buddhist Ethics and Aesthetics of <i>Pin Peat</i> and Cambodian Hip Hop

This article illustrates how the aesthetics of two types of Cambodian music—<i>pin peat</i> and Cambodian hip hop—enact Cambodian–Buddhist ethics and function as ritual practices through musicians’ recollections of deceased teachers’ musical legacies. Noting how prevalent historicist and...

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Main Author: Jeffrey Dyer
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-11-01
Series:Religions
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2077-1444/11/11/625
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spelling doaj-69e18755375540b4b5130fa1b56cb4a82020-11-25T04:01:04ZengMDPI AGReligions2077-14442020-11-011162562510.3390/rel11110625Popular Songs, Melodies from the Dead: Moving beyond Historicism with the Buddhist Ethics and Aesthetics of <i>Pin Peat</i> and Cambodian Hip HopJeffrey Dyer0Department of Musicology and Ethnomusicology, Boston University, Boston, MA 02215, USAThis article illustrates how the aesthetics of two types of Cambodian music—<i>pin peat</i> and Cambodian hip hop—enact Cambodian–Buddhist ethics and function as ritual practices through musicians’ recollections of deceased teachers’ musical legacies. Noting how prevalent historicist and secular epistemologies isolate Cambodian and, more broadly, Southeast Asian musical aesthetics from their ethical and ritual functions, I propose that analyses focusing on Buddhist ethics more closely translate the moral, religious, and ontological aspects inherent in playing and listening to Cambodian music. I detail how Cambodian musicians’ widespread practices of quoting deceased teachers’ variations, repurposing old musical styles, and reiterating the melodies and rhythms played by artistic ancestors have the potential to function as Buddhist rituals, whether those aesthetic and stylistic features surface in <i>pin peat</i> songs or in hip hop. Those aesthetic practices entail a modality of being historical that partially connects with but exceeds historicism’s approach to Buddhism, temporality, and history by enacting relations of mutual care that bring the living and dead to be ontologically coeval. Such relational practices bring me to conclude with a brief discussion rethinking what post-genocide remembrance sounds like and feels like.https://www.mdpi.com/2077-1444/11/11/625popular musicefficacymusical aestheticshistoricismBuddhist ethicsontologies of living–dead relations
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jeffrey Dyer
spellingShingle Jeffrey Dyer
Popular Songs, Melodies from the Dead: Moving beyond Historicism with the Buddhist Ethics and Aesthetics of <i>Pin Peat</i> and Cambodian Hip Hop
Religions
popular music
efficacy
musical aesthetics
historicism
Buddhist ethics
ontologies of living–dead relations
author_facet Jeffrey Dyer
author_sort Jeffrey Dyer
title Popular Songs, Melodies from the Dead: Moving beyond Historicism with the Buddhist Ethics and Aesthetics of <i>Pin Peat</i> and Cambodian Hip Hop
title_short Popular Songs, Melodies from the Dead: Moving beyond Historicism with the Buddhist Ethics and Aesthetics of <i>Pin Peat</i> and Cambodian Hip Hop
title_full Popular Songs, Melodies from the Dead: Moving beyond Historicism with the Buddhist Ethics and Aesthetics of <i>Pin Peat</i> and Cambodian Hip Hop
title_fullStr Popular Songs, Melodies from the Dead: Moving beyond Historicism with the Buddhist Ethics and Aesthetics of <i>Pin Peat</i> and Cambodian Hip Hop
title_full_unstemmed Popular Songs, Melodies from the Dead: Moving beyond Historicism with the Buddhist Ethics and Aesthetics of <i>Pin Peat</i> and Cambodian Hip Hop
title_sort popular songs, melodies from the dead: moving beyond historicism with the buddhist ethics and aesthetics of <i>pin peat</i> and cambodian hip hop
publisher MDPI AG
series Religions
issn 2077-1444
publishDate 2020-11-01
description This article illustrates how the aesthetics of two types of Cambodian music—<i>pin peat</i> and Cambodian hip hop—enact Cambodian–Buddhist ethics and function as ritual practices through musicians’ recollections of deceased teachers’ musical legacies. Noting how prevalent historicist and secular epistemologies isolate Cambodian and, more broadly, Southeast Asian musical aesthetics from their ethical and ritual functions, I propose that analyses focusing on Buddhist ethics more closely translate the moral, religious, and ontological aspects inherent in playing and listening to Cambodian music. I detail how Cambodian musicians’ widespread practices of quoting deceased teachers’ variations, repurposing old musical styles, and reiterating the melodies and rhythms played by artistic ancestors have the potential to function as Buddhist rituals, whether those aesthetic and stylistic features surface in <i>pin peat</i> songs or in hip hop. Those aesthetic practices entail a modality of being historical that partially connects with but exceeds historicism’s approach to Buddhism, temporality, and history by enacting relations of mutual care that bring the living and dead to be ontologically coeval. Such relational practices bring me to conclude with a brief discussion rethinking what post-genocide remembrance sounds like and feels like.
topic popular music
efficacy
musical aesthetics
historicism
Buddhist ethics
ontologies of living–dead relations
url https://www.mdpi.com/2077-1444/11/11/625
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