About
I am a Professor of Music with a DPhil in Social Anthropology from Oxford University. I have specialised in the anthropology of music and in ethnographic, participatory research on popular music, defined in its broadest sense. My research interests have centred on questions of place, migration, heritage and identity. This research has generally been largely collaborative, conducted with scholars based in the UK and beyond, and through partnership with a wide range of non-academic groups and organisations, including museums and galleries, governing bodies and heritage managers, community activists, media companies, music businesses and associations, and other cultural organisations.
A Fellow of the British Academy, I have also been elected Fellow of the Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland and held Visiting Professor appointments, most recently at the University of Turku. In 1988 I was appointed by the University of Liverpool to establish (with David Horn) the Institute of Popular Music as the world's first specialist centre for the study of popular music, and I acted as the Institute's Director from 2001 to 2024. I have taught undergraduate and postgraduate modules on various topics, including music and politics, music and everyday life, music and the city. My doctoral students have worked on topics such as music scenes and identities, music and urban regeneration, creativity and sound recording, cultural policy and the music industries.