Category: News

AHRC Videogame Research Networks

ahrc-logo-forwebAs many in the UK will no doubt be aware, the AHRC recently released a press release entitled ‘Game changing research networks for the Video game industry’. The research council is now supporting six new research networks dedicated to videogames, including Guitar Heroes in Music Education? Music-based video-games and their potential for musical and performative creativity, led by David Roesner at the University of Kent. The press release states that:

The network seeks to investigate the impact of music-games on how we define music-making, creativity and identity and what opportunities this provides for artist and teachers. In order to do so, the network will connect relevant arts and humanities academics with both game designers and musicians, who have embraced the soft- and hardwares of gaming for creating new ways of composing and performing. The network also seeks to explore the creative potential and influence these games will have on future game design and how these could be implemented in music education.

This is unquestionably an excellent sign for the development of the field, and we look forward to seeing the fruits of their labour.

New Features: Facebook Comments and Guest Contributors

We are pleased to announce that we have implemented two new features to our website, the ability for Facebook users to comment on our blog posts, and a special form for submitting guest contributions (http://www.ludomusicology.org/contribute/). To comment on our posts, click on the post title to view the post in full; comments will be available at the bottom of the page. Comments will be moderated and not all guest contributions will necessarily be published, but we welcome any ludomusicologically-pertinent submissions.

We are pleased to announce that our first guest contributor will be Kyle Roderick (Texas Christian University), the Editor-in-chief at Musicology Memes.

Ludo 2014 Keynote: William Cheng

We are very excited to announce that the second keynote address at Ludo 2014 will be given by William Cheng, of Harvard University. Will’s most familiar ludomusicological work to-date is his ethnography, “Role-Playing toward a Virtual Musical Democracy in The Lord of the Rings Online,” Ethnomusicology 56:1 (2012), 31-62. His first book, Sound Play: Video Games and the Musical Imagination, is expected from Oxford University Press just weeks before the conference date.

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