Music in the time-spectrum: routines, spaces and emotional experience

Gary Sinclair, Julie Tinson, Paddy Dolan

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Music streaming, structured by an expanding network of social interdependencies (e.g. musicians, sound engineers, computer scientists and distributors) has made it easier to consume music in a wider number of social and private spaces and to a greater degree. This paper examines the emotional experience of contemporary music consumption by drawing from an Eliasian perspective, specifically Elias and Dunning’s sociology of leisure. We explore the relationship between work, spare time and leisure spaces, rather than examining specific spaces in isolation. We argue that music is used to demarcate, transition between, and blur space. Music plays an important role in facilitating the rhythm of routine, helping individuals to adjust to the demands of different spaces (based on varying intensities and immediacies of social pressures) and manage mood. The key characteristics of leisure that Elias and Dunning identify (motility, sociability and mimetic tension) are explored across the spectrum of time and space.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)509-522
Number of pages14
JournalLeisure Studies
Volume38
Issue number4
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 4 Jul 2019

Keywords

  • figurational sociology
  • leisure
  • Music streaming
  • sparetime spectrum
  • work

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