Alexander
Cannon
Ethnomusicologist
About Me
I am an ethnomusicologist with research expertise in traditional and popular music from southern Vietnam and in the Vietnamese diaspora, queer music-making, and creativity studies. I currently am Associate Professor of Music at the University of Birmingham and teach classes in ethnomusicology, fieldwork methods, critical musicology, musical traditions of Asia, musical activism, and Black music-making in Britain. I am also the Principal Investigator of the ERC-selected project SoundDecisions: Musical Listening, Decision Making and Equitable Development in the Mekong Delta.
I previously taught at Western Michigan University and served as Co-Editor of Ethnomusicology Forum, Secretary of the Society for Asian Music Board, and Book Reviews Editor for the Yearbook for Traditional Music. I hold an undergraduate degree in flute performance and mathematical economics from Pomona College (California) and a PhD from the University of Michigan.
2022 Seeding the Tradition: Musical Creativity in Southern Vietnam. Middletown, CT: Wesleyan University Press
For artists, creativity plays a powerful role in understanding, confronting, and negotiating the crises of the present. Seeding the Tradition explores conflicting creativities in traditional music in Ho Chi Minh City, the Mekong Delta, and the Vietnamese diaspora, and how they influence contemporary southern Vietnamese culture. The book centers on the ways in which musicians of đờn ca tài tử, a “music for diversion,” practice creativity or sáng tạo in early 21st-century southern Vietnam. These musicians draw from long-standing theories of primarily Daoist creation while adopting strategically from and also reacting to a western neo-liberal model of creativity focused primarily—although not exclusively—on the individual genius. They play with metaphors of growth, development, and ruin to not only maintain their tradition but keep it vibrant in the rapidly-shifting context of modern Vietnam. With ethnographic descriptions of zither lessons in Ho Chi Minh City, outdoor music cafes in Cần Thơ, and television programs in Đồng Tháp, Seeding the Tradition offers a rich description of southern Vietnamese sáng tạo and suggests revised approaches to studying and understanding creativity.