Article published In: The Politics of Sound: Intersections of Music, Discourse and Political Communication
Edited by Lyndon C.S. Way
[Journal of Language and Politics 18:4] 2019
► pp. 526–540
‘Get off your arse’
‘Singing newspapers’ and political choirs in the UK
Published online: 28 June 2019
https://doi.org/10.1075/jlp.18064.hen
https://doi.org/10.1075/jlp.18064.hen
Abstract
Although the UK has a centuries-old history of subversive singing, since the election of a
Conservative-led government in 2010 and imposition of austerity-based economic and social policies, the number
of choirs with a political philosophy and mission has grown. The website CampaignChoirs lists around thirty
political choirs committed to a left-wing, green or anarchist agenda, which is reflected in the music and
related actions. This paper takes as its case study the Leeds-based Commoners Choir and considers how its
musical decisions enable it to communicate protest politics. Using critical discourse analysis, this study
adds to the dialogue on musical discourse by focusing on the speech acts contained within the lyrics; the
social impact of the Commoners’ performances; and the use of dialect to root the works within a distinctly
northern culture. It concludes that careful consideration of discourse can demonstrate a more measurable
authenticity in an artistic act of protest.
Keywords: choir, singing, protest, discourse, Leon Rosselson, Commoners Choir, Boff Whalley, critical discourse
Article outline
- 1.Introduction
- 2.Methodology
- 3.A radical history
- 3.1‘Get off your arse’
- 3.2More than a mouthful
- 3.3Tuneful protesting
- 3.4True north
- 4.Performances
- 5.Conclusion
References
References (44)
Aleshinskaya, Evgeniya. 2013. “Key Components of Musical Discourse Analysis”. Research in Language, 2013, 11(4). [URL].
Bakhtin, Mikhail. 1986. Speech Genres and Other Late Essays. Trans. Vern W. McGee. Austin, TX: University of Texas Press.
BBC. n.d. [Site archived]. Accessed August 8, 2018. [URL]
BBC News. March 2, 2018. “Great Exhibition of the North: two acts quit in protest at sponsors BAE”. [URL]
Campaign Choirs. n.d. Accessed August 6, 2018. [URL]
Clifford, Allan. 2017. “A moment that changed me: joining a radical choir”. The Guardian. September 1, 2017. [URL]
Commoners Choir. n.d. Accessed August 10, 2018. [URL]
. 2018. YouTube. [URL]
Cross, Simon. 2017. “The enduring culture and limits of political song”. Cogent Arts and Humanities, 4 (1).
Eastis, Carla M. 1998. “Organizational Diversity and the production of Social Capital: One of these groups is not like the other”. American Behavioral Scientist, 42 (1): 66–67.
English Diggers n.d. Accessed August 20, 2018. [URL]
The Great Exhibition of the North. n.d. Accessed August 11, 2018. [URL]
Gresham Lecture July 8, 2015. [URL]
Harrop, Sally. June 2018. Commoners Choir. [URL]
Ibrahim, Awad El Karim M. 1999. “Becoming Black: Rap and hip hop, race, gender, identity, and the politics of ESL learning.” TESOL Quarterly, 33(3).
Jeannotte, M. M. Sharon. 2003. “Singing Alone? The contribution of cultural capital to social cohesion and sustainable communities”. International Journal of Cultural Policy, 9:1, 35–49.
Launay, Jacques. 2015. “Choir singing improves health, happiness – and is the perfect ice-breaker”. The Conversation October 28, 2015.
Leeds City council. 2018. Leeds Council Poverty Fact Book. [URL]
Negm, Mohamed Said. 2014. “Resisting Power in Discourse”. Procedia – Social and Behavioral Sciences. 1921: June 2015, 284–289.
O’Halloran, Kay. 2011. Multimodal Discourse Analysis. In Ken Hyland and Brian Paltridge (eds) Companion to Discourse, 120–137. London and New York: Continuum.
Reisigl, Martin, and Ruth Wodak. 2001. Discourse and Discrimination: Rhetorics of Racism and Antisemitism. London: Routledge.
. 2009. “The discourse-historical approach (DHA)”. Methods for Critical Discourse Analysis. Ruth Wodak; Michael Meyer, eds. London: Sage (2nd revised edition).
Reimer, Lotte, and Kevin Mason. 2016. “Raised Voices: the campaigning choir movement”. Red Pepper. [URL]
Rodrigues, Jason. 2014. “John Prescott gets soaked at the Brit Awards”. [URL]
Rosselson, Leon. 2017. ‘The Power of Song’. [URL]
Smith, Ben, and Anita Badejo. 2014. [URL]
The Voice project n.d. Accessed August 6, 2018. [URL]
Van Leeuwen, Theo. 2012. “The critical analysis of musical discourse”. Critical Discourse Studies. 9 (4).
Way, Lyndon C. S., and Simon McKerrell. 2017, eds. Music as Multimodal Discourse. London: Bloomsbury.
Whalley, Boff. Commoners Choir. [URL]
. 2016. “Crass, me and Gareth Malone”. [URL]
Whyatt, Mark. 2018. Commoners Choir. [URL]
