Crossing borders/Grime Report symposium, Solent University, Southampton, Febuary 5, 2020
Haus der Kulturen der Welt (conference speaker), Berlin, December 2019
Keynote at Bass Culture conference, Royal Holloway, University of London, November 2019
Bass Culture symposium, Solent University, Southampton, October 18, 2019
Keynote with screening, Bass Culture, XX Biennial IASPM conference, School of Music, ANU, Canberra, June 24 – 28, 2019
Street Music conference presentation, University of East Anglia, Norwich, May 15, 2019
Performer and speaker, Birmingham City Council/ Punch/Bass festival, October 13, 2018
Guest speaker, for Debris Stevenson’s The Big Idea: Grime and Legislation, Royal Court Theatre, London, October 4, 2018
Wassermusik, Haus der Kulturen der Welt conference speaker, Berlin, August 9, 2018
Windrush 70th Anniversary event (presentation as academic consultant), City Hall, London, June 2018
Keynote at Positive Vibration festival, June 2018
Keynote at Sound System Outernational Conference, Goldsmiths, University of London, May 26, 2018
Conference presentation, Conservatorium of Music, Sydney, April 2018
Ticketmaster annual conference, October 2017
Being Human, October 2017
Black Cultural Archives, Bass Culture community workshop talk, June 2017
Reggae Research Network, University of East Anglia, Norwich, January 25, 2017
Resonanceia Music Tecnolgia, international conference, Colombia, October 13, 2016
Interviews with BBC News, Sky News, BBC WorldService, Newsnight and BBC Radio London to coincide with Bass Culture 70/50, October 2018
Report on launch of Bass Culture 70/50 exhibition, The Wire, October 25, 2018
Emma Finamore, ‘A huge celebration of UK bass culture has launched’, Clash, November 1, 2018
Bass Culture has been shortlisted in the ‘Research Project of the Year: Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences’ category of the Times Higher Education Awards 2021.
Creators | Riley, M. |
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Description | As P-I for the AHRC project Bass Culture (£533,032), Riley’s research involves locating, capturing and preserving memories, experiences and ephemera from three generations of musicians, music industry participants and audience members. The associated communities and networks have played a key role in transforming Britain into a multicultural society, yet their contributions have previously remained absent from the country’s cultural institutions. The output components draw on original interviews, new and archival imagery to inform both a large- scale multimedia, interdisciplinary exhibition at Ambika P3 (Bass Culture 70/50, 2018), and a collaboratively produced documentary film (Bass Culture, 2018). Included are a wide range of oral testimonies and previously unseen images (representing over 50 years of London-based content) that explore and make manifest reference points connecting the influence of British sound-system culture to modern and contemporary music, fashion and cultural forms today. Riley’s book chapter (2014) draws on his experiences as a black British musician of Jamaican heritage to contextualise the origins and emergence of black British music in the 1970s and 1980s against the socio-political backdrop of the era. Riley devised a methodology for working together with wide-ranging collaborators to break down and classify areas of interest, without disenfranchising the participants or co-researchers. In creating the online resource, the project’s researchers were able to apply key categories that helped guide navigation of the complex layers of material, cultural and economic activity underpinning key values that were shared within the community, while mapping the contribution for academia. The Bass Culture project successfully united academics, museums and the African Caribbean community in a series of projects that helped make visible the Jamaican contribution to British popular music and culture and lay the basis for popular music teaching that more accurately reflects that influence. |
Portfolio items | Bass Culture film |
Bass Culture 70/50 | |
Basscultureduk.com | |
Bass Culture: an alternative sound track to Britishness | |
Ticket Master State of Play Grime Report | |
Jazz Jamaica All Stars: The Trojan Story - Live Event | |
Year | 2014 |
Publisher | University of Westminster |
Keywords | CREAM Portfolio |
Digital Object Identifier (DOI) | https://doi.org/10.34737/qqvqz |