Composing Identity, Fiddling with (Post)Ethnicity: Liz Carroll’s “Lake Effect”
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How to Cite

Dillane, A. (2013). Composing Identity, Fiddling with (Post)Ethnicity: Liz Carroll’s “Lake Effect”. MUSICultures, 40(1). Retrieved from https://journals.lib.unb.ca/index.php/MC/article/view/21128

Abstract

This paper analyzes the title track of the 2002 CD Lake Effect, as composed by Chicago fiddle player Liz Carroll and arranged by Evan Price (featuring the Turtle Island String Quartet), positing the degree to which it is suggestive of “post-ethnic” identification. Beginning with a nuancing of the various identities performed and negotiated by Liz Carroll the musician and first-generation Irish American and Chicagoan, “Lake Effect” can ultimately be understood in terms of its transgressive and transformative features. Generated from melodic and rhythmic motifs that the composer identifies as “Irish,” “American” or “jazzy,” “Lake Effect” juxtaposes and interpolates sonic indices of different identities in a hybrid, cosmopolitan and potentially post-ethnic structure.
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