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Glossary›World Music

Glossary

World Music

A commercial term coined in 1987 to market non-Western music to Western audiences, encompassing traditional, folk, and contemporary music rooted in cultural traditions outside the Anglo-American mainstream.

What is World Music?

World music is a marketing category created in 1987 by independent record labels in London to promote non-Western musical traditions to Western consumers. The term encompasses a vast array of genres including traditional folk music, sacred ritual music, contemporary fusion styles, and regional popular music from Africa, Asia, Latin America, the Middle East, Eastern Europe, and indigenous cultures worldwide. While commercially useful, the term has been criticized by ethnomusicologists and musicians as reductive, lumping diverse traditions into a single “other” category defined primarily by what it is not—namely, Western pop, rock, classical, and jazz.

Origins & Lineage

The term “world music” emerged from a meeting of eleven independent record label executives at the Empress of Russia pub in London on June 29, 1987. Faced with the challenge of marketing international artists like Youssou N’Dour, Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan, and the Bulgarian State Radio and Television Female Vocal Choir, they agreed on “world music” as an umbrella term for record store bins and radio programming. The participating labels included Globe Style, Oval Records, Hannibal Records, and Cooking Vinyl.

The concept gained institutional legitimacy when Peter Gabriel founded the WOMAD (World of Music, Arts and Dance) festival in 1982, five years before the term was formalized. The first WOMAD festival in Shepton Mallet, England, featured artists from Egypt, Pakistan, India, and Burundi alongside Western experimental musicians. Gabriel’s Real World Records label, established in 1989, became one of the most influential distributors of world music.

Precursors to the world music movement include ethnomusicologist Alan Lomax’s field recordings for the Library of Congress (1930s-1980s), the Nonesuch Explorer Series launched in 1967, and David Lewiston’s recordings of Tibetan, Balinese, and other Asian traditions. The Anthology of American Folk Music (1952) curated by Harry Smith established a model for presenting traditional music as art worthy of serious attention.

How It’s Practiced

World music encompasses performance contexts ranging from sacred ceremonies to international concert halls. A Gnawa musician in Morocco performs spiritual healing rituals with the guembri (three-stringed lute) and qraqeb (metal castanets); the same artist may later perform at WOMEX, the international world music trade fair in Europe. A Carnatic vocalist in Chennai follows centuries-old raga structures in temple performances; their recording appears in Western yoga studios.

Instruments vary by tradition: the kora (21-string West African harp-lute), didgeridoo (Australian Aboriginal aerophone), oud (Middle Eastern lute), sitar (North Indian plucked string instrument), gamelan (Indonesian percussion ensemble), and countless others. Vocal techniques include Tuvan throat singing, Bulgarian open-throat harmonies, Pygmy polyphony, and qawwali Sufi devotional singing.

Contemporary world music frequently involves fusion: Ry Cooder’s collaborations with Cuban musicians (Buena Vista Social Club, 1997), Paul Simon’s Graceland (1986) featuring South African mbaqanga, and Transglobal Underground’s electronica-infused North African sounds. Some artists, like Senegalese singer Baaba Maal and Mali’s Tinariwen, blend traditional forms with rock, hip-hop, or electronic elements.

World Music Today

Seekers encounter world music through streaming platforms (Spotify’s “World” category includes 1,600+ sub-genres), international festivals (WOMAD, Rainforest World Music Festival in Malaysia, Festival au Désert in Mali before its suspension), and academic programs in ethnomusicology. The genre influences conscious music spaces: kirtan gatherings feature Indian bhajan and mantra traditions, ecstatic dance events incorporate West African drumming, and sound healing practitioners use Tibetan singing bowls and Aboriginal instruments.

The Academy Awards introduced a Best World Music Album category in 1992 (later renamed Best Global Music Album in 2021, acknowledging the problematic nature of “world” as othering). Artists like Ravi Shankar, Ali Farka Touré, Ladysmith Black Mambazo, and Angélique Kidjo have won recognition. Subscription services like Smithsonian Folkways and ARC Music preserve field recordings alongside contemporary releases.

Common Misconceptions

World music is not a musical style with unified characteristics—it’s a retail category. A Mongolian overtone singer, a Brazilian samba school, and a Syrian oud player share no musical commonality beyond being non-Western. The term has been criticized by artists including Youssou N’Dour and Ravi Shankar as patronizing, creating a hierarchy where Western music is the norm and everything else is “world.”

World music does not mean “ancient” or “authentic.” Many traditions labeled world music are contemporary creations or evolving practices. Nigerian Afrobeat, created by Fela Kuti in the 1970s, and Algerian raï both emerged as modern, politically charged genres.

The category is not synonymous with spirituality, though sacred traditions (Sufi music, Tibetan chant, kirtan) are frequently marketed under this label. Much world music is secular dance music, protest music, or popular entertainment.

How to Begin

Start with curated compilations: the Rough Guide series offers regional overviews (Rough Guide to Mali, Rough Guide to Psychedelic Samba), while Smithsonian Folkways provides annotated field recordings with cultural context. Radio programs like KCRW’s Global Village and BBC Radio 3’s World on 3 introduce artists with expert commentary.

Attend a local WOMAD festival or world music venue. Many cities host festivals featuring artists from specific traditions—the Chicago World Music Festival, Colours of Ostrava in Czech Republic, or Sfinks Mixed in Belgium.

For deeper study, explore ethnomusicology texts: Bruno Nettl’s “The Study of Ethnomusicology” (1983) and Timothy Rice’s “May It Fill Your Soul: Experiencing Bulgarian Music” (1994) provide academic frameworks. The Garland Encyclopedia of World Music (10 volumes) offers comprehensive regional coverage.

Choose one tradition to explore in depth rather than sampling broadly. Sustained attention to Carnatic music, Ghanaian highlife, or Persian classical music reveals complexities lost in superficial browsing. Seek instruction from practitioners within the tradition when possible, recognizing that transmission often occurs through oral/aural methods rather than notation.

Artists & teachers in this practice

Xavier RuddXavier RuddYoga TeacherKeBlackKeBlackMusicianHeuss L'enfoiréHeuss L'enfoiréMusicianAk4:20Ak4:20MusicianAyla NereoAyla NereoMusicianJohn De KadtJohn De KadtMusicianClannadClannadMusicianTina MaliaTina MaliaMusicianTWOPILOTSTWOPILOTSMusicianT.SivaprasadT.SivaprasadMusicianDrezusDrezusMusicianAlok KumarAlok KumarMusician

Related terms

kirtansound healingecstatic dancecarnatic musicsufismethnomusicology
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