4.7 Article

Music Has No Borders: An Exploratory Study of Audience Engagement With YouTube Music Broadcasts During COVID-19 Lockdown, 2020

Journal

FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY
Volume 12, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2021.643893

Keywords

social capital; community resilience; COVID-19; social distancing; collective effervescence; music; bridging; bonding

Funding

  1. Australian Research Council [DP190102978]

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This exploratory study examines the role of music in promoting social cohesion, intercultural understanding, and community resilience during times of social distancing and heightened racial tensions through analysis of online music performances. Audience engagement with music performances on YouTube during the COVID-19 lockdown resulted in themes of Interaction, Unity, Resilience, Identity, and Emotion. The study suggests that music can foster intercultural understanding and shape individual and collective identity through cognitive and emotional engagement.
This exploratory study engages with eight case studies of music performances broadcast online to investigate the role of music in facilitating social cohesion, intercultural understanding and community resilience during a time of social distancing and concomitant heightened racial tensions. Using an online ethnographic approach and thematic analysis of video comments, the nature of audience engagement with music performances broadcast via YouTube during COVID-19 lockdown of 2020 is explored through the lens of ritual engagement with media events and models of social capital. The eight case studies featured virtual choirs, orchestras and music collaborations of various genres, including classical, pop and fusion styles drawing from European, Asia Minor, South African, West African, North African, Arabic, South Asian, and East Asian cultural origins. Five overarching themes resulted from thematic analysis of video comments, including Interaction, Unity, Resilience, Identity, and Emotion. The paper contributes important theorisation that ritual engagement and social learning fosters intercultural understanding through engaging with music both cognitively and emotionally, which can in turn shape both individual and collective identity. Online platforms provide scope for both bonding and bridging opportunities. Community resilience is supported through the sharing of knowledge, sustaining music practice during social distancing, as well as emotional support shared among audience participants, with potential wellbeing outcomes.

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