2019
DOI: 10.1080/00343404.2019.1580817
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How do new music genres emerge? Diversification processes in symbolic knowledge bases

Abstract: Table A1. Cities analyzed in this study and the number of last.fm users applying their city-related tags to artists on the platform (as of May 2015) Sample cityCountry No. of taggers

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Cited by 16 publications
(13 citation statements)
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“…Klement and Strambach research points out that popular music is spreading widely, and this recognized beauty of music is not pure objectivity, which reflects a strong subjectivity of the public's aesthetics. For music, a magical culture, it is emotional and casual [ 16 ]. Investigate and examine the issues with polyphony estimate and melody extraction in music.…”
Section: Related Workmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Klement and Strambach research points out that popular music is spreading widely, and this recognized beauty of music is not pure objectivity, which reflects a strong subjectivity of the public's aesthetics. For music, a magical culture, it is emotional and casual [ 16 ]. Investigate and examine the issues with polyphony estimate and melody extraction in music.…”
Section: Related Workmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The importance of nonlocal knowledge as a source of path creation and diversification has long been acknowledge in EG, but a focal research agenda around this theme has only formed more recently in the path creation literature (Boschma et al 2017;Trippl, Grillitsch, andIsaksen 2017, Neffke et al 2018;Klement and Strambach 2019). In their seminal article, Martin and Sunley (2006) highlight that new paths may emerge from the importation of organizational forms, technologies, firms, or institutional arrangements from other places.…”
Section: Nonlocal Sources Of Path Creationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Activities crucial to these scenes can be often be based well outside their home region (Chapain and Comunian, 2010). Klement and Strambach (2019b), for example, find in their recent analysis of the emergence of new music genres that while new genres spawn mainly from localised knowledge sources, symbolic knowledge creation rarely happens without contributions of extra-local knowledge. It was evident through the interviews that the same dynamics of informality that define local scenes also define social and business relationships developed beyond the region.…”
Section: The Importance Of Connections Beyond the Regionmentioning
confidence: 99%