CfP: Music at the Edges: Peripherality in the practices of popular music, Deadline: 09.02.2026
June 29 – July 1, 2026; University of Aberdeen, Kings College, Aberdeen, Scotland
For this meeting of the UK and Ireland branch of IASPM we invite scholars to explore and reflect on the concept of peripherality as it relates to the diversity of practices undertaken in relation to music making and dissemination. We consider peripherality here in both its literal (spatial and geographical) forms and in the more metaphorical ways that attitudes and behaviours are shaped by a perceived distance from an implied centre. To this end, we encourage considerations of the ways in which peripherality may influence how music is created, performed, recorded, and disseminated within and from such locales. This may include locations that are geographically isolated, taking into consideration the positive and negative influences on the local music scenes and their functioning. Peripherality may also refer to the ways in which the music markets within such locales might be considered satellite markets for other centres of production. We also recognise the ways in which specific genres of music may be considered ‘underground’ when positioned in relation to ‘mainstream’ genres and hence are considered peripheral within specific markets. Furthermore, we recognise the ways in which digital and internet technologies can break down traditional barriers between the centre and the periphery and the tensions which may arise as a result of this.
Specific activities may also be conceptualised hierarchically within a core-periphery relationship, such as superstar performers (core) and their backing band, backup singers and/ or stage crew (peripheral) or how those who are onstage performers (core) sit in relation to backstage crew (peripheral). What’s more, those who work behind-the-scenes in music may also have their roles conceptualised within the core-peripheral relationship. These relationships may also be evidenced in relation to the upholding (or leveraging) of dominant discourses and preferentiality in the supporting of music within place-specific initiatives such as music city frameworks, and/ or the ways in which music histories may perpetuate dominant discourses and understandings. By extension artists and/ or listeners may be marginalised or even exploited by dominant power structures.
To this end we invite submissions exploring the diversity of the ways in which we understand peripherality as it broadly relates to the creation, recording and dissemination of music as well as the sustention of music scenes, their associated ecosystems and music careers more broadly. This may be related to (but is not limited to):
The ways in which peripherality – real and/ or perceived – influences music activities within and beyond locales labelled as peripheral
The influence of peripherality on the development and sustainability of music careers within and from such locales, their scenes and the discourses associated with them
The ways in which a peripheral-to-core shift may occur through the emergence of genres and scenes of note within mainstream music popularity, which may be considered with contemporary and/or historical examples
The ways in which dominant (core) discourses may be challenged through the emergence of new scholarship exploring previously ignored/ forgotten (peripheral) perspectives and experiences (including scholarship on the experiences of marginalised voices)
The role those in perceptually peripheral positions play in the sustainability of the music industry
The role of the music industry as a whole in relation to larger systems of cultural, social and economic (re)production – i.e., how core or peripheral is the music industry when viewed from different geographic or political perspectives?
How peripherality is thematised and/or critiqued in music making and fan cultures
We also welcome submissions for papers which may not fit within the main conference theme.
We ask contributors to the conference to familiarise themselves with the IASPM Code of Conduct and IASPM UK & Ireland Branch’s statement on safe spaces. Contributors will be required to hold a paid membership with IASPM at the time of the conference.
Abstract Submissions
We invite submissions for papers and sessions in the following formats. Please submit your proposals as a Word document to iaspmuki2026[at]gmail.com by Monday February 9, 2026.
Individual Papers (20 mins + 10 mins for questions). Please include name, affiliation, and email address of the presenter, and an abstract of no more than 300 words. Please ensure that the names of the contributors do not appear in the abstracts themselves.
Group Sessions (90 Minutes) focused on a topic and involving three or four contributors. Please include names, affiliations and email addresses of proposer/facilitator and individual contributors, an abstract for the session (c.300 words) and additional abstracts for each contribution (c.200 words). Please ensure that the names of the contributors do not appear in the abstracts themselves.
Practice-based demonstrations/ workshops: We also have capacity to consider a limited number of practice-based demonstrations and/ or workshops. These would be limited to no longer than 45 minutes (including a Q and A). Those wishing to share their research in this format are asked to submit a 300-word statement outlining the rationale and focus of their session. Technical specifications (equipment and space requirements) will also be required to assess the feasibility. Conference organisers may wish to liaise further on these proposals as part of their decision-making process.