Josh Kun


Josh Kun is an American author, academic and music critic. Kun is Professor of Communication and Journalism and Chair in Cross-Cultural Communication in the Annenberg School at the University of Southern California.
He also holds a joint appointment at USC's Department of American Studies and Ethnicity. He is the director of USC Annenberg's School of Communication, director of The Popular Music Project at USC Annenberg's the Norman Lear Center and co-editor of the book series "Refiguring American Music" for Duke University Press.
Kun serves on the boards of Dublab, Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions, and the Latin American Cinemateca, and on the editorial boards of American Quarterly, the International Journal of Communications, and The Journal of Popular Music Studies. He has also worked as a consultant and curator with The Los Angeles Public Library, Walt Disney Concert Hall, The Autry National Center, and the Santa Monica Museum of Art. He is a 2016 MacArthur Fellow.

Biography

Josh Kun attended the Harvard School, a private university preparatory day school in Los Angeles, and then Duke University, where he received a B.A. in literature in 1993. He graduated from University of California, Berkeley, with a Ph.D in ethnic studies. Prior to USC, he was an associate professor of English at the University of California, Riverside. His research focuses on the arts and politics of cultural connection, with an emphasis on popular music, the cultures of globalization, the US-Mexico border, and Jewish-American musical history.
In 2005, he co-founded Reboot Stereophonic, a non-profit record label dedicated to excavating lost treasures of Jewish-American music. Reboot has been featured in The New York Times and on National Public Radio. He is also a co-founder of the Idelsohn Society for Musical Preservation, which is named for Abraham Zevi Idelsohn, legendary Jewish musicologist and writer of the classic, "Hava Nagila." Idelsohn Society is committed to the belief that music creates conversations otherwise impossible in daily life. The Society's goal is to incite a new conversation about the present by listening anew to the past, focusing on stories of hybrid identities, eclectic communities, racial dialogue, and pioneering musical style, music that forces listeners to interrogate their own identities.
Dr. Kun's October 2009 exhibit "Last Exit USA" at the Steve Turner Contemporary Gallery in Los Angeles, focused on popular music exchanges between Mexico and the U.S. in the 1960s, complete with 44 album covers and two listening stations. According to the Los Angeles Times review of the exhibit, "Listening to Kun's selections is like visiting a world both familiar and strange, a sort of parallel universe that is disorienting, eye-opening, exciting."
As a critic and journalist, Kun is a regular contributor to The New York Times, The Los Angeles Times, Los Angeles Magazine, VIBE, Tu Ciudad Los Angeles, the San Francisco Bay Guardian, and Boston Phoenix.

Works

''What is an MC If He Can't Rap to Banda? Making Music in Nuevo L.A.''

What is an MC If He Can't Rap to Banda? Making Music in Nuevo L.A. is an article about cultural, especially musical, crossovers between the United States and Mexico, particularly between Los Angeles and Mexico. He analyzes the cultural implications and intersections in the song "No Hay Manera" by AKWID. To give some background, "No Hay Manera" was first popularized in 2003, and it aired on both KPWR 105.9, a popular R&B and hip-hop station in L.A., and La Que Buena, one of Mexico's leading radio stations. The song samples brass and vocal samples from Banda El Recodo's rendition of the song .
Essentially, Kun argues that "No Hay Manera" is a sufficient representation of the idea that cultural and musical hybridity is a form of authenticity, and that immigrant communities express their diaspora in an active, not passive, fashion. Firstly, Kun addresses the three musical "layers" that are contained in No Hay Manera, each addressing a different slice in time and altogether forming an authentic expression and representation of a "congealed history". More specifically, the layers form a narrative of the Mexican migration to Los Angeles and the creation of new cultural identities along the way and in Los Angeles. The three "layers" are: the original lyrics, the aforementioned sample of Banda El Recodo's rendition of "Te Lo Pido Por Favor", and the song "Te Lo Pido Por Favor" itself. The original lyrics resemble classic L.A. and Chicano hip-hop; specifically, the lyrics emulate the styles of popular L.A. MCs such as Snoop Dogg or Ice Cube, and the lyrics employ typical Spanish wordplay found in the Chicano hip-hop scene in the nineties. The sample of Banda El Recodo's rendition places a traditional Mexican musical style, banda, into a commercialized and widespread context, expressing the Mexican identity now inherent in the L.A. identity. The last layer, "Te Lo Pido Por Favor" written and recorded by Juan Gabriel in 1986, demonstrates the crossover between American and Mexican cultural elements, as Juan Gabriel, a symbol of Mexican music, was a product of both Mexican and American influences. Altogether, these layers confirm a Mexican heritage that is intertwined and mixed into the L.A. identity. Even further, the fact that these layers can be identified inside a single song and are expressed through the "young" and "individualized" medium of hiphop shows that AKWID does not engage in a passive reconnection to their Mexican heritage, but they are, in fact, creating their own, hybrid identities that contains Mexican and American elements. In this way, AKWID connects to their Mexican roots actively rather than passively, as they are creating, not observing. Hence, Kun argues that the musical layers and histories that can be identified in "No Hay Manera" demonstrate an active expression of an authentic, hybrid identity.

Awards