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The Moranbong Band and Regime Consolidation in the DPRK

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1 The Moranbong Band and Regime Consolidation in the DPRK
Adam Cathcart Leeds University

2 Source: Bundesarchiv, Berilin – SAMPO, circa 1951

3 Research Themes North Korean musical diplomacy
(2013). “North Korea’s Cultural Diplomacy in the Early Kim Jong-un Era,” with Steven Denney, North Korean (2009). “North Korean Hip Hop? Reflections on Musical Diplomacy and the DPRK,” Acta Koreana, Vol. 12, No. 2 (December): 1–19. (2009). “North Korean Hip Hop? Reflections on Musical Diplomacy and the DPRK,” Acta Koreana, Vol. 12, No. 2 (December): 1–19. North Korean music & influences since 1945 (2008). “Internationalist Culture in North Korea, 1945–1950,” with Charles Kraus, Review of Korean Studies Vol. 11, No. 3 (September) 123–148.   (2008). “Song of Youth: North Korean Music from Liberation to War,” North Korean Review, Vol. 4, No. 1 (Fall), 93–104. North Korean leadership & purges (2015). “’Kim Jong-un Syndrome’: North Korean Commemorative Culture and the Succession Process,” SOAS-AKS Working Papers in Korean Studies, no. 44 (London: School of Oriental and African Studies, March). (2014). “In the Shadow of Jang Song-taek: Pyongyang’s Evolving SEZ Strategy with the Hwanggumpyeong and Wihwa Islands,” Korea Economic Institute of America Academic Paper Series, Vol. 8 (June),

4 Research Themes (II) Co-authored work with Pekka Korhonen
Two journal manuscripts under peer review at present

5 Sources Online archive of musical performances, 2010-
North Korean defector interviews Funded via Academy of Korean Studies, “Contested Korean Identities on the Peninsula and in Northeast China,” project. Attendance at DPRK music performances Participation in rehearsals of North Korean musicians (2x) Performance of Moranbong Band music for North Korean diplomats at the British Council

6 Sources Arranging and performance of DPRK music for cello and piano

7 The “Sea of Blood” Opera in China
Source: Chengdu Daily, June 2012

8 Contentions Musicians are a key element in the composition of “the North Korean elite” The Moranbong Band is the vehicle for a limited cosmopolitanism in the DPRK Music plays an important role in consolidating self-perception of the regime & in DPRK’s foreign media strategy Musical ensembles not be an ideal yardstick for measuring internal turmoil – “musical chairs”

9 Returned Defector Pak Jong-suk with her son, identified as a conservatory professor in Pyongyang, at her return press conference, May 2012.

10 Kim Jong-un & the Band, 2015

11 Ri Sol-ju, First Lady & Former Performer w/ Unhasu Orchestra

12 Sonu Hyang-hui, former concertmaster of Moranbong Band

13 Mun Kyong-jin, former concertmaster of Unhasu Orchestra

14 Contentions (repeated)
Musicians are a key element in the composition of “the North Korean elite” The Moranbong Band is the vehicle for a limited cosmopolitanism in the DPRK Musical ensembles not be an ideal yardstick for measuring internal turmoil – “musical chairs” Music plays an important role in consolidating self-perception of the regime & in DPRK’s foreign media strategy


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