English version below!

Dear colleagues and friends of the Music and Minorities Research Center (MMRC)!

The 2025 MMRC Lecture aims to bring current socio-political issues into the spotlight of academic discourses and thereby raise the visibility of marginalised groups. In an era marked by multiple crises and the resurgence of nationalist and right-wing movements, fostering solidarity against these tendencies is a pressing social responsibility. The lecture addresses questions of identity politics and citizenship, as well as the inclusion and exclusion of marginalised groups and their musical practices. Therefore, the lecture asks the urgent question of what role music plays in the relationship between hegemonic and marginalised social groups within societies, and how academia can take on socio-political responsibility. 

"Minority Voices in Civil Society: Exclusion – Inclusion – Solidarity in Music" The 2025 MMRC Lecture

18 November 2025, 7PM (CEST), Concert Hall, Future Art Lab, mdw and online!

Register here (for on-site and mdw stream*)        

Title image: Bíborka Ágnes Czire

Programme:

Music: Marwan Abado

Opening: Ulrike Sych, Rector of the mdw

Introduction: Ursula Hemetek, Director of the MMRC, mdw

Keynote: "Music, Citizenship and Belonging", Martin Stokes (King's College, London)

Response: "Sounding Solidarity: Music, Minoritarian Alliances, and the Politics of Belonging",

Isabel Frey (IVE, mdw, Vienna)

Q&A Session: Chaired by Ursula Hemetek, MMRC, mdw

Music: Marwan Abado

Where do marginalised groups locate themselves within civil society, and how do they express their concerns? How can music contribute to negotiating belonging and participation? What collective cultural and musical practices can be employed to challenge political power and representation dynamics and create spaces for transnational solidarity? The 2025 MMRC Lecture will explore and reflect on these areas of tension from academic and musical perspectives.

In his keynote, Martin Stokes (King's College, London) will examine the profound connection between music, identity, and political participation and how music not only creates a sense of belonging for some but also can lead to the exclusion of others. Stokes will delve into the complex relationship between ethnicity and citizenship, issues that are highly contested in the current climate of rising populism. Drawing on his extensive research in this field, Stokes will use examples from the musical practices of minoritized Muslim communities across Europe and the Mediterranean.

Responding to Martin Stokes considerations, Isabel Frey (IVE, mdw, Vienna) will explore how musical practices can act as powerful tools for political solidarity, challenging conventional notions of national and ethnic identity. Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork with contemporary Yiddish music practices, she will demonstrate how music transcends simple group boundaries to forge cross-group alliances. Frey will reflect upon collaborative projects between displaced Ukrainian and Berlin-based Jewish musicians and will discuss a compilation of new Yiddish songs created in solidarity with Palestinians in response to the destruction of Gaza.

The event will be framed with music contributions by Marwan Abado. Abado was born into a Palestinian Christian family in a refugee camp in Beirut, Lebanon. In 1985, he fled from the Lebanese civil war and moved to Austria, where he continued his musical training with Asim Chalabi, an Iraqi oud master. It was in Vienna that he found a new home as a musician, singer, composer and poet. His music combines traditional Arabic sounds with European and contemporary influences. His songs deal with exile, identity and peace, and he is committed to intercultural dialogue and artistic encounters across cultural boundaries.

This event explores how musical solidarity can foster coalitions among minority communities, offering timely perspectives on music, citizenship, ethnicity and belonging in an era of growing authoritarianism and populism. An evening dedicated to minoritarian alliances and solidarity.

 

    F.l.t.r.: Martin Stokes, Isabel Frey (© Viktoria Hofmarcher) and Marwan Abado (© Sascha Osaka)

 

Find all information about the event on our website

*The streaming link will be announced on the event website and sent to all registered participants via email.


Music and Minorites Research Center (Wittgenstein Project)
mdw – University of Music and Performing Arts Vienna
Tongasse 2/43, 1030 Vienna, Austria
mmrc@mdw.ac.at
www.musicandminorities.org

mdw - University of Music and Performing Arts Vienna

FWF - Der Wissenschaftsfonds.