City of Music (UNESCO)

(Redirected from UNESCO City of Music)

UNESCO's City of Music programme is part of the wider Creative Cities Network.

The Network launched in 2004, and has member cities in seven creative fields. The other fields are: Crafts and Folk Art, Design, Film, Gastronomy, Literature, and Media Arts.[1]

Criteria for Cities of Music

To be approved as a City of Music, cities need to meet a number of criteria set by UNESCO.[2]

Designated UNESCO Cities of Music share similar characteristics:

  • recognised centres of musical creation and activity
  • experience in hosting music festivals and events at a national or international level
  • promotion of the music industry in all its forms
  • music schools, conservatories, academies, and higher education institutions specialised in music
  • informal structures for music education, including amateur choirs and orchestras
  • domestic or international platforms dedicated to particular genres of music and/or music from other countries
  • cultural spaces suited for practicing and listening to music, e.g. open-air auditoriums.

About the cities

In March 2006, Seville was designated as the first City of Music. Bologna was named approximately two months later.[3]

Seville has a "legendary Flamenco scene," and UNESCO lists Flamenco as an "intangible cultural heritage."[4]

Hamamatsu is the founding city of musical instrument companies Yamaha, Kawai, and Roland. It has also an Museum of Musical Instruments.[5]

Liverpool—"the city that spawned The Beatles"—earned its designation due to music's "place in the heart of the city's life." UNESCO also noted a "clearly defined" music, education, and skills strategy for young people.[6]

Idanha-a-Nova "lives by the rhythm of music," Ghent is a "city full of culture," and Auckland is the "beating heart of New Zealand's music industry."[7][8][9]

Adelaide is "sophisticated, cultured, and neat-casual," Daegu is a "pleasant and progressive place," and Leiria is an "agreeable mixture of medieval and modern."[10][11][12]

Cities of Music

As of 2021, fifty Cities of Music have been designated by UNESCO.

Nineteen of the participating cities are European, ten are Asian and Middle Eastern. South America and North America each have six, Africa has four, and two have been designated in Oceania.

Seven countries have two member cities. India, Colombia, Portugal, and the United Kingdom are the only countries to have three designated cities.

The Cities of Music are:

CityCountryYear of Inscription
Adelaide  Australia2015[13]
Almaty  Kazakhstan2017[14]
Amarante  Portugal2017[15]
Ambon  Indonesia2019[16]
Auckland  New Zealand2017[9]
Belfast  United Kingdom2021
Banja Luka  Bosnia & Herzegovina2023[17]
Bissau  Guinea-Bissau2023[17]
Bogotá  Colombia2012[18]
Bologna  Italy2006[19]
Bolzano  Italy2023[17]
Brazzaville  Congo2013[20]
Brno  Czech Republic2017[21]
Bydgoszcz  Poland2023[17]
Caracas  Venezuela2023[17]
Chennai  India2017[22]
Da Lat  Vietnam2023[17]
Daegu  Korea Republic2017[23]
Essaouira  Morocco2019[24]
Frutillar  Chile2017[25]
Ghent  Belgium2009[8]
Glasgow  United Kingdom2008[26]
Gwalior  India2023[17]
Hamamatsu  Japan2014[5]
Harbin  China2010[27]
Hanover  Germany2014[28]
Havana  Cuba2019[29]
Idanha-a-Nova  Portugal2015[7]
Ipoh  Malaysia2023[17]
Kansas City  United States2017[30]
Katowice  Poland2015[31]
Kazan  Russia2019[32]
Kingston  Jamaica2015[33]
Kinshasa  Democratic Republic of Congo2015[34]
Kırşehir  Turkey2019[35]
Leiria  Portugal2019[36]
Llíria  Spain2019[37]
London  Canada2021[38]
Liverpool  United Kingdom2015[39]
Mannheim  Germany2014[40]
Medellín  Colombia2015[41]
Metz  France2019[42]
Mexicali  Mexico2023[17]
Montreux   Switzerland2023[17]
Morelia  Mexico2017[43]
Norrköping  Sweden2017[44]
Pesaro  Italy2017[45]
Port of Spain  Trinidad and Tobago2019[46]
Praia  Cape Verde2017[47]
Ramallah  Palestine2019[48]
Salvador  Brazil2015[49]
Sanandaj  Iran2019[50]
Şanlıurfa  Turkey2023[17]
Santo Domingo  Dominican Republic2019[51]
Seville  Spain2006[52]
Suphan Buri  Thailand2023[17]
Tallinn  Estonia2021[53]
Tongyeong  South Korea2015[54]
Toulouse  France2023[17]
Valledupar  Colombia2019[55]
Valparaíso  Chile2019[56]
Varanasi  India2015[57]
Varaždin  Croatia2023[17]
Veliky Novgorod  Russia2023[17]
Veszprém  Hungary2019[58]
Vranje  Serbia2019[59]

See also

References