<p>In recent research there has been growing emphasis on the&nbsp;collaborative social and collective nature of musical behaviour and&nbsp;practices. Among the emerging hypotheses in this connection are the idea&nbsp;that listening to music is always listening together and being with the&nbsp;other; that music making is a matter of intercorporeality mutuality and&nbsp;emphatic attunement; and that creative agency in musical practices is&nbsp;fundamentally a distributed phenomenon. Chamber music provides an ideal&nbsp;context for the testing and actualization of these notions. This Special&nbsp;Issue on chamber music and the chamber musician aims to explore the&nbsp;psychological social cultural historical and artistic issues in the&nbsp;practice of classical chamber music in the twenty-first century.&nbsp;Contributions are invited on any of these aspects and issues involved in&nbsp;being a contemporary classical chamber musician. Authors are encouraged&nbsp;to contextualise their research by reference to the recent literature on&nbsp;collaborative musicking and among the topics they may choose to address&nbsp;are the cultural and musical demands chamber musicians face and the&nbsp;implications of these demands for their artistic practice the ways the&nbsp;twenty-first-century chamber musicians engage with historical practices&nbsp;the newly emerging musical identities and artistic roles available to&nbsp;them and expressivity in current chamber music practices.</p>
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