“…Suffice it to say, for the moment, that there is a growing tendency to address performativities more fully in music research (see e.g., Chung, 2019;Kartomi, 2014;Madrid, 2009), in addition to the established Butlerian approaches affiliated with, for instance, identity, gender and ethnicity studies. In one sense, we seek to join forces with Chung's P 1 -Performativity and P 2 -Performativity, as well as Miller's Performativities sub 1 and sub 2 (Chung, 2019;Miller, 2009), while at the same time acknowledging the individual contributions and genealogical steps of performativity's development (e.g., Loxley, 2006;Loxley & Robson, 2013) in close relation to pedagogy and rhetoric. I offer here a possible starting point, not a complete methodology, but rather a contributory incentive towards creating a course for future research: What will HIP do for us in the future?…”