“…In addition, songs that the older immigrants sing and listen to provided extensive information about each individual's personhood-who they are, where they come from, what they feel in specific moments, and what they like and dislike-, which aligns with the notion of songs as a symbol to elaborate a sense of self and to tell the "continuous" stories of who they are (DeNora, 1999). As previous studies indicated that young immigrants often used music from their homeland to maintain a continuity of their previous selves (e.g., Frankenberg et al, 2014;Karlsen, 2012Karlsen, , 2013 and cultivate the collective identity of their larger cultural/ethnic groups in the immigrant societies (e.g., Karlsen & Westerlund, 2010), songs of the older immigrants in this study seemed to significantly contribute to their personal, as well as collective, identity works. However, although young immigrants also used music as a tool to cultivate their "fluid, multilayered self " by relating themselves to the popular music of general youth culture, which is the commonality of interests with their peers of the host society, this did not appear in any cases in the narratives of the elderly interviewees.…”