Abstract The convergence of digital media and educational practices has expanded the communicative potential of music pedagogy beyond artistic instruction to encompass broader social and developmental functions. This study conceptualises digital music pedagogy as a form of development communication, examining how multimodal discourse practices within digitally mediated learning environments contribute to communicative competence and social learning. Grounded in Multimodal Social Semiotic Theory and informed by discourse-pragmatic perspectives, the paper investigates how linguistic interaction, musical performance, visual resources, and embodied participation operate as interconnected semiotic modes through which meaning is negotiated and knowledge is constructed. Using qualitative discourse analysis of selected digital music learning contexts, the study explores the pragmatic strategies, interactional patterns, and participatory structures that facilitate learner engagement, identity formation, and communicative confidence. The findings suggest that digital music pedagogy functions as a participatory communicative ecosystem that supports not only skill acquisition but also interpersonal communication, sociocultural awareness, and collaborative learning processes. By integrating insights from development communication, music education, and pragmatics, the study advances a multidisciplinary framework for understanding the role of music as a transformative communication tool in contemporary mediated societies. The paper highlights the potential of digitally mediated music pedagogy to promote inclusive communication practices, enhance learner agency, and contribute to socially responsive educational development in the 21st century.
Ugwuja et al. (Wed,) studied this question.