从蜡筒到金属盘:二战前夕将罗伯特-拉赫曼的 "东方音乐 "项目从柏林移植到耶路撒冷

Ruth F. Davies
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摘要

罗伯特-拉赫曼(Robert Lachmann,1892-1939 年)在柏林音图档案馆成立后的几十年中,与该档案馆有联系的多学科学者中,他的田野调查方法和对田野调查的重视程度最接近经典民族音乐学的方法。1935 年 4 月,他被纳粹种族法解除了在普鲁士国家图书馆的职务,并在新成立的耶路撒冷希伯来大学担任临时职务,负责创建东方音乐档案馆。他带来了他收藏在柏林 Phonogramm-Archiv 的大约 500 张蜡筒录音的全部拷贝。1935 年至 1938 年间,拉赫曼用金属唱片录制了 956 张唱片,记录了巴勒斯坦不同 "东方 "社区的音乐传统。不过,他这一时期的著作主要依赖于柏林时期的研究成果。其中最有分量、也是第一部完成的专著是他根据 1929 年在杰尔巴岛的实地考察撰写的《杰尔巴岛上的犹太吟唱与歌曲》(Gesänge der Juden auf der Insel Djerba)。在这篇论文中,我认为拉赫曼对这个突尼斯犹太社区的开创性研究为他在巴勒斯坦的许多工作提供了方法论蓝本。我的研究重点是他在 1936 年 11 月至 1937 年 4 月期间在巴勒斯坦广播公司播出的 12 个名为 "东方音乐 "的系列广播节目。这些节目介绍了生活在耶路撒冷或其周边地区的不同群体,由当地音乐家和歌手在演播室现场表演,同时录制成金属光盘。由于资金不足和缺乏机构支持,拉赫曼的工作因 1939 年 5 月英年早逝而中断,他以前的学生伊迪丝-格尔森-基维(Edith Gerson-Kiwi)继承了他的事业。他的搜集活动以及其中蕴含的比较观点,为后来几代民族音乐学家的工作奠定了基础。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
From Wax Cylinder to Metal Disc: Transplanting Robert Lachmann’s “Oriental Music” Project from Berlin to Jerusalem on the Eve of World War II
Of the multidisciplinary cohort of scholars associated with the Berlin Phonogramm-Archiv in its formative decades, it is Robert Lachmann (1892–1939) who, in his approach to fieldwork and the importance he attached to it, comes closest to adopting the methods of classic ethnomusicology. In April 1935, having been dismissed from his post in the Prussian State Library under the Nazi racial laws, he took up a temporary appointment at the newly founded Hebrew University of Jerusalem with a mission to create an Archive of Oriental Music. He brought with him copies of his entire collection of some 500 wax cylinder recordings held in the Berlin Phonogramm-Archiv. Between 1935 and 1938, Lachmann made 956 recordings on metal disc documenting musical traditions of different "Eastern" communities of Palestine. His writings from this period, however, relied predominantly on research carried over from his Berlin years. The most substantial, and the first to be completed, is his monograph Jewish Cantillation and Song in the Isle of Djerba (Gesänge der Juden auf der Insel Djerba) based on his fieldwork in Djerba in 1929. In this contribution, I argue that Lachmann's pioneering study of this Tunisian Jewish community provided the methodological blueprint for much of his work in Palestine. I focus on his series of 12 radio programs, entitled "Oriental Music," transmitted by the Palestine Broadcasting Service between November 1936 and April 1937. The programs, which feature different groups living in or around Jerusalem, were illustrated by live studio performances by local musicians and singers, simultaneously recorded onto metal disc. In successive lectures, Lachmann presents fundamental ideas about the nature and evolution of musical practices and systems that are explored more fully in his Djerba monograph. Thwarted by inadequate finances and lack of institutional support, Lachmann's work was cut short by his premature death in May 1939 and it fell to his former student, Edith Gerson-Kiwi, to pick up the threads of his project. His collecting activities, together with the comparative vision that informed them, laid the foundations for the work of subsequent generations of ethnomusicologists.
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