口述传统背景下的乐器教学:来自土耳其博卢的实地考察

N. Kalyoncu, Cemal Özata
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引用次数: 4

摘要

在几乎所有的现代工业和后工业社会以及大多数发展中国家,音乐文化的积累都是通过文字、乐谱和类似的视听工具来记录的,以最小的信息损失来实现传播。由于文字文化的形成和音乐记谱法的广泛使用,音乐作品可以被登记在永久文件中,不仅可以传给下一代,还可以传给未来几个世纪的许多代人。然而,在人类漫长的历史中,文字的使用和由此产生的音乐通过文字的传播是相对较新的但值得注意的发展。在音乐中使用符号或文字的最早痕迹可以在“古代美索不达米亚、埃及、印度、中国和希腊”的音乐文化中看到(Michels 2001:159)。2尽管如此,“用记谱系统写音乐”(Rosing 1997:79)及其书面传播是一种在欧洲文化中流行起来的做法,尽管它在其他全球音乐文化中并不那么普遍。西方的记谱法始于字母和新符号,但当9世纪达西亚记谱法通过印刷机的传播而获得突出地位时,它变得更加系统化,然后在16世纪经历了几次进化。它在20世纪达到了使用的顶峰,当时它被新音乐作曲家更新和再利用,或者被其他作曲家完全抛弃。尽管如此,这种传统的欧洲记谱系统对音乐文化的代代相传负有重要的责任。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Instrument Teaching in the Context of Oral Tradition: A Field Study from Bolu, Turkey
In almost all industrial and post-industrial societies of the modern age as well as in a majority of developing countries, musical-cultural accumulation is documented via writing, musical notation, and similar audio-visual tools to achieve transmission with minimum information loss. As a consequence of the formation of written culture and widespread use of musical notation, musical works could then be registered on permanent documents to enable transmission not only to the immediately following generations but also to many generations over future centuries. The use of writing and the consequential transmission of music via writing, however, are comparatively new yet noteworthy developments in the long history of humankind. The earliest traces of using symbols or writing in music can be seen in the musical cultures of “ancient Mesopotamia, Egypt, India, China, and Greece” (Michels 2001:159). 2 Nonetheless, “music writing with a notation system” (Rosing 1997:79) and its written transmission is a practice that gained popularity amidst European culture, though it was not so widespread among other global musical cultures. Western notation started with letters and neumes, but it then became more systematized when the ninth-century Dasia Notation gained prominence through the spread of the printing press and then underwent several evolutionary steps up through the sixteenth century. It reached its peak use in the twentieth century, when it was then renewed and reused by New Music composers or abandoned completely by other composers. Still, this traditional European notation system bears remarkable responsibility for the transmission of music culture from one generation to the next.
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