现代晚期的口头/听觉文化?:作为专业化体裁的传统歌唱与口传表达

Ing-Marie Åkesson
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引用次数: 4

摘要

本文讨论了现代晚期社会中有关口型和听觉的一些表现形式和要素,以及这些表现形式的作用、功能和局限性。不同文化起源的传统歌曲一直是口头研究、民谣研究和其他几个相关领域的许多分析和学术研究的主题。然而,在许多情况下,歌曲和歌唱主要是作为语言艺术和语言表演来分析的,而很少注意到文字、音乐、节奏和音色紧密交织在一起的纹理,也很少注意到口头语言和与音乐有关的方面之间的平衡。我认为民俗学、文学、语言学和民族音乐学等学科的学者之间更频繁的讨论可能会有成果。这种倡议在会议和出版物中不断得到采纳,最近在口头传统本身中发表了一些关于音乐方面的有趣文本。我自己的学科是民族音乐学,我的主题是北欧,特别是瑞典/斯堪的纳维亚背景下的传统歌唱(或声乐民乐),被视为当代文化语言和音乐表达,部分被视为今天被标记为“民间音乐”或“民间和世界音乐”的流派或领域中的一种已建立的子流派。在二十一世纪初,我们有理由问,在一个加速专业化、制度化和正规化的时代,口头衍生的歌唱和音乐创作会带来什么后果。在一个快速变化的文化环境中,哪些元素和口头表达发挥作用,这些文化环境可以接触到无数的文化项目,音乐作为一种媒介化、加工化和数字化的现象?以亲和力为中心的、长期的口述传统,比如在厨房餐桌边学习歌曲,在一生中表演和发展自己的剧目,会产生什么后果?这篇文章是基于我对瑞典/斯堪的纳维亚当代民间音乐场景的研究,并参考了一些早期时期和其他欧洲/西方音乐文化。我相信,尽管有这些地理和文化的限制,我的一些
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Oral/Aural Culture in Late Modern Society?: Traditional Singing as Professionalized Genre and Oral-Derived Expression
This article discusses some expressions and elements of orality and aurality in late modern society, and the roles, functions, and limitations of these expressions. Traditional song of different cultural origin has been the subject of much analysis and scholarship within the areas of orality studies, ballad studies, and several other related fields. However, songs and singing are in many cases analyzed chiefly as verbal art and verbal performance, while less attention is given to the closely interwoven texture of words, music, rhythm, and timbre, or to the balance between verbal and music-related sides of orality. I think more frequent discussions between scholars within the disciplines of folkloristics, literature, linguistics, and ethnomusicology might be fruitful. Initiatives of this kind are continuously taken in conferences and publications, and a couple of interesting texts on musical aspects have recently been published in Oral Tradition itself. 1 My own discipline is ethnomusicology, and my topic is traditional singing (or vocal folk music) in a Northern European and especially Swedish/Scandinavian context, viewed as a contemporary cultural—verbal and musical—expression, and partly as an established sub-genre within the genre or field that is today labeled “folk music” or “folk and world music.” There are reasons to ask, in the early twenty-first century, what the consequences are for oral-derived singing and music-making in an era of accelerating professionalization, institutionalization, and formalization. Which elements and expressions of orality function in a cultural environment characterized by fast changes, access to innumerable cultural items, and music as a mediatized, processed, and often digitized phenomenon? And what are the consequences for affinity-centered and long-term qualities of oral tradition, such as learning songs across the kitchen table and performing and developing one’s repertory during a lifetime? This essay is based on my studies of the Swedish/Scandinavian contemporary folk music scene with some references to earlier periods of time and other European/Western music cultures. It is my belief that, despite these geographic and cultural limitations, several of my
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