室内乐:1800年前后的音乐空间、媒介和类型

IF 0.1 2区 艺术学 0 MUSIC
M. L. Turner
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Although this was not specifically a conference on Beethoven, Ludwig loomed large, as he is likely to at any conference on instrumental music around the year 1800, and particularly one held at a centre for Beethoven scholarship. In the wake of the unexpectedly curtailed ‘Beethoven year’ of 2020, there was palpable enjoyment among attendees at the meeting of colleagues and friends, and much to appreciate about being together in physical space to present and experience a variety of thought-provoking and enjoyable papers and performances. A number of presentations focused productively on questions of genre, with particular attention paid to dismantling (or at least complicating) the oppositional dualities common in chamber-music scholarship. As Ellen Lockhart (University of Toronto) observed in her paper, the widely accepted definition of chamber music both invokes and invites binaries: public/private, commercial/aesthetic, male/female and professional/amateur, among others. In the first of three lecture-recitals at the conference, Erica Buurman, assisted by the Takács Quartet and historical dance expert Joan Walton (San José State University), demonstrated the heretofore underexplored influences of ballroom and social dance on the second movement of Beethoven’s String Quartet Op. 132. Considering the binary between ‘bodily’ music (in this case, music for dance) and ‘cerebral’ music, Buurman suggested that, contrary to the ideologies of critics such as Eduard Hanslick, chamber music drew on the former as well as the latter. Lockhart too engaged with a binary that might seem inherent in the genre: that of instrumental versus vocal music. Tracing the origins of the term ‘chamber music’, she suggested the term’s indebtedness to baroque vocal genres, and observed the continuing presence of vocality in later chamber music, as in the cavatina movement of Beethoven’s String Quartet Op. 130. Sarah Waltz (University of the Pacific) complicated the aforementioned public/ private binary in an English context, noting that the repertoire for ‘public’ stage concerts and ‘private’ house concerts may not have differed as widely as one might think. ‘Domestic’ chamber genres were often performed publicly, just as ‘larger’ genres, like the concerto, sometimes found their place in domestic venues. Other papers called into question a further entrenched binary: original compositions and arrangements. Nancy November (University of Auckland) suggested that performance parameters rather than compositional parameters were definitive for musicians around 1800. Used for both educational and performance purposes, small-ensemble arrangements of operas were indeed considered ‘real’ chamber music. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

2月中旬,学者和表演者聚集在圣何塞,讨论一些可能被认为是长期没有答案的问题。19世纪初的室内乐是什么?它的惯例、轮廓和用途是什么?谁听了它,玩了它,并为它付费?“室内乐场景:音乐空间,媒介和流派c. 1800”的演讲者和参与者充分地解决了这些问题和其他问题。这次会议由圣何塞州立大学的贝多芬研究中心主持,由中心主任埃里卡·布尔曼和加州大学伯克利分校的尼古拉斯·马修巧妙地组织。虽然这不是一个专门关于贝多芬的会议,路德维希显得很重要,因为他很可能在1800年左右的任何一个器乐会议上,尤其是在贝多芬奖学金中心举行的会议上。随着2020年“贝多芬年”的意外缩减,在同事和朋友的会议上,与会者明显感到很高兴,也很感激能在物理空间里一起展示和体验各种发人深省、令人愉快的论文和表演。许多演讲都富有成效地关注了流派问题,特别关注了室内乐学术中常见的对立二元性的拆除(或至少使其复杂化)。正如多伦多大学(University of Toronto)的艾伦·洛克哈特(Ellen Lockhart)在她的论文中所观察到的那样,被广泛接受的室内乐定义既唤起又引入了二元性:公共/私人、商业/美学、男性/女性、专业/业余等等。在会议的三场讲座演奏会中的第一场,埃里卡·布尔曼在Takács四重奏和历史舞蹈专家琼·沃尔顿(圣何塞州立大学)的协助下,展示了迄今为止尚未被充分探索的交际舞和社交舞对贝多芬弦乐四重奏Op. 132第二乐章的影响。考虑到“身体”音乐(在这种情况下,舞蹈音乐)和“大脑”音乐之间的二元性,布尔曼认为,与爱德华·汉斯利克等评论家的意识形态相反,室内乐既借鉴了前者,也借鉴了后者。洛克哈特也采用了一种似乎是这种音乐类型固有的二元性:器乐与声乐。在追溯“室内乐”一词的起源时,她认为这个词与巴洛克声乐流派有关,并观察到在后来的室内乐中声乐的持续存在,如贝多芬弦乐四重奏Op. 130的cavatina运动。太平洋大学的Sarah Waltz将前面提到的公共/私人二元结构在英语语境中复杂化,指出“公共”舞台音乐会和“私人”家庭音乐会的保留曲目可能没有人们想象的那么大。“国内”室内乐经常在公开场合演出,就像协奏曲这样的“大型”体裁有时在国内演出场所找到自己的位置一样。其他论文则对根深蒂固的二分法提出了质疑:原创作曲和编曲。奥克兰大学(University of Auckland)的南希·11月(Nancy November)认为,1800年左右,演奏参数而不是作曲参数对音乐家来说是决定性的。用于教育和表演目的,小型歌剧合奏曲确实被认为是“真正的”室内乐。由库马兰·阿鲁尔(斯坦福大学)主持的讲座演奏会
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Chamber Scenes: Musical Space, Medium, and Genre c. 1800
In mid-February scholars and performers gathered in San José to address what some might think are long-answered questions. What was chamber music around the turn of the nineteenth century? What were its conventions, contours and uses? Who listened to it, played it and paid for it? The presenters and participants at ‘Chamber Scenes: Musical Space, Medium, and Genre c. 1800’ amply addressed these questions and others. The conference was hosted by the Ira F. Brilliant Center for Beethoven Studies at San José State University, and adroitly organized by Erica Buurman, director of the Center, and Nicholas Mathew of the University of California Berkeley. Although this was not specifically a conference on Beethoven, Ludwig loomed large, as he is likely to at any conference on instrumental music around the year 1800, and particularly one held at a centre for Beethoven scholarship. In the wake of the unexpectedly curtailed ‘Beethoven year’ of 2020, there was palpable enjoyment among attendees at the meeting of colleagues and friends, and much to appreciate about being together in physical space to present and experience a variety of thought-provoking and enjoyable papers and performances. A number of presentations focused productively on questions of genre, with particular attention paid to dismantling (or at least complicating) the oppositional dualities common in chamber-music scholarship. As Ellen Lockhart (University of Toronto) observed in her paper, the widely accepted definition of chamber music both invokes and invites binaries: public/private, commercial/aesthetic, male/female and professional/amateur, among others. In the first of three lecture-recitals at the conference, Erica Buurman, assisted by the Takács Quartet and historical dance expert Joan Walton (San José State University), demonstrated the heretofore underexplored influences of ballroom and social dance on the second movement of Beethoven’s String Quartet Op. 132. Considering the binary between ‘bodily’ music (in this case, music for dance) and ‘cerebral’ music, Buurman suggested that, contrary to the ideologies of critics such as Eduard Hanslick, chamber music drew on the former as well as the latter. Lockhart too engaged with a binary that might seem inherent in the genre: that of instrumental versus vocal music. Tracing the origins of the term ‘chamber music’, she suggested the term’s indebtedness to baroque vocal genres, and observed the continuing presence of vocality in later chamber music, as in the cavatina movement of Beethoven’s String Quartet Op. 130. Sarah Waltz (University of the Pacific) complicated the aforementioned public/ private binary in an English context, noting that the repertoire for ‘public’ stage concerts and ‘private’ house concerts may not have differed as widely as one might think. ‘Domestic’ chamber genres were often performed publicly, just as ‘larger’ genres, like the concerto, sometimes found their place in domestic venues. Other papers called into question a further entrenched binary: original compositions and arrangements. Nancy November (University of Auckland) suggested that performance parameters rather than compositional parameters were definitive for musicians around 1800. Used for both educational and performance purposes, small-ensemble arrangements of operas were indeed considered ‘real’ chamber music. A lecture-recital by Kumaran Arul (Stanford University) further
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