播放儿童音乐

J. Bignell
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引用次数: 3

摘要

在电视和广播中播放儿童音乐的动机和目的是服务于成年人对儿童需求的认知。一般来说,儿童音乐是由对“童年”含义的理解形成的,反过来又支持了成年人对童年的假设。本文通过分析英国广播电视史上的例子来发展这些观点,从20世纪20年代开始,一直持续到21世纪初,在线互动媒体的不断渗透挑战了广播的地位。本文讨论了广播背景下不同类型的儿童音乐的例子,包括为儿童播放音乐的商业录音,如传统歌曲和童谣的版本,以及针对儿童的流行音乐。它还考虑了长期存在和深受喜爱的儿童节目中的标志性曲调和重复的音乐序列的重要性,因为它们在区分儿童节目和区分儿童音乐与针对成人的音乐方面发挥了关键作用。广播节目经常包括音乐,当它被用作戏剧、娱乐表演或动画的伴奏时,它并不起中心作用。但这样的音乐有助于节目的基调,并塑造了节目对想象中的儿童观众的称呼方式。娱乐节目或杂志节目包括音乐表演和非音乐序列,可以使用音乐来标记一个场合,例如,唱歌活动或伴随游戏。儿童在家里或学校观看或收听广播的社会功能,通常是与成人或其他儿童一起,部分由这些各种形式的儿童音乐组成。这些音乐形式通过特殊的聆听练习和属于听众的方式来塑造童年的概念。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Broadcasting Children’s Music
Broadcasting children’s music on television and radio is motivated by, and aims to serve, adults’ perceptions of children’s wants and needs. Children’s music in general is shaped by the understanding of what ‘childhood’ means and, in turn, supports adults’ assumptions about childhood. This article develops these ideas in an analysis of examples from the history of British radio and television, beginning in the 1920s and continuing until the growing penetration of online interactive media challenged the status of broadcasting in the early 21st century. The article discusses examples of different kinds of children’s music in a broadcast context, including the broadcast of commercial recordings of music for children, such as versions of traditional songs and nursery rhymes as well as pop music aimed at children. It also considers the significance of signature tunes and repeated musical sequences from long-lived and well-loved children’s programmes, because they play key roles in differentiating children’s programmes from each other and distinguishing children’s music from music aimed at adults. Broadcast programmes frequently include music that does not play a central role, when it is used as an accompaniment to drama, entertainment performance or animation. But such music contributes to programmes’ tone and shapes their mode of address to an imagined child audience. Entertainment shows or magazine programmes include music performances alongside non-musical sequences and can use music to, for example, mark an occasion for sing-along activities or accompany games. The social function of broadcasting for children watching or listening at home or at school, usually with an adult or other children, is constituted in part by these varied forms of children’s music. These forms of music shape conceptions of childhood through particular kinds of listening practices and ways of belonging to an audience.
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