Thursday, 26 November 2020
15:00 – 16:30 | SESSION 3:
Musicology in the Expanded Field chair: Zdravko Blažeković |
15:00 – 15:30 | Tatjana Čunko:
How to Make Musicology More Visible with Help of Radio |
15:30 – 16:00 | Jurij Dobravec:
From Ladislav Šaban to the Future of Slovenian Organology |
16:00 – 16:30 | Leon Stefanija・Vanessa Nina Borsan・Matija Marolt・Matevž Pesek:
Challenges of Computational Musicology |
Tatjana Čunko
Croatian Academy of Sciences and Arts, Division for the History of Croatian Music
tcunko@hazu.hr
How to Make Musicology More “Visible” with Help of Radio
This paper is going to try to answer one of the proposed questions, namely, who are musicology audiences today? Assuming that the radio listeners make up the majority of today’s musicology audience, the paper proposes one way to make scholar musicology papers accessible to them. Based on more than 30 years of experience in applied musicology (as an editor for Croatian Radio) and researching and writing scholarly musicological articles (in the fields ranging from instrumental music in Croatia in the 17th Century to music on the radio) the author of the paper shares and argues the idea (already tested in eight years of practice) of broadcasting scholarly musicological articles instead of trying to make them popular, easy to listen to by retelling them or discussing them with their authors (two of the main formats of a radio programme). The paper gives arguments for the acceptability of using scholarly papers in the domain of applied musicology (such as a radio programme) in order to reach the broader audience than could ever be reached only by printing them in specialised journals (although they are now available on the internet). The paper proves that with this format of presenting the scholar musicological articles, audiences could not only broaden their interest in musicology, but also, musicology could arise as a science. Although there are many research papers about music broadcasts on the radio published in the last thirty years, they are focused mostly on the various types and genres of music (Doctor & Carpenter 1996; Doctor 1999; Čunko 2012), very rarely, if ever, is there research on various types of textual presentation of the music in the radio broadcasts. In that respect this paper relies on the author’s own research on the subject and the article Klassische Musik im Radio by Oemichen and Feurstein (2006).
Key words: applied musicology, dissemination, radio, scholarly papers
Tatjana Čunko graduated in Musicology and Music Journalism from the Zagreb Academy of Music in 1986, where she obtained her master’s degree (MSc) in 2004. with the thesis Instrumental Music in Croatia in the 17th Century and earned her doctoral degree with the thesis Croatian Music and Croatian Radio. She has been an editor in the Croatian Radio Music Department of the Croatian Radiotelevision (HRT) since 1986 (from 2001 to 2004 an Editor in the Classical Music Department). Aside from her editorial and authorship work on the radio, she has published scholarly articles in the Arti musices journal (since 1996) and in the Proceedings of Croatian Academy of Sciences and Arts (2005), in Proceedings of the International Musicological Symposium Krsto Odak – Life and Opus (1997), Music and Heritage. Essays in Honour of Dr Lovro Županović (2002), Music of Transition. Essays in Honour of Eva Sedak (2009) and in Croatian Music in the 20th Century (2010). She is one of the editors of the monograph Varaždin Chamber Orchestra 1994-2004 (2004), the author end editor of the monograph Varaždin Chamber Orchestra 1994-2014: Two Decades of Enthusiasm (2014) and she contributed to the monograph Eight Decades. 1930-2010. Croatian Radiotelevision Symphony Orchestra (2010). Since 2019 she has been a lecturer at the Zagreb Academy of Music, and since summer of 2020 a researcher in the Division for the History of Croatian Music of the Croatian Academy of Sciences and Arts.
Jurij Dobravec
Ars organi Sloveniae – Društvo JARINA Bohinj
jurij.dobravec@jarina.org
From Ladislav Šaban to the Future of Slovenian Organology
In 1980 Ladislav Šaban, a prominent Croatian musicologist, published a paper on organs in Croatia made by Slovenian organ builders. His outstanding contribution represents a triple milestone, at least. Firstly, for him, a final outline of the study started with J. G. Eisl ten years before at the very inception of the Musicological Institute at the Academy of Music in Zagreb. Secondly, the first research paper on organs for Slovenia after the WW II. And thirdly, for the musicology of the area, a thorough method influencing structure and wording of future texts on pipe organs. Two researchers followed his achievements in Slovenia: his graduate student Milko Bizjak, and Dr Edo Škulj, professor emeritus, still active in the field today.
The presentation shortly displays analytical milestones in Slovenian organ research. Beginning with the oldest known critical treatise concerning Ljubljana cathedral organ by Frančišek Križman in 1762, we proceed with the surveys of organs in Maribor and Ljubljana dioceses at the beginning of the 20th century and finish with the mutually interconnected book Orgle Slovenije (Slovenian Organs) and web page www.orgle.si (2018).
Special attention will be given to the future and so-called digital humanities in organ research, which the institute Ars organi Sloveniae has been developing since 2005 and is summarised in the mentioned book-web hybrid. By its structure, the digital approach does not differ from Šaban’s fundamentals or the paradigms of his followers. What distinguishes considerably is the effectiveness of data survey and organisation, a capacity of the advanced analyses, and an openness for syntheses and visualisation using digital tools. The experience of our institute shows that the attractive interpretation of scientific results accompanied by active communication can raise awareness for organ and organ music in society. Community feedback, on the other hand, initiates and contributes to the direction of needed research activities.
Key words: Ladislav Šaban, organology, digital humanities, data interpretation, awareness raising
Jurij Dobravec finished education in biology at Ljubljana University in 1993. During his university study, he attended the Ljubljana Organists school for four years, receiving music-history and organology lessons in the class of professor Edo Škulj. Later on, in parallel to managing the Science and Research department at the Triglav national park administration, he volunteered as a choir conductor and church organist, and in 2005 established a national organ database managed by a non-governmental institute Ars organi Sloveniae. In 2018, in co-authorship with Dr Škulj, this comprehensive data system summarised into an innovative complex of the printed book Pipe Organs of Slovenia and web page www.orgle.si. Besides other activities, Dobravec participated in the Slovenian part for the international Organ dictionary, published in 2015 in 23 languages, while his articles on the organ and results of musicology research appeared in professional publications like Acta organologica, Cerkveni glasbenik, Arhivi, Informazione organistica, Varstvo spomenikov, Ars Organi, ISO journal, Ecce organvm! and others.
Leon Stefanija1・Matevž Pesek2・Vanessa Nina Borsan3・Marija Marolt4
Department of Musicology, Faculty of Arts1・Faculty of Computer and Information Science2, 4, University of Ljubljana1, 2, 4・independent researcher3
leon.stefanija@ff.uni-lj.si1・matevz.pesek@fri.uni-lj.si2・vninaborsan@gmail.com3・matija.marolt@fri.uni-lj.si4
Crisis of Musicology: Challenges of Computational Musicology
The basic etymological interpretation of crisis stems from the Greek κρίνω: to ‘pick out, choose’, ‘decide disputes’, ‘decide a contest’, ‘adjudge’, ‘judge, give judgement’, ‘estimate’, ‘expound, interpret in a particular way’, ‘bring to trial, accuse’, ‘pass sentence upon, condemn’.
As the root κρίνω suggests, it is an action of picking up, choosing or deciding, preferring, determining. Today’s choices of music research may be schematically summed up as follows (on the next page). The scheme raises an omnipresent question in music research: “Who sells knowledge on music to whom?”. The contribution offers a historical sketch of the computational musicology in Slovenia that traces different levels, and levers, of music research pointing to a rathe banal fact: why have been musicologists accepting only certain forms of computer-assisted music analysis while the concept of “big data” analysis of musical facts remains outside of ethno/musicology?
Key words: computational musicology, axiology of music, systematic musicology, music analysis, Slovenian music
Leon Stefanija (Ljubljana 1970) is a professor of musicology at the Faculty of Arts in Ljubljana. He served as the chair of systematic musicology, between 2008 and 2012 also as the chair of the Department of Musicology. His main research interests and teaching areas are the epistemology of music research, sociology of music, and history of contemporary, primarily Slovenian music since 1918. He cooperates regularly with the Music Academy in Zagreb, Faculty of Music Belgrade, University of Graz, Music Academy in Sarajevo, and Ballet College in Ljubljana.
Matevž Pesek is an assistant professor and a researcher at the Faculty of Computer and Information Science, University of Ljubljana, where he received his BSc in computer science in 2012 and his PhD in 2018. He has been a member of the Laboratory of Computer Graphics and Multimedia since 2009. His research interests are music information retrieval, music e-learning, biologically inspired models and deep architectures. He has also researched compositional hierarchical modelling as alternative deep transparent architectures, and music multi-modal perception, including human-computer interaction, and visualisation for audio analysis and music generation.
Vanessa Nina Borsan is currently a master’s student of Music and Sound Computing at the Pompeu Fabra University in Barcelona. She graduated at the department of Musicology University of Ljubljana, where she also got her master’s degree in 2020. Her master’s thesis incorporated a computational approach to research music patterns of Slovenian lied in-between the two World wars. Her main research focuses on Western music of the 20th century, digital and applied musicology.
Matija Marolt is an Associate Professor and the Head of Laboratory for Computer Graphics and Multimedia at the Faculty of Computer and Information Science, University of Ljubljana. His research interests include music /audio information retrieval, computer graphics and visualisation. He focuses on problems, such as melody and rhythm estimation, audio segmentation and organisation, and search and visualisation of music collections.
© 2015 Sofarider Inc. All rights reserved. WordPress theme by Dameer DJ.