Música, linguagem e (re)conhecimento
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Universidade do Estado do Amazonas
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The musical experience gained an enormous dimension with the
advancement of digital technologies. One of the main differences
huge sound supply that has never been greater in any other
time like now. The complete work of an author, however productive
has been, however many papers he used to write it and yet
hours of rehearsals and recordings have been spent, it is now up to
on small devices ranging from the size of a toothpick to a
or not at all: they can be accessed from a remote point, which
we figuratively call the cloud, even our electronic devices.
In fact, we can have entire catalogs, authors
diverse, from the same epoch, from all epochs, if we wish.
The incredible ease with which it became to make a recorded record, with
incredibly high quality compared to two decades past,
rivals the stunning availability of documents from the past and
of the present, through initiatives of public and private digital portals,
large library or new virtual repositories that reorganize
in a coherent file many libraries.
The experience of doing and listening to music became more common,
after all we can have a home recording and music editing studio
to make our own demonstration feasible, or even listen in the car or
on public transport the repertoires once available only for
special and sometimes very exclusive occasions, such as summer mornings
Sunday of a Venetian parish church from the early 18th century,
a small Parisian cafe from the 1930s, or an unrepeatable night of
a rock festival in the late 1960s.
But our capacity for enjoyment cannot be intended to be total,
nor at the same level of processing of these incredible repertoires
that we access today. Something that can be seen at the time of these two decades
21st century is that our capacity for reflection on ideas and
musical practices also need to change. Instead of the apparent trivialization
of all this musical heritage transformed into computer data,
we can understand how different times and places achieved their music.
In a world that is being rapidly ratified by
globalization determined by the canonical imposition of the great centers
radiators of technology and information, we realized, however, that
some things do not change. This is because new tools and techniques
serve old ideas.In the first chapter, Geoffrey Baker, of long years studying the
phenomenon of multiplication of orchestras in the recent history of Venezuela,
which should correspond to a massive process of musical education and
consequent citizen emancipation, offers arguments that weaken such
idea and point to the process as a tool of doubtful purpose,
because in the end it seems to be a strategy of social control and domination
of the state on the individual, a finding that is never consistent with the
construction of free will.
Baker refers to Favio Shifres, who in the next chapter does not leave
room for doubts to those who still have them: the cultural south is necessary
recognize and value their own experiences of manifesting
language, in this case musical, to then reach an emancipation
of knowing. The (re) knowledge is therefore to make the experience visible outside
of the canon, since otherwise only a silent and
subordinate, full of mistakes.
Graziela Bortz's text refers to the first words of this
presentation leading to think that the technological race also ends
because it is a challenge to understand the human being. The challenges
educational aspects of the previous text here seem to echo as challenges to
human essence itself.
The social dimension of music continues to be discussed by João
Quadros Jr. in order to complete the section dedicated to cognition
and music education. To close the block, Beatriz Ilari discusses the latest
research in the field of musical cognition, involving central aspects that
the previous authors were concerned, such as the construction of a rationale
musical, emotionality and impact on social relationships.The second block is intended for musicological discussions that
lose sight of many of the preceding elements. Here we see
diverse concerns with theory, analysis and musical interpretation
for which historical, semiotic contributions and approaches are called
intertextual analytics. Robert Gjerdingen's work echoes in almost everyone
the texts here in this section, since this researcher revealed
effectively the teaching-learning and musical creation of the
tradition of Neapolitan origin that in the 18th century would reach
with consequences and traces for many decades.
This tradition provided for pre-compositional stages that guided
a massive process of musical formation and elaboration. These are the
counterpoint schemes, virtual models from which they were oriented (and
are still oriented) many practical achievements with great possibility
of uses and variations.
Mário Trilha looks at one of these schemes in particular,
Romanesca, identifying wide use in the middle of instrumental works of
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several authors from the second half of the 18th century, in contrast to
its frequent application in the opening of movements, until then the way
most commonly seen in the European repertoire.
Romanesque remains the point of attention in the following text,
in which I argue for her interaction with the subject of love in
opera would be Italian. The theory of musical topics, were they not problems
methodological factors that have restricted it, could have come here as a support
for understanding meanings. However, the issue seems to be
much more correct in a discussion on how to represent and
interpret ideas and their context, thus being a debate about mimesis.The last text in this block could be the first in the next section.
Guilherme Monteiro, who carried out the first integral analysis of a work
dimension of a Brazilian author, following the theoretical framework
Gjerdingen and showing associations with musical topics, highlights
here some excerpts from the Six Funeral Responsibilities of João de Deus
Castro Lobo who connect because of the unusual structure and
textual similarities. For the interpretative analytical approach I took
the exciting opportunity to collaborate, literary sources were brought
and above all iconographic ones that seem to make sense of what the
Minas Gerais composer in his last musical creation.
Thus, the next section, dedicated to musical iconography,
appears in a timely manner. In it, Vergara shows us approximations of
musical education, or through music, and homoerotic social practice
in iconographic representations in Classical Antiquity, which
reveals other social constructions and artistic understandings.
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