Évènements

Visualising Musical Cultures: From Analysis to Public Ethnomusicology

Séminaire du CREM

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Monday 17 October 2022 10:00 - 12:00
Lesc – salle 308F (3e étage)
21, allée de l’Université, Nanterre

Présentation

Seminaire Lutzu 2022

With Marco Lutzu*

Dealing mainly with unwritten music, ethnomusicologists have developed various systems of graphic representation of music. Not only music itself but also different aspects of musical cultures have been described through images since the origins of the discipline. Over the years, both static and dynamic images have been used for various purposes: analysing musical performance, describing rituals or the making process of musical instruments, presenting the research results to a generic public, and so on.

The seminar aims to discuss theoretical issues and practical examples focusing on the graphic representation of musical cultures based on my 20-years research experience in Sardinia, Cuba and Equatorial Guinea.

*Marco Lutzu is Research Associate of Ethnomusicology at the University of Cagliari. He has carried out fieldwork in Sardinia, Cuba, and Equatorial Guinea, focusing on the relationship between music and religion, improvised poetry, hip hop culture, and performance analysis.

He is the scientific director of the Encyclopedia of Sardinian Music (L’Unione Sarda, 2012), and co-edited the volume Investigating Musical Performance: Theoretical Models and Intersections (Routledge 2020). He is the scientific director and co-designer of various multimedia museums and exhibitions on Sardinian traditional music and improvised poetry, including the Museo Multimediale del canto a tenore (Bitti). As visual ethnomusicologist he directed more than 20 documentaries on the main topic of his research.


LESC CREM Picto C webThe CREM (Centre for Research in Ethnomusicology) seminar takes place on two Mondays per month, from 10:00 to 12:00. Members of the CREM (doctoral students included) and invited researchers present their ongoing work. The presentations last 50 minutes, and are followed by a coffee break and discussion hour.

Occasionally, the seminar takes the form of a workshop which brings together several researchers around a common theme. In these cases, the seminar takes place over an afternoon, or sometimes an entire day.

Participation in the seminar is open to everyone. It is also integrated into the Master’s degree in ethnomusicology at the Universities of Paris Nanterre and Paris Saint-Denis.

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