Artistic Research in Music versus Musicological Musicianship

Författare

  • Marko Aho

Nyckelord:

Ethnomusicology, bi-musicality, musicking, artistic research, musical performance

Abstract

Artistic research has fully established itself in the curricula of higher musical education in Europe. The strong associations between artistic research in music and music-making in service of research pose a challenge for those traditional musicologists and ethnomusicologists who wish to incorporate music making in their research practices. Especially with the emergence of an ever stronger artistic research scene in the genre of folk music, it may be argued that the role of music-making as a method for ethnomusicological enquiry has been unduly abandoned. In this article, the ethnomusicological concept of bimusicality and the benefits of performative ethnomusicology are brought forth.

Författarbiografi

Marko Aho

Marko Aho is a researcher at the University of Jyväskylä. He is also adjunct professor in performance research at the University of Tampere. Previously he has worked as research director at the Department of Music Anthropology in Tampere, and as director of the Folk Music Institute in Kaustinen. He has also been a member of the board of the Finnish Ethnomusicological Society for several years. He has published papers in journals such as Popular Music, Popular Musicology Online, Music Performance Research, and Finnish Yearbook of Ethnomusicology. His research on this article was financed by Emil Aaltosen Säätiö.

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Publicerad

2013-08-20

Referera så här

Aho, M. (2013). Artistic Research in Music versus Musicological Musicianship. Svensk Tidskrift för Musikforskning Swedish Journal of Music Research, 95, 65–78. Hämtad från https://publicera.kb.se/stm-sjm/article/view/33871

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