Companion Thinking in Improvised Musicking Practice

IF 0.3 2区 艺术学 0 MUSIC Contemporary Music Review Pub Date : 2023-01-02 DOI:10.1080/07494467.2023.2191070
Jodie Rottle, Hannah Reardon-Smith
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Abstract

ABSTRACT We understand that our thinking and creating is always in company. By musicking with others, we situate ourselves amongst an entangled web of human, nonhuman, and more-than-human co-creators; to recognise these external and internal influences is to become a companion. Our concept of companion thinking stems from companion texts according to Sara Ahmed (2017. Living a Feminist Life. Durham, NC: Duke University Press), which may ‘prompt you to hesitate or to question the direction in which you are going, or they might give you a sense that in going the way you are going, you are not alone’ (16). Companionship implies with: In this paper, we discuss how companions are vital to our improvisatory music practices by considering the co-creative relationships in which we operate. we analyse our artistic research from our perspectives as performers and improvisers and consider the processes of making music with beyond-human entities. Instead of the human-focused concept of collaboration, we posit companionship as an approach to thinking-with and sounding-with the more-than-human, other-than-human, and nonhuman. Our former selves, experiences, environments, and nonhuman critters and objects are always-already part of our musicking practices and communities. Performance is thus ecological, political, and personal; it is through this lens that we analyse the entanglements of our varied communities and explore how this concept can stretch beyond a music practice, to consider what it means to engage in creative practice as migrant-settlers on stolen Aboriginal land. This paper includes an investigation of what it means to be a companion and a discussion of a practice-based case study in which we implement—or practice—companion thinking. As friends, collaborators, and companions to one another, we each present our individual concepts of companionship through our own improvisation practices, addressing themes of situatedness, response-ability, surprise, stumbling, curiosity, and unmastery. We then analyse the entanglements of our work in performance. This process of thinking, making, and doing in-company offers the opportunity to consider an intersection of analysis and performance through an improvisatory musical practice.
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即兴音乐实践中的同伴思维
摘要我们明白,我们的思考和创造始终伴随着我们。通过与他人一起演奏,我们将自己置身于一个由人类、非人类以及更多人类共同创造者组成的纠缠网络中;认识到这些外部和内部的影响就是成为一个伴侣。萨拉·艾哈迈德(Sara Ahmed,2017)认为,我们的同伴思维概念源于同伴文本。过着女权主义的生活。北卡罗来纳州达勒姆:杜克大学出版社),这可能会“促使你犹豫或质疑你的前进方向,或者他们可能会让你感觉到,按照你的方式前进,你并不孤单”(16)。同伴关系意味着:在本文中,我们通过考虑我们所处的共同创作关系,讨论了同伴对我们即兴音乐实践的重要性。我们从表演者和即兴演奏者的角度来分析我们的艺术研究,并考虑超越人类实体的音乐创作过程。与以人为中心的合作概念不同,我们将陪伴视为一种与人类、非人类和非人类思考和发声的方法。我们以前的自我、经历、环境以及非人类的生物和物体一直是我们音乐实践和社区的一部分。因此,表演是生态的、政治的和个人的;正是通过这个镜头,我们分析了我们不同社区的纠葛,并探索了这个概念如何超越音乐实践,思考作为移民定居者在被盗的原住民土地上从事创造性实践意味着什么。本文包括对同伴意味着什么的调查,以及对我们实施或实践同伴思维的基于实践的案例研究的讨论。作为彼此的朋友、合作者和同伴,我们每个人都通过自己的即兴实践来呈现自己的陪伴概念,解决情境性、反应能力、惊喜、磕磕碰碰、好奇和揭露等主题。然后,我们分析我们的工作在表演中的纠葛。这种在公司里思考、制作和实践的过程提供了一个机会,可以通过即兴音乐练习来考虑分析和表演的交叉点。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.00
自引率
25.00%
发文量
48
期刊介绍: Contemporary Music Review provides a forum for musicians and musicologists to discuss recent musical currents in both breadth and depth. The main concern of the journal is the critical study of music today in all its aspects—its techniques of performance and composition, texts and contexts, aesthetics, technologies, and relationships with other disciplines and currents of thought. The journal may also serve as a vehicle to communicate documentary materials, interviews, and other items of interest to contemporary music scholars. All articles are subjected to rigorous peer review before publication. Proposals for themed issues are welcomed.
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