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Ethnographic Explorations of the Impacts of COVID-19 on Sociality and Spatiality in a Swiss Live Music Venue 2019冠状病毒病对瑞士现场音乐场所社会性和空间性影响的民族志探索
Q2 Arts and Humanities Pub Date : 2022-06-22 DOI: 10.1558/jwpm.23356
J. Gligorijevic
The globally experienced suspension of cultural life brought about by the COVID-19 crisis has been duly acknowledged and discussed in a growing number of publications, reports and online seminars, most often in terms of the impact of COVID-19 on the music/culture industry. Despite the worsening pandemic situation in Switzerland and elsewhere during the autumn of 2020, I happened to be conducting field research in the city of St. Gallen (in north-eastern Switzerland) where the authorities opted for a “liberal” handling of the health crisis. As a result, the city’s live music venue “Palace”, where I was doing my fieldwork observations, remained open to the public as late as mid-December 2020, albeit with shortened opening hours and with a dancing ban. This allowed me to gain first-hand fieldwork experience during the pandemic’s significant constraints on social behaviour. The present article accordingly addresses the ethical dilemmas that I encountered when operating in this “grey zone” of field research, while also documenting the challenges and adjustments that the Palace venue had to undergo during pandemic times from the perspectives of producers, musicians and audiences alike. The article specifically focuses on understanding and analysing changes in the experience of the Palace’s sociality and spatiality under social distancing rules. Ultimately, this work provides a different angle on the existing body of music-cultural research, which largely focuses on the cancellations and transformations of music events into virtual gatherings.
在越来越多的出版物、报告和在线研讨会上,人们充分认识和讨论了新冠肺炎危机给全球带来的文化生活中断,其中最常见的是新冠肺炎对音乐/文化产业的影响。尽管2020年秋季瑞士和其他地方的疫情不断恶化,但我碰巧在圣加仑市(瑞士东北部)进行实地研究,那里的当局选择了“自由”处理卫生危机。因此,直到2020年12月中旬,我正在进行实地考察的该市现场音乐场地“宫殿”(Palace)仍对公众开放,尽管开放时间缩短了,而且禁止跳舞。这使我在疫情严重制约社会行为期间获得了第一手的实地工作经验。因此,本文阐述了我在实地研究的“灰色地带”中遇到的道德困境,同时也从制作人、音乐家和观众的角度记录了在大流行时期宫殿场地必须经历的挑战和调整。本文着重于理解和分析在社会距离规则下故宫的社会性和空间性体验的变化。最终,这项工作为现有的音乐文化研究提供了一个不同的角度,主要关注音乐活动的取消和转变为虚拟聚会。
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引用次数: 2
Impact of COVID-19 on the Welsh Music Industries COVID-19对威尔士音乐产业的影响
Q2 Arts and Humanities Pub Date : 2022-06-22 DOI: 10.1558/jwpm.23353
Paul Carr
This article reflects upon an extensive report written by Paul Carr for the Culture, Welsh Language and Communications Committee (CWLCC), a body that recommends policy to Welsh Government and holds it to account. After initially providing a brief historical account of the ways in which the UK and more specifically the Welsh Government responded to the pandemic in terms of generic and targeted support, in addition to how private sector bodies “filled the gaps”, the article discusses how the report’s recommendations resonated with both the CWLCC Turn Up the Volume report and the official Welsh Government response, providing an account of how three distinct narratives (the reports from Carr, the CWLCC and Welsh Government) have been able to improve the prospects of live music stakeholders in Wales.
这篇文章反映了保罗·卡尔为文化、威尔士语言和通信委员会(CWLCC)撰写的一份广泛的报告,CWLCC是一个向威尔士政府提出政策建议并追究其责任的机构。本文首先简要介绍了联合王国,更具体地说是威尔士政府在一般和有针对性的支持方面应对疫情的方式,以及私营部门机构如何“填补空白”,然后讨论了报告的建议如何与CWLCC“加大力度”报告和威尔士政府的官方回应产生共鸣,并介绍了三种不同的叙述(卡尔的报告,CWLCC和威尔士政府)已经能够改善威尔士现场音乐利益相关者的前景。
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引用次数: 3
COVID-19 and British Jazz Musicians 新冠肺炎与英国爵士音乐家
Q2 Arts and Humanities Pub Date : 2022-06-22 DOI: 10.1558/jwpm.23355
Elina Hytönen-Ng
Jazz is a genre that relies heavily on live performance. It is therefore understandable that the COVID-19 related lockdown greatly affected jazz musicians. In this article, I reflect on London-based jazz musicians’ stories by using the idea of “liminal state”, as conceptualized by Arnold van Gennep (1960) and Victor Turner (1982), examining how they described the lockdown, in particular the financial and emotional impacts it had on them. Between spring 2020 and spring 2021, ten structured theme interviews with jazz musicians were conducted. The article commences by overviewing the data gathered and the ethical procedures adopted, after which I examine the overall emotional and psychological effects that COVID-19 had on jazz musicians who participate in live music. After reflecting on the support that the musicians have received during the pandemic, the article proceeds to outline the new skills that the musicians learned during lockdown.
爵士乐是一种非常依赖现场表演的流派。因此,与新冠肺炎相关的封锁极大地影响了爵士乐音乐家,这是可以理解的。在这篇文章中,我通过使用阿诺德·范·根内普(1960)和维克托·特纳(1982)概念化的“极限状态”的概念来反思伦敦爵士音乐家的故事,研究他们如何描述封锁,特别是封锁对他们的财务和情感影响。在2020年春季至2021年春季期间,对爵士乐音乐家进行了十次结构化主题采访。文章首先概述了收集的数据和采用的道德程序,然后我研究了新冠肺炎对参与现场音乐的爵士音乐家的总体情感和心理影响。在反思了音乐家们在疫情期间得到的支持后,文章继续概述了音乐家们封锁期间学到的新技能。
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引用次数: 0
“First Ones to Close and Last Ones to Re-Open” “第一个关闭,最后一个重新打开”
Q2 Arts and Humanities Pub Date : 2022-06-22 DOI: 10.1558/jwpm.23354
Robert Kuchar, Maxine Frey, Julia Gooß, T. Mertens
During the initial phase of the pandemic in the spring of 2020, music venues and clubs were the first to close—and often the last to re-open. Based on knowledge about music venues and club culture from the pre-COVID-19 era and data collected among club owners, clubbers, venue associations and cultural policy in Germany, this article encompasses a variety of perspectives regarding the situation of live music venues and clubs during the pandemic. Firstly, it analyses, from a German perspective, the club-related developments of the COVID-19 crisis from the first lockdown in March 2020 to the spring of 2021. Secondly, it considers the effect of “loss” among audiences and, thirdly, the discourse about cultural policy and emergency funds for music clubs and live music culture in Germany.
在2020年春季疫情的最初阶段,音乐场所和俱乐部是第一个关闭的,通常也是最后一个重新开放的。本文基于新冠肺炎疫情前对音乐场所和俱乐部文化的了解,以及在德国俱乐部所有者、俱乐部会员、场地协会和文化政策中收集的数据,涵盖了关于疫情期间现场音乐场地和俱乐部状况的各种观点。首先,它从德国的角度分析了从2020年3月第一次封锁到2021年春季新冠肺炎危机的俱乐部相关发展。其次,它考虑了“损失”在观众中的影响,第三,讨论了德国音乐俱乐部和现场音乐文化的文化政策和应急资金。
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引用次数: 0
New Normal or Old Problems? “Hibernation” and Planning for Music Careers in the Victorian Music Industries during COVID-19 新常态还是老问题?新冠肺炎期间维多利亚音乐产业的“休眠”和音乐职业规划
Q2 Arts and Humanities Pub Date : 2022-06-22 DOI: 10.1558/jwpm.23351
Fabian Cannizzo, C. Strong
Compared to many nations in the global metropole, Australia experienced low per capita cases of the novel coronavirus during 2020. However, despite the nation’s geographical isolation, its dependence on international travel did result in a number of infections in early 2020, prompting federal and state governments to impose travel restrictions, social distancing orders, and eventually some state-wide lockdowns. The strategy to help affected businesses and workers was a combination of income support, tax relief and economic incentives to spur on spending as businesses were able to again operate—an approach that became known as “hibernation”. This article examines music workers’ expectations for their future, and the future of the music industries, post-“hibernation”. Through surveying and interviewing workers and business owners from across the Victorian music industries during a period of lockdown, it is explored how workers position themselves in relation to the idea that the sector could return to “normal” post-COVID, and these responses are situated within creative work research. Without common spaces of socialization and common economic objectives, workers within the hibernated music industries have demonstrated individualized approaches to their career planning, fragmented by the breakdown of daily rituals and routines. Some workers are orienting themselves to a future where the sector re-opens mostly unchanged, while others believe that the industry will be fundamentally different post-COVID. Workers’ activities in lockdown are shaped by these beliefs, with many exiting or preparing for an exit from music work, while those who anticipate staying undertake extensive labour to ensure the viability of their careers. The article concludes by considering what this might mean for the future of live music events in Victoria.
与全球大都市的许多国家相比,澳大利亚在2020年的人均新型冠状病毒病例较低。然而,尽管美国在地理上处于孤立状态,但它对国际旅行的依赖确实导致了2020年初的一些感染,促使联邦和州政府实施旅行限制、社会距离令,并最终实施了一些全州范围的封锁。帮助受影响的企业和工人的策略是收入支持、税收减免和经济激励相结合,在企业能够重新运营时刺激消费——这种方法后来被称为“冬眠”。本文考察了音乐工作者对自己未来的期望,以及音乐产业“冬眠”后的未来。通过在封锁期间对维多利亚州音乐行业的工人和企业主进行调查和采访,探讨了工人如何定位自己与该行业可能在covid后恢复“正常”的想法,这些回应位于创造性工作研究中。由于没有共同的社交空间和共同的经济目标,处于休眠状态的音乐行业的工人们表现出了个性化的职业规划方法,日常仪式和惯例的崩溃使他们的职业规划支离破碎。一些工人正在调整自己的方向,未来该行业将基本保持不变,而另一些人则认为,该行业将在covid后发生根本变化。封锁期间工人的活动受到这些信念的影响,许多人退出或准备退出音乐工作,而那些打算留下来的人则从事大量劳动,以确保他们的职业生涯的可行性。文章最后考虑了这对维多利亚现场音乐活动的未来可能意味着什么。
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引用次数: 1
Impact of COVID-19 on Virtual Guitar Communities 新冠肺炎对虚拟吉他社区的影响
Q2 Arts and Humanities Pub Date : 2022-06-22 DOI: 10.1558/jwpm.23357
Daniel A Lee
Prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, the music industry was already experiencing uncertainty as musicians experimented with new modes of dissemination and monetization following developments in telecommunications. The arrival of the internet instigated varying, sometimes contradictory, cultural concerns including dispersion, dissipation, preservation, development, homogenization and heterogeneity. Guitar players have traditionally formed local networks and communities in geo-located domains. However, in the twenty-first century, community domains also include virtual spaces. An immersive netnographic study investigated activities in online guitar communities from the perspective of UNESCO’s Convention for the Safeguarding of Intangible Cultural Heritage. Data were analysed using the protocols of Inductive Thematic Analysis generating seven codes, regarding the impact of COVID-19 on virtual guitar communities. Without doubt, the pandemic has had serious negative effects on individual musicians’ and live venues’ income streams. However, it does seem to have acted as a catalyst for fresh vigour within online communities seeking new ways to connect. With more artists sharing and interacting, the result could be a richer environment in the future. However, without a strong recognition of cultural responsibility this richness may result in a homogenous melting pot. Alternatively, it may also bring to light cultural expressions previously suppressed.
在新冠肺炎大流行之前,音乐行业已经经历了不确定性,因为随着电信的发展,音乐家们尝试了新的传播和货币化模式。互联网的出现引发了不同的、有时是矛盾的文化问题,包括分散、耗散、保存、发展、同质化和异质性。吉他手传统上在地理位置域中形成了本地网络和社区。然而,在二十一世纪,社区领域也包括虚拟空间。一项沉浸式网络研究从联合国教科文组织《保护非物质文化遗产公约》的角度调查了在线吉他社区的活动。使用归纳主题分析协议对数据进行分析,生成了关于新冠肺炎对虚拟吉他社区的影响的七个代码。毫无疑问,疫情对个人音乐家和现场场地的收入流产生了严重的负面影响。然而,它似乎确实成为了在线社区寻求新连接方式的新活力的催化剂。随着更多的艺术家分享和互动,未来的环境可能会更加丰富。然而,如果没有对文化责任的强烈认识,这种丰富性可能会导致同质的大熔炉。或者,它也可能揭露以前被压制的文化表达。
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引用次数: 0
Playing Out 上演
Q2 Arts and Humanities Pub Date : 2022-06-22 DOI: 10.4324/9780080957081-20
Mathew Flynn, Richard Anderson
Drawing on the findings of practitioner group consultations (n=49) and an online survey of music makers (n=37), this article illustrates the devastating impact of 18 months without full-capacity live events on the financial, musical and social wellbeing of the Liverpool City Region’s (LCR) music sector. The analysis shows how uncertainties concerning a return to normal operations, access to funding support, working within socially distanced limitations, and dealing with changing regulations have underlined the live music workers’ experience of the pandemic as well as how a sense of uncertainty persists despite a return to full-capacity events in July 2021. The findings show that digital alternatives partially helped alleviate lockdown’s detrimental effects but, overall, the sector viewed live-streaming as a “stop-gap” incomparable to the conventional concert experience. The research concludes by observing that, despite the numerous practical and economic adaptations and online advances that ensured the sector’s survival, the return to “business as usual” also means a return to pre-pandemic industry economics, which often function to the detriment of the musicians on whom the regional live sector’s operational and financial recovery depend.
根据从业者小组咨询(n=49)和音乐制作人在线调查(n=37)的结果,本文说明了18个月没有满负荷现场活动对利物浦城市地区(LCR)音乐部门的财务、音乐和社会福利的破坏性影响。分析显示,恢复正常运营、获得资金支持、在社交距离限制范围内工作以及应对不断变化的法规等方面的不确定性,突显了现场音乐工作者对疫情的经历,以及尽管2021年7月活动恢复满负荷运转,但不确定性仍然存在。调查结果显示,数字替代方案部分帮助缓解了封锁的有害影响,但总体而言,该行业将直播视为传统音乐会体验无法比拟的“权宜之计”。该研究的结论是,尽管有许多实际和经济上的调整以及在线上的进步确保了该行业的生存,但回归“一切照旧”也意味着回归流行病前的行业经济,这往往损害了地区现场行业的运营和财务复苏所依赖的音乐家的利益。
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引用次数: 1
To Be Announced 待定
Q2 Arts and Humanities Pub Date : 2022-06-22 DOI: 10.1558/jwpm.23352
Johannes Krause, Jan Üblacker, Katharina Huseljić, Niklas Blömeke, Heiko Rühl
The COVID-19 pandemic and the associated closures of live music venues have confronted operators in Germany with fundamental uncertainty about the prospects of their venues. In the summer of 2020, both public and political debates revolved around the question of whether operators might have to close or could remain open during the crisis, with the overarching viewpoint being that closures were the most sensible option. Using data from the German live music survey (n = 686) and linear regression modelling, this article analyses the factors influencing the expected duration until insolvency. We show that the continuous financial support provided by the state extended the expected time to insolvency, as did the number of actors and initiatives using venues on a regular basis. On the other hand, operators with market venues, venues for lease and venues in big cities had more pessimistic expectations. The results demonstrate the safeguarding function of state support and diverse live music networks in times of crisis and bear important implications for the promotion of resilient live music ecologies.
2019冠状病毒病大流行和相关的现场音乐场馆关闭,使德国的运营商对其场馆的前景面临根本的不确定性。在2020年夏天,公众和政治辩论都围绕着运营商在危机期间是否必须关闭或保持开放的问题,总体观点是关闭是最明智的选择。利用德国现场音乐调查(n = 686)的数据和线性回归模型,本文分析了影响破产预期持续时间的因素。我们表明,国家提供的持续财政支持延长了预期的破产时间,定期使用场地的参与者和倡议的数量也延长了预期的破产时间。另一方面,拥有市场场馆、租赁场馆和大城市场馆的运营商的预期更为悲观。研究结果显示了国家支持和多样化现场音乐网络在危机时期的保障功能,对促进弹性现场音乐生态具有重要意义。
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引用次数: 2
Tourism-Dependent Local Music Ecosystems under COVID-19 新冠肺炎下依赖旅游的地方音乐生态系统
Q2 Arts and Humanities Pub Date : 2022-06-22 DOI: 10.1558/jwpm.23350
Iñigo Sánchez-Fuarros, M. Lacerda
This article aims to examine the changing atmosphere of Lisbon’s fado live music scene during the COVID-19 crisis. In particular, it focuses on the effects of the lockdown measures and other public health restrictions on the casas de fado, a distinctive type of local institution where music, tourism and the quest for experiences of authenticity intersect. Drawing on in-person and remote interviews with venue owners, local association representatives, musicians and patrons, as well as on content analysis of local media sources and participant observation, this article argues that the pandemic has revealed the fragility of a local music ecosystem overly dependent on foreign tourism and institutional support for its survival. Moreover, it discusses how the changes brought about by the pandemic has impacted fado practice itself.
本文旨在研究新冠肺炎危机期间里斯本法多现场音乐场景的变化气氛。特别是,它关注的是封锁措施和其他公共卫生限制对法多之家的影响,这是一种独特的地方机构,音乐、旅游和寻求真实体验交织在一起。本文通过对场地所有者、当地协会代表、音乐家和赞助人的面对面和远程采访,以及对当地媒体来源的内容分析和参与者观察,认为疫情揭示了当地音乐生态系统的脆弱性,该生态系统过度依赖外国旅游业和机构支持。此外,它还讨论了疫情带来的变化如何影响法多实践本身。
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引用次数: 1
Birmingham and the (International) Business of Live Music in Times of COVID-19 伯明翰与新冠肺炎时代的现场音乐(国际)业务
Q2 Arts and Humanities Pub Date : 2022-06-22 DOI: 10.1558/jwpm.23348
Adam Behr, C. Hamilton, Patrycja Rozbicka
This article discusses the context of, and presents findings from, a project examining the live music sector in Birmingham, UK. This research is set against the backdrop of the broader socio-political impact of the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, and links it to national and global contexts. We explore the live music ecology of Birmingham and highlight the interdependencies between the various musical and non-musical stakeholders in the context of the pandemic—including the venues where live music takes place—examining how these stakeholders are responding to the crisis as it unfolds. In doing so, this article asks how an urban geographical area tied into national and international mechanisms of culture, commerce and policy can work to sustain its musical ecology in the face of the uncertainty of a post-COVID-19 era, and underlines the interconnectedness of live music ecologies and wider economies.
本文讨论了一个研究英国伯明翰现场音乐行业的项目的背景,并介绍了该项目的研究结果。这项研究是在持续的新冠肺炎大流行带来更广泛的社会政治影响的背景下进行的,并将其与国家和全球背景联系起来。我们探索了伯明翰的现场音乐生态,并强调了在疫情背景下,各种音乐和非音乐利益相关者之间的相互依存关系,包括现场音乐的场所,研究了这些利益相关者如何应对危机。在这样做的过程中,本文询问了一个与国家和国际文化、商业和政策机制相联系的城市地理区域如何在后COVID-19时代的不确定性面前维持其音乐生态,并强调了现场音乐生态与更广泛的经济体之间的相互联系。
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引用次数: 0
期刊
Journal of World Popular Music
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