沃尔什在欧洲及欧洲以外:18世纪英国音乐版画的传播与接受

IF 0.1 2区 艺术学 0 MUSIC Eighteenth Century Music Pub Date : 2023-08-25 DOI:10.1017/S1478570623000210
Gesa zur Nieden, Berthold Over
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引用次数: 0

摘要

18世纪的音乐手稿和版画越来越多地被早期现代音乐史学学者视为不可或缺的组成部分,不仅是音乐表演,而且是基于音乐的社交和各种形式的交流和接受。与所有这些问题相关的两个历史人物是伦敦出版商约翰·沃尔什(1665/1666 - 1736)和他的同名儿子(1709-1766),他们在1694年至1766年间印刷并发行了歌剧和清唱剧中的舞蹈、器乐作品、精选咏叹调和整个咏叹调文集。到目前为止,对他们版画的研究主要集中在英国,主要集中在乔治·弗里德里希·亨德尔和印刷技术上。在Alfried Krupp Wissenschaftskolleg Greifswald和Universität Greifswald举行的“沃尔什在欧洲及其他地区”会议,通过对欧洲和国际乐谱收藏、它们的来源和使用痕迹的系统调查,扩展了这一领域。其目的是揭示18世纪音乐在欧洲和全球范围内的分销渠道、用户群体以及美学或政治功能。在两天半的时间里,提交的论文主要按地区分组。在我们的介绍中,我们(geesa zur Nieden (Universität Greifswald)和Berthold Over (Universität Greifswald))在调查沃尔什版画在欧洲的分布和功能时指出了几个出发点。这些出版物在不列颠群岛和欧洲大陆的存在提供了许多线索:频繁的海上贸易促进了这些印刷品的运输,而个人和外交网络则充当了传播的中介和渠道。沃尔什指纹的用途很难确定;它们似乎在两种类别之间流动,一种是国内音乐创作的材料,另一种是纪念演出、宣传名人和分享当代关于歌剧的话语的物品。martin Eybl (Universität f r Musik und darstellende Kunst Wien)在他的主题演讲“启蒙时代音乐中的文化转移:方法论和研究问题”中,从Gottfried van sweeten的英文印刷顺序开始,描绘了一幅文化历史图景,将传播与影响、文化转移、接受和流动/迁移等概念联系起来,以及翻译研究和历史交叉交叉。他确定了与音乐发行相关的几个方面和代理人:购买公众、文化本地化、音乐材料的中介(编曲者、编译者)和限制(如不使用罗马字体的地区,如俄罗斯)。在他的论文《小约翰·沃尔什及其继任者的音乐版本:工作实践,出版策略和接受》中,唐纳德·巴罗斯(米尔顿凯恩斯开放大学)对沃尔什的操作原则和政策提供了全面的见解。年轻的
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Walsh in Europe and Beyond: Dissemination and Reception of English Music Prints in the 18th Century
Music manuscripts and prints from the eighteenth century have increasingly been regarded by scholars of early-modern music historiography as integral components not only of musical performances, but also of music-based sociability and various forms of exchange and reception. Two historical figures who relate to all of these issues are the London publishers John Walsh (1665/1666– 1736) and his son of the same name (1709–1766), who printed and distributed dances, instrumental pieces, selected arias and entire aria corpuses from operas and oratorios between 1694 and 1766. Research on their prints has so far taken place largely in Britain, and has focused for the most part on George Frideric Handel and on printing techniques. The conference ‘Walsh in Europe and Beyond’, held at the Alfried Krupp Wissenschaftskolleg Greifswald and at the Universität Greifswald, extended this field through a systematic investigation of European and international sheet-music collections, their provenance and the traces of their use. Its aim was to uncover Europe-wide and global distribution channels, user groups and the aesthetic or political functions of eighteenth-century music. The papers presented over the two and a half days were mainly grouped into regional areas. In our introduction, we (Gesa zur Nieden (Universität Greifswald) and Berthold Over (Universität Greifswald)) pointed to several points of departure when investigating the distribution and function of Walsh’s prints in Europe. The presence of these publications in the British Isles and Continental Europe offers many hints: frequent maritime trade facilitated the shipping of these prints, while individuals and diplomatic networks functioned as intermediaries and conduits for transmission. The uses of the Walsh prints are difficult to define with certainty; they seem to flow between categories of material for domestic music-making and objects for remembering performances, promoting celebrity and sharing in contemporaneous discourses about opera. In his keynote address ‘Cultural Transfer in Music in the Age of Enlightenment: Methodology and Research Questions’Martin Eybl (Universität für Musik und darstellende Kunst Wien), starting with Gottfried van Swieten’s order for English prints, painted a cultural-historical picture that linked dissemination to the concepts of influence, cultural transfer, reception and mobility/migration, as well as discourses on translation studies and histoire croisée. He identified several aspects and agents related to the distribution of music: the buying public, cultural localization, mediators of musical material (arrangers, compilers) and limitations (such as regions not using Roman typeface, as in the case of Russia). In his paper ‘The Music Editions of John Walsh Junior and His Successors: Working Practices, Publishing Strategies and Reception’, Donald Burrows (The Open University, Milton Keynes) offered a comprehensive insight into Walsh’s operating principles and policies. The younger
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