果冻影院

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Singing Cultural Memories of Places and Spaces

A conversation-recital at 果冻影院 exploring the curatorship of cultural heritage as performed in the art song repertoire, with particular focus on their articulations of landscapes, geographies and sites.

cover of Butterworth鈥檚 score setting of Houseman鈥檚 鈥楲ovliest of trees鈥
How do we understand our relationship to our surroundings and experience of seasons, nature and landscape through the heritage of music? How does music function as cultural memory and cultural heritage of these locales? How might music influence our understanding of the world around us, particularly our understanding of and relationship with landscape and nature, and with specific geographies?


This project aims to develop a programme in which examples from the art song repertoire are contextualised and discussed as performative agents in a collective relationship with places and landscapes which is historically contingent and developed. The event seeks to explore and investigate art song as 鈥渋ntangible鈥 cultural heritage and as curatorship of cultural memory and cultural history, in particular how they shape and influence our understanding of places, landscapes and locales.

鈥業ntangible cultural heritage鈥 is a definition which might be understood as relating to practices, expressions, knowledge and skills which a particular group recognise as 鈥榯heirs鈥, or as part of their cultural history and heritage. It manifests in different forms, among them in performing arts. The terminology therefore allows for an approach to aspects of performative cultures, e.g. particular musical genres, that understands them as interactive with collective relationships also external to the material itself. As a particularly strong and rich development of the art song repertoire in Britain (and elsewhere), occurred when the cultural and collective properties of landscape, heritage and specific geographies accumulated, and had accumulated, significant weight and resonance, these songs might be understood to articulate a set of ideologies that surround what might be referred to as cultural landscapes and land/place values as cultural heritage. Curating a programme where these songs may be experienced as individual artistic and aesthetic expressions, while contextualising them with conversations around their collective resonance and meaning, might enable an enhanced understanding for how values of landscapes, nature, and geographies come to form, how their perpetuation contributes to a cultural heritage of places and spaces, and how musical expression might be appreciated as a continuous dialogue with its own context.

See the聽conversation-recital event page