Popular musical arrangements in the nineteenth-century home: A study of The Harmonicon supported by digital tools

Lewis, David and Page, Kevin. 2024. 'Popular musical arrangements in the nineteenth-century home: A study of The Harmonicon supported by digital tools'. In: 11th International Conference on Digital Libraries for Musicology (DLfM 2024). Stellenbosch, South Africa 27 June 2024. [Conference or Workshop Item]

[img]
Preview
Text
3660570.3660575.pdf - Published Version
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution.

Download (10MB) | Preview
[img] Text
harmonicon.pdf - Accepted Version
Permissions: Administrator Access Only

Download (10MB)

Abstract or Description

Musicologists often remove all traces of the scaffolding used to construct their scholarship at the point of completion -- presenting information about bibliographic and evidential sources, but not describing the tools and digital resources used. This makes an analysis of the state of digital support for musicology harder to achieve. In this paper, we consider both outcome and scaffolding, presenting a musicological study built upon digitised library resources, which made use of digital tools, and then considering the digital affordances that were required by the study.
We explore the musical content of the music periodicals, 'The Harmonicon' (1823-1833) and 'The Musical Library' (1834-1837), considering what it tells us about music making and reception in early nineteenth-century England. Journals such as these are important both for bringing a wide range of music into the home, but also for adapting music written for concert halls and the opera for the domestic sphere through musical arrangement. Since this music was more accessible to many than ticket prices, its selection and deployment in such volumes would have been critical for shaping an audiences musical tastes. At the same time, the editor was compelled to tailor the music to the abilities and interests of the audience, in an economically highly challenging environment.
This musicological study was supported by digital tools at multiple stages in the process. We describe the interaction between tools and scholarship, reflecting on where these were strong, but also considering opportunities for future development. We do this in terms of an iterative model of research, digitisation and editing, acknowledging that research must be able to continue despite imperfections and absences in tools, resources and digital data.

Item Type:

Conference or Workshop Item (Paper)

Identification Number (DOI):

https://doi.org/10.1145/3660570.3660575

Additional Information:

This research was undertaken by the project ‘Beethoven in the House: Digital Studies of Domestic Music Arrangements’, supported by a UK-Germany funding initiative: in the UK by the Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC) project number AH/T01279X/1 and in Germany funded by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German Research Foundation) project number 429039809. The annotation tool was developed during the same project by Johannes Kepper and Mark Saccamano, connecting EDIROM tooling with the MELD Framework; we are grateful to Elisabete Shibata and Lisa Rosendahl for substantial cataloguing assistance. Subsequent analysis of digital score annoations was supported by the ‘Annote’ project, also funded by the AHRC, grant reference APP24889.

Keywords:

digital musicology, digital libraries, linked data, web applications, music encoding

Related URLs:

Departments, Centres and Research Units:

Computing

Dates:

DateEvent
28 May 2024Accepted
27 June 2024Published

Event Location:

Stellenbosch, South Africa

Date range:

27 June 2024

Item ID:

37216

Date Deposited:

05 Jul 2024 08:03

Last Modified:

05 Jul 2024 08:09

URI:

https://research.gold.ac.uk/id/eprint/37216

View statistics for this item...

Edit Record Edit Record (login required)