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Bulletin of International Council for Traditional Music, oct 2013 issue

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153 views

123 ICTM Bulletin Oct 2013 Good

Bulletin of International Council for Traditional Music, oct 2013 issue

Uploaded by

Julio Guillén
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 58

BULLETIN

of the INTERNATIONAL COUNCIL for


TRADITIONAL MUSIC
No. 123, October 2013
ISSN (Online): 2304-4039
Including rst notice for the
43rd ICTM World Conference
in Astana, Kazakhstan, 2015

FROM THE SECRETARIAT


Message from the Secretary
General; Appointment of new
General Editor of the Yearbook;
Appointment of Film/Video
Reviews Editor for the Yearbook
for Traditional Music;
Appointment of Book Notes
(Web) Editor for the Yearbook
For Traditional Music;
Appointment of Guest Editor for
2014 Yearbook; New publication
from the ICTM Colloquium on
Laments; Bulletin news.
Pages 2-4
IN MEMORIAM
Marianne Brcker (1936-2013);
Olive Lewin (1927-2013);
Barbara Sparti (1932-2013); Jan
Ling (1932-2013).
Pages 5-8
42nd ICTM WORLD CONFERENCE
IN SHANGHAI, CHINA
Local Arrangements Committee
Report; Program Committee
Report; Minutes of the 41st
General Assembly of the ICTM;
Minutes of 12th Assembly of
ICTM National and Regional
Representatives.
Pages 9-17

43rd ICTM WORLD CONFERENCE


IN ASTANA, KAZAKHSTAN
First Notice and Call for
Proposals.
Pages 18-20
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Call for Papers: 4th Symposium
of the ICTM Study Group on
Applied Ethnomusicology; News
from the ICTM Study Group on
Ethnochoreology; Call for
Papers: 20th Symposium of the
ICTM Study Group on
Historical Sources of Traditional
Music; Call for Papers: ICTM
Ireland Annual Conference; Call
for Papers: 10th Symposium of
the ICTM Study Group on
Mediterranean Music Studies;
Second Call for Papers: 4th
Symposium of the ICTM Study
Group on Music and Dance in
Southeastern Europe; Call for
Papers: 8th Symposium of the
ICTM Study Group on Music
and Minorities; Call for Papers:
4th Symposium of the ICTM
Study Group on Musics of East
Asia; Call for Papers: 3rd
Symposium of the ICTM Study
Group on Performing Arts of
Southeast Asia (PASEA).
Pages 21-33

REPORTS
Reports from ICTM National
and Regional Representatives:
Austria; Estonia; Indonesia;
Ireland; Madagascar; Thailand.
Pages 34-41
Reports from ICTM Study
Groups: African Musics;
Applied Ethnomusicology;
Ethnochoreology; Folk Musical
Instruments.
Pages 42-46
CALENDAR OF EVENTS
Page 47
RECENT PUBLICATIONS BY ICTM
MEMBERS
Local and Global
Understandings of Creativities:
Multipart Music Making and
the Construction of Ideas,
Contexts and Contents; La
polyphonie dans les Pyrnes
gasconnes: Tradition, volution,
rsilience; Dschila le Romendar
andar o Burgenland - Lieder der
burgenlndischen Roma;
Triguna: A Hindu-Balinese
Philosophy for Gamelan Gong
Gede Music; (Music ! Dance)
Environment; Trapped in
Folklore? Studies in Music and
Dance Tradition and Their

Bulletin of the ICTM Vol. 123 October 2013 Page 1

Contemporary Transformations;
The Art of n Ca Ti T and
Styles of Improvisation;
%&'()*+ +*,-.&/0*-(
1&2&3+4 [Musical Instruments of
the Hutsuls]; Musical
Traditions. Discovery, Inquiry,
Interpretation, and Application;
Javanese Gamelan and the West;
Bartk Bla hangszeres magyar
npzenei gyjtse
knyvbemutatja; One Common
Thread: The Musical World of
Lament (Humanities Research
Volume XIX No. 3. 2013).
Pages 48-51
ICTM WORLD NETWORK
Pages 52-54
ICTM STUDY GROUPS
Page 55
ICTM AUTHORITIES
The President, Vice Presidents,
Secretary General, Executive
Assistant, and Executive Board
Members.
Page 56
GENERAL INFORMATION
About ICTM; Membership
information; Publications by
ICTM.
Pages 57-58

Message from
the Secretary
General

Chuluunbaatar (Mongolia), Evert


Bisschop Boele (The Netherlands),

from Basel, Switzerland, in 1948 to


Shanghai, China, in 2013.

Bjrn Aksdal (Norway), Constantin


Secar (Romania), and Keith Howard

Study Groups

by Svanibor Pettan

(UK). The number of countries and


territories having oicial ICTM repre-

Dear members, friends


and supporters of the International
Council for Traditional Music, welcome
to the October 2013 issue of the Bulletin of the ICTM.
During the 42nd ICTM World Conference, which took place on 11-17 July
2013 in Shanghai, China, the results of
the biennial ICTM elections were announced (see pages 15-16), making this
a suitable opportunity to express gratitude to those leaving the Executive
Board, and welcome those who join it.
Adrienne L. Kaeppler, President of
ICTM for two consecutive mandates
(2005-2013) was succeeded by Salwa
El-Shawan Castelo-Branco, whose former position as Vice President was
lled by Don Niles, who in turn is currently completing his last volume as
General Editor of the Yearbook for
Traditional Music. For their dedicated
work in the best interests of the Council, many thanks to Ursula Hemetek
and Timothy Rice, and all the best to
the newly elected Ordinary Members of
the Executive Board, Jonathan Stock,
Terada Yoshitaka, and Xiao Mei, as

sentation is currently 87.


Next ICTM World Conference
The 43rd ICTM World Conference will
take place in July 2015 at the Kazakh
National University of the Arts, in Astana, Kazakhstan, the youngest city to
ever host our major scholarly gathering. To get an idea about Kazakhstan,
the city of Astana, the hosting institution and Trksoy (the sponsoring institution), please watch the promotional
video of the 2015 ICTM World Conference, as presented during the Closing
Ceremony of the Shanghai Conference.
The Program Committee of the next
Conference is co-chaired by Timothy
Rice and Razia Sultanova, while the
Local Arrangements Committee wishes
us a warm welcome through its CoChairs, Aiman Mussakhajayeva and
Saida Yelemanova. Please read more
about the Conferences themes and
timeline in the First Call for Papers, on
pages 18-20 of this Bulletin. Also do
not miss to browse through our new
list of past ICTM World Conferences,

The leadership of the Study Group on


Music and Gender has changed. We
thank former Co-Chairs Fiona Magowan and Nino Tsitsishvili, and welcome the Study Groups new Chair,
Barbara Hampton.
Please take a look at the schedule of
forthcoming Study Group Symposia on
page 47 before us is a year rich with
scholarly gatherings in very diverse
parts of the world.
New Colloquia webpage
ICTM Colloquia are the third kind of
scholarly gatherings organized by the
Council and the only one in which participation is based on invitation. Recently, a new detailed page listing all
past ICTM Colloquia was added to the
ICTM website, including the rst Colloquium (Poland, 1981) to the most
recent one (Portugal, 2011).
Publications
The 2013 volume of the Yearbook for
Traditional Music is already at the
printers, and will be distributed on
time in early November 2013. Dominated by the timely theme of Music

well as to the co-opted ones, Mohd


Anis Md Nor, Razia Sultanova, and
Saida Yelemanova.
World Network changes
As evidenced by the World Network
page at the ICTM website, our network
of National and Regional Representatives has been recently enriched by two
new countries (Lebanon and Mongolia).
The Council warmly welcomes the nine
new National Representatives: anna
Prtlas (Estonia), Jarkko Niemi (Finland), Jaime Jones (Ireland), Nidaa
Abou Mrad (Lebanon), Otgonbayar

Astana, capital of Kazakhstan and the site of the next ICTM World Conference
Bulletin of the ICTM Vol. 123 October 2013 Page 2

and Poverty, it will most certainly


attract attention in the world of ethnomusicology and beyond.
The Bulletin of the ICTM will be,
starting in 2014, distributed three
times a yearin January, April, and
October.
Also a new page listing the complete
run of past Bulletins has been added to
the ICTM Website. Many issues have
been scanned and are available for free
download, including the very rst issue
(October 1948). I would like to thank
Don Niles and Carlos Yoder for their
initial work on this page, and to invite
everyone to participate in the project,
and help the Council to obtain some
missing issues of past Bulletins.

To relaunch the Online Membership


Directory as a dynamic, powerful
tool for all ICTM members.

To compile a master list of all ICTM


publications, including but not limited to volumes resulting from Study

Appointment of new
General Editor of the
Yearbook

The ICTM Executive Board is pleased


to announce the appointment of Kati
Szego as General Editor, beginning

School of Music, Memorial University,


St. Johns, NL, Canada A1C 5S7;
email: [email protected].
Kati replaces Don Niles, who is retiring
after serving as General Editor for

contribution to our journal.

Appointment of Film/Video
Reviews Editor for the
Yearbook for Traditional
Music

achievements, linked to a clear vision of


the activities in the future, testify
about the healthy present state of the
Council. Your opinions are always wel-

MK7 6AA, United Kingdom; email:


[email protected].

Websites: Barbara Alge, Musicology


and Music Pedagogy Department,
Hochschule fr Musik und Theater,
Rostock, Germany; email:
[email protected].

I am sure that the ICTM membership


will welcome Yoshitaka and will continue to support all the editors in the
vital role they play in the production of
our journal.

Editor, Yearbook for


Traditional Music

by Don Niles, General Editor, Yearbook


for Traditional Music

I am very happy to

Michael Silvers, assistant professor of

Video Reviews Editor, beginning with


the 2014 Yearbook for Traditional Mu-

The dynamics of past activities and

Audio: Byron Dueck, Music Department, Arts Faculty, The Open University, Walton Hall, Milton Keynes

by Don Niles, General

To examine existing relations be-

Concluding remarks

Appointment of Book Notes


(Web) Editor for the
Yearbook For Traditional
Music

announce that Terada


Yoshitaka has been appointed as Film/

terests, and to improve them in the


best interest of our scholarship.

Books: Sydney Hutchinson, Department of Art and Music Histories,


Syracuse University, 308 Bowne Hall,
Syracuse, NY 13244-1200, USA;
email: [email protected].

with the 2014 Yearbook for Traditional


Music. Katis contact details are:

Group symposia and colloquia, and


make it available online.
tween the Council and other scholarly societies having compatible in-

seven years as editor. The continuing


review editors are:

The Executive Board welcomes Kati to


this position and looks forward to her

information available online.

iat to serve our shared goals in the best


possible way.

The Executive Board has committed to

To compile a list of all Study Group


symposia (in close cooperation with
Study Group Chairs), and make the

Yoshitaka is taking over from Lisa Urkevich, who is retiring after completing

eight issues of the Yearbook.

come, so let me encourage you to help


the Executive Board and the Secretar-

Future endeavours
full a number of key projects during
the next mandate, among them being:

sic. He can be reached at Department


of Advanced Studies in Anthropology,
National Museum of Ethnology, 10-1
Senri Expo Park, Suita, Osaka 5658511, Japan. His email address is
[email protected].
Please contact him regarding lms and
videos to review.

Bulletin of the ICTM Vol. 123 October 2013 Page 3

music at the University of Illinois, is


joining the Yearbooks editorial team as
the Book Notes (Web) Editor, working
with the Book Reviews Editor. He will
be responsible for a separate part of
the book reviews section called Book
Notes. These reviews will only be
available on the ICTM website, but will
supplement the reviews in the printed
Yearbook. This will enable more and
dierent kinds of material to be reviewed.

Please note that all book materials for


review should be sent to the Book Reviews Editor, Sydney Hutchinson, Department of Art and Music Histories,
Syracuse University, 308 Bowne Hall,
Syracuse, NY 13244-1200, USA; email:
[email protected].
We all welcome Mike as a Yearbook
editor and look forward to his eorts to
get more publications reviewed.

Appointment of Guest
Editor for 2014 Yearbook
by Don Niles, General Editor, Yearbook
for Traditional Music
It gives me great pleasure to announce
that J. Lawrence Witzleben will be the
guest editor for the 2014 Yearbook for
Traditional Music. Larry was Program
Chair for the 2013 ICTM World Conference in Shanghai. The 2014 Yearbook
will focus on the themes from that conference: Presentation and Representation in Minority Musics and Dance;
Rethinking, Reconstructing, and Reinventing Musical Pasts; Ethnomusicology, Ethnochoreology, and Education;
Ritual, Religion and the Performing
Arts; Screening Music and Dance; and
New Research.
Manuscripts to be considered for publication in the 2014 Yearbook should be
sent to Larry by 1 January 2014
([email protected]). Submissions should
be no more than 7,0008,000 words in
length. Please submit your articles in
Microsoft Word format (.doc, .docx) or
Rich Text Format (.rtf), not as PDF
les. Also be sure to include an abstract and a brief biographical statement, each up to 100 words.
Further information on the format of
submissions can be found on the Information for Authors section in any
recent Yearbook (p. v) or on the ICTM
website.

New publication from the


ICTM Colloquium on
Laments
by Stephen Wild
A volume of papers on
the musical expression
of laments has recently
been published as a
volume of the journal Humanities Research by ANU E-Press (Australian
National University).

nal. Most of the presentations appear


as papers in the published volume.
Please see more about the volume on
page 51 of this Bulletin.

Bulletin news
by Carlos Yoder,
Editor, Bulletin of the
ICTM

A new design

The papers are based on those pre-

The design language of


the Bulletin has been incrementally

sented at the 21st ICTM Colloquium


on laments held in Canberra, Australia,
20-22 April 2011. The title of the vol-

rened over the past two years, to


make the transition from paper to online a smooth one. Starting with this

ume is One Common Thread: The


Musical World of Lament, edited by

issue, the Councils fonts and colour


palette have been thoroughly incorporated into the design, and the balance

Stephen Wild, Di Roy, Aaron Corn and


Ruth Lee Martin.
The colloquium was held in association
with the National Folk Festival and the
National Folklore Conference. Sessions
were held at the School of Music
(ANU) and the National Library of
Australia (host of the National Folklore
Conference). The colloquium was preceded by an Open Public Conversation:
Laments from the bush: Is Waltzing
Matilda a Lament?, and concluded
with a Public Forum and a concert on
laments held at the National Folk Festival. A vocal and choral concert on the
theme of laments was held at the Australian National University.
The concept of laments was broadly
conceived as the musical expression of
loss and bereavement. There were three
main themes: (1) loss of place/
displacement; (2) personal loss, death,
funerals; and (3) cultural loss/language
loss. Musical cultures represented in
the colloquium included Scots Gaelic,
Chinese Australian, Fijian, Hawaiian,
Mongolian, Irish, Irish Australian,
Uzbek, Western popular music, Papua
New Guinean, and Australian AborigiBulletin of the ICTM Vol. 123 October 2013 Page 4

of white space has been corrected to


maximize legibility on most electronic
devices.

A new frequency
Following a decision by the Executive
Board, the Bulletin of the ICTM will
now be distributed three times a year,
i.e., in January, April, and October.
This new experimental schedule will
allow for a more dynamic communication between ICTM, its members, and
the public.
If you have any comments about the
new design, the new frequency, or any
other matters relating to the Bulletin
of the ICTM, please write to
[email protected].
Until next time, in January 2014!

It has heard nothing from me for so long


that it may very well believe that I am dead!
It is of no consequence to me
Whether it thinks me dead;
I cannot deny it,
for I really am dead to the world.
I am dead to the world's tumult,
And I rest in a quiet realm!
I live alone in my heaven,
In my love and in my song!

(Manfred Bartmann)

Marianne Brcker (1936-2013)


I am very sad to report that Marianne
Brckerethnomusicologist, ethnochoreologist, ethnoorganologist and anthropologist, esteemed scholar, highly
gifted teacher and warm-hearted, generous friendborn on 1 November 1936
passed away on 4 August 2013. She did
not want a funeral let alone any other
ceremony, and insisted on an anonymous burial.
Let me oer a poem byFriedrich
Rckert, which has been set to music
by Gustav Mahler as one of his ve
Rckert songs, to express the feelings
Marianne gave us when we saw her the
last few times:
Ich bin der Welt abhanden gekommen
Mit der ich sonst viele Zeit verdorben
Sie hat so lange nichts von mir vernommen
Sie mag wohl glauben, ich sei gestorben!
Es ist mir auch gar nichts daran gelegen,
Ob sie mich fr gestorben hlt,
Ich kann auch gar nichts sagen dagegen,
Denn wirklich bin ich gestorben der Welt.
Ich bin gestorben dem Weltgetmmel,
Und ruh' in einem stillen Gebiet!
Ich leb' allein in meinem Himmel,
In meinem Lieben, in meinem Lied!

A translation by Emily Ezust follows.


I am lost to the world

Inexhaustible as her dancing repertoire,


Marianne Brcker was initially a
teacher of mathematics and sport. Her
dissertation Hurdy-gurdy, its construction and history published in 1977, is
regarded as a reference work and is still
often used by musicians and scholars.
Her merits for ethnomusicology include
teaching at the universities of Bonn,
Dsseldorf, Cologne, Gttingen, and
Bamberg, presiding of scholarly associations, organizing and serving as a
judge at international competitions and
festivals, presenting papers at conferences, preparing radio programs, and
more. She combined scholarship and
musical practice, and we thank her for
her warm-hearted nature and for passing to us the passion for ethnomusicology. (Heidi Christ)
Marianne Brcker shaped the work of
the German ICTM National Committee with great enthusiasm for almost
twenty years. It was she who organized
and conducted the annual meetings and
pursued with continual engagement the
publication of the proceedings, thus
editing about twenty volumes. She received numerous honours for her work,
the last being the ICTM's Lifetime
Recognition Award and Honorary
Membership in 2013. She has reached
the hearts and souls of many people.
We will keep her in honourable and
living remembrance. (Dorit Klebe)

with which I used to waste so much time,

Bulletin of the ICTM Vol. 123 October 2013 Page 5

The members of the Ethnochoreology


Sub-Study Group on Dance Iconography remember with particular pleasure
our meeting in Bamberg in 2003. Marianne not only made all of our arrangements, but our meetings were held at
her house, sitting around her dining
room table. Each evening included a
special event culminating in a dinner.
The late Barbara Sparti led our discussions and the result was our book Imaging Dance. Visual Representations of
Dancers and Dancing (2011).
(Adrienne L. Kaeppler)
There were many qualities to admire in
Marianne. Many of us have felt her
warm support and delicate guidance.
She was always interested in new initiatives, and her role in research policy on
the national and international levels
was important and long-lasting. Our
institute cooperated with her on several
occasions as for example in 1998 on the
organization of an international symposium titled Musik kennt keine Grenzen
(There are no borders in music) and I
remember very well Mariannes
thoughtful remarks during the sessions
as well as her readiness to celebrate,
when serious work was over. Teaching
was one of her favourite obligations and
many students of ethnomusicology owe
her a great deal. (Ursula Hemetek)
Most certainly, many of us feel we owe
a lot to Marianne Brcker, hence this
non-standard multi-voiced obituary
symbolically hopes to bring all our
voices in shared celebration of a dear
friend and respected colleague, whose
life continues to inspire us. It is not a
coincidence that I am concluding these
lines at the Tainan National University
of the Arts, where Marianne taught for
a semester in 2006. (Svanibor Pettan)

Olive Lewin (1927-2013)

trained, Olive Lewin was nonetheless


drawn to the sounds, words and melo-

(OAS), and was instrumental in the


recognition by UNESCO of the Musical

dies of Jamaican folk music. It was an


area that was previously little known or

Heritage of the Moore Town Maroons


as a Masterpiece of the Oral and In-

understood and was even viewed with a


certain degree of ambivalence by some

tangible Heritage of Humanity in 2003.


This was a very important acknow-

members of the Jamaican society who


regarded folk music as low culture.
Nonetheless, she started island-wide

ledgement of the element of Maroon


music and served to initiate a research
and documentation programme, led by

treks to locate and document Jamaican


folk songs and happened upon a treasure trove of music steeped in African

the African Caribbean Institute of


Jamaica/Jamaica Memory Bank, which
sought to safeguard traditional Maroon

retention from Revival, Jonkunnu, to


Kumina, Gerreh, Dinki Mini to the

music and heritage in Jamaica.

drumming and chanting of Rastafari.

Olive Lewin has written several articles

by Bernard Jankee, Director of the


African Caribbean Institute of Jamaica

This important work has now proven to


be critical to the understanding of the

and is the author of books on folk music including Forty Folk Songs of Jamaica (1973), Come Mek Me Hol Yu

The African Caribbean Institute of


Jamaica/Jamaica Memory Bank regrets
the passing of Olive Lewin, ethnomusi-

cultural expressions that are alive and


evolving in Jamaica, and which have

Han: The Impact of Tourism on Traditional Music (co-edited with Adrienne

inuenced local Gospel, Ska, Mento,


Reggae and Dancehall genres.

L. Kaeppler, 1988), and Rock it Come


Over: The Folk Music of Jamaica
(2000), based on her PhD dissertation.

cologist, folk researcher, public servant


and educator.
Olive Lewin was born in Vere, Clarendon, in September 1927, and in 1943
she was awarded a scholarship to pursue studies at the Royal Academy of
Music in London.
Upon her return, her passion for music
and her belief in its educational and
therapeutic qualities, a pioneering view
at the time, caused her to agitate for
the introduction of music classes at the
Belleview Hospital and even in prisons.
In the mid 1960s, the Government undertook the documentation of various
aspects of Jamaican folk culture, and
Dr. Lewin was appointed Research Ofcer at the Jamaica School of Music to
collect and document Jamaican folk
music in all its manifestations. This set
in train what was to become her lifes
work, following her to postings at the
Social Development Commission, the
division of culture in the Oice of the
Prime Minister and the former Institute of Folk Culture. Classically

In 1981, as Director of Culture in the


Oice of the Prime Minister, she initiated, with support from UNESCO, the

The Institute of Jamaica awarded her


the coveted Gold Musgrave Medal for

Jamaica Memory Bank, a national oral


history project that sought to document the nations history through the

Contribution to Music in 1987, and the


Government of Jamaica acknowledged
her sterling contribution to Jamaicas

lived experiences of its senior citizens.


This project later became part of the

culture by awarding her the Order of


Distinction (OD) in 1975 for Services in

Institute of Folk Culture.

the Field of Art, the Commander of the


Order of Distinction (CD) in 1988 for
Services in the Field of Folk Culture

While she had also engaged in choral


music and had established choirs at
Boys Town and other community
groups, her most notable musical accomplishment was the establishment of
the Jamaican Folk Singers in 1967, a
group which continues to thrive and is
internationally acclaimed.
A well respected ethnomusicologist,
Lewin served the International Council
for Traditional Music as Executive
Board Member (1971-1986), Vice
President (1987-1994), and local organizer of the 21st World Conference
(1971) and the 5th Colloquium (1986).
She also served on the Cultural Council
of the Organization of American States
Bulletin of the ICTM Vol. 123 October 2013 Page 6

and the Order of Jamaica (OJ) for


Outstanding Contribution in the Field
of Art and Culture. The University of
the West Indies also awarded her with
an honorary doctorate (D.Litt) in 1998.
The African Caribbean Institute of
Jamaica/Jamaica Memory Bank salutes
Olive Lewin for her work in documenting and promoting Jamaicas folk heritage and expresses its condolences to
her daughter Joanna and her other
family members.

have exhausted any lesser mortal. Almost until her death (17 June 2013)

and professional courage in studying


and elucidating depictions of people

Barbara kept travelling to and presenting papers at international conferences.

making music, and/or dancing, in


paintings, etchings, carvings, and other

She also continued to be a tough and


insightful editor, a gracious host, a tire-

forms of visual art. More than that,


Barbara sawand helped others to

less promoter of the projects in which


she believed, an unfailingly generous
friend, and a devoted mother and

seethe common threads among these


elds.

grandmother.

Barbara Sparti (1932-2013)


by Nancy Heller
In June of 1999 I had the spectacular
good fortune of meeting Barbara
Sparti. Then in her mid-60s, Barbara
lookedand actedmany decades
younger. Tiny, with tremendous energy
and physical grace, she radiated intelligence, warmth, elegance, and wit. We
were on the same panel at a conference
of the Society for Dance History Scholars in Albuquerque, New Mexico,
where we admired each others presentations and became fast friends. Over
the years Barbara was also an invaluable mentor, though we couldnt see
each other often since she lived in
Rome, while I was based in Philadel-

Barbara was an enormously important


scholar, who made signicant contribu-

former with and director of the Gruppo


di Danza Rinascamentale (between
1975 and 1988), andall her life--an

tions to the eld of early dance history,


including seminal papers, articles, and

enthusiastic student of whatever new


dance forms presented themselves (I

books focusing on the Renaissance and


Baroque periods in Italy, but also dealing with dance from other centuries

have fond memories of watching Barbara learn, and then do--with great
abandon, Hungarian and Spanish cou-

and countries. The high esteem in


which she was held is indicated by the

ple dances, one evening during the 2006


Symposium of the ICTM Study Group

numerous invitations Barbara received


to write papers for festschrifts dedicated to other dance-history luminaries,

on Ethnochoreology in Cluj, Romania.)


In addition, Barbara was an extraordinary and adored teacher, as demon-

and the collection of essays published


in her honour in 2011. Her reputation

strated by the emotional tributes


posted on the Internet by her former

is also reected by the distinguished


scholars with whom she collaboratedsuch as Julia Sutton.

students in Poland, Germany, Italy, the


United States of America, and elsewhere. I was only able to attend one of

Barbaras involvement with the ICTM


Study Group on Ethnochoreology be-

phia.

gan at its 1998 Symposium, held in


Istanbul. She became a loyal member of
the group and soon led its Sub-Study

Almost a decade after that initial meeting I was delighted, when Barbara

Group on Iconography. This involvement eventually led to a book, Imaging

agreed to y all the way to Dallas,


Texas, to participate in a panel I was
chairing for the College Art Association. And it was heartbreaking, when
she had to miss that conference because she had just been diagnosed with
lung cancer. Still, no one who corresponded or spent time with Barbara
during the last six years of her alwaysbusy life would ever have guessed that
she was ill. Despite occasionally being
sidelined by medical treatments, Barbara continued to keep up a professional and personal schedule that would

She was a noted choreographer, a per-

Dance, co-edited with Judy Van Zile


(with assistance from Elsie Dunin,
Adrienne Kaeppler, and myself).
Equally impressive is the progress Barbara made toward erasing the unnecessary and illogical, but long-held,
boundaries between the histories of
dance, music, and visual art. Perhaps
because of her own, unusually deep and
broad training in her native New York
City, Barbara was entirely comfortable
researching, writing, and lecturing
about both music and dance. She
showed the same intellectual curiosity
Bulletin of the ICTM Vol. 123 October 2013 Page 7

Barbaras early-dance workshops, but


that experience revealed what a clear,
patient, and yet rigorous instructor she
was. Her passion and respect for the
music, the steps, and the people around
her was immediately obvious. This explains why she was in so much demand
as a Visiting Artist/Lecturer/
Choreographer/Teacherat major universities in Europe, the U.S., Israel,
and Japan.
Some of my strongest memories of
Barbara involve her obvious joy at introducing friends and relatives to each
other. She was a real mensch. I will
miss her inquisitive, outrageous, and
hilarious emails, her wise editorial
counsel, and the fun I had, looking
forward to seeing her at international
conferences (Barbara was looking forward to participating in next years

symposium of the Study Group on


Ethnochoreology on Korula). Her leg-

Swedish folk music. His book on Swedish folk music published in 1964 be-

acyas a dancer, teacher, scholar, and


an all-round exceptional human be-

came the main source on the subject


for decades. During the 1960s he

ingwill not be forgotten.

worked at Svenskt Visarkiv and The


Stockholm Music Museum. Jan Ling

conducted a number of recording projects for those institutions with a clear


sociological perspective. Lings obvious
interest in the musicians contemporary
repertoire distinguishes his collected
material from other more historically
oriented documentations from the same
period.
In 1967 he became lecturer at the University of Gothenburg. In the following
years he established an institute for
musicology at the university, with a
new direction for the discipline in Swe-

Jan Ling (1934-2013)


by Dan Lundberg and Krister Malm
The Nestor of Swedish ethnomusicology, Jan Ling, has left us. He died suddenly on 3 October 2013. He was 79
years old.
Ling has been enormously important
for the development of Swedish ethno-

den, applying methodology from anthropology and sociology. He also encouraged his students to work in research teams. His fresh views on what
musicology could be, combined with his
leftist political views met resistance
from the academic establishment. Although a number of important studies
were published by him and his students
it was only in 1977 when he became a

musicology. His dissertation on the


Swedish nyckelharpa from 1966 was
ground breaking and contributed a

professor and his brand of musicology


became fully recognized by the university.

great deal to the revival of this instrument (for a summary in English see

Together with Krister Malm, Ling established the ICTM Sweden National

this website). In A History of European Folk Music (University of Rochester Press, 1997) he addressed a plethora of questions through a detailed examination of a wide range of music
from vastly dierent national and cultural backgrounds. Other major works
of his dealt with folk music and ideology, and with ethnomusicological perspectives on European art music.

Committee, and he became its rst


president. In the 1980s Ling started a
giant project on the history of European folk music in its context. In 1985
the book covering the period up to
1730 was published and a few years a
second volume covering the period up
to 1980.

He studied piano at the Royal College


of Music in Stockholm in 1955-58 and
then musicology at Uppsala university.
His main research interest soon became
Bulletin of the ICTM Vol. 123 October 2013 Page 8

Jan Ling recording nyckelharpa players


Gsta Hellstrm and Spel-Oskar Larsson in
the 1960s Photo: Ingvar H. Eriksson

In 1992 Ling became the Vice Chancellor of the University of Gothenburg,


i.e., the director of the whole university. He was a controversial but successful Vice Chancellor, securing new funding for research in all areas, from medicine to humanities. When the board of
the university praised him for his ability to raise funds, he said I learnt how
to do it from Karl Marx.
After his retirement he started again to
publish works, focusing more on art
music composers. He wrote a book on
Franz Liszt, and in September 2013, a
few weeks before his death, the book
Musiken som tidsspegel (Music as mirror of contemporary times) was published, containing 12 essays on music
around the turn of the twentieth century.
Jan Ling was an exceptionally generous, encouraging, and important force
among musicians and academics. We
will miss him a lot.

42nd ICTM World Conference


11-17 July 2013.
Shanghai Conservatory of Music, Shanghai, China.
Local Arrangements
Committee Report
by Xiao Mei, LAC Co-Chair
On 17 July 2013, the week-long 42nd
ICTM World Conference, which convened at the Shanghai Conservatory of
Music and was attended by approximately 500 delegates from 56 countries,
formally ended with a closing ceremony. For the planning of this World
Conference, the Shanghai Conservatory
formed a Local Arrangements Committee consisting of Conservatory oicials,
members of relevant administrative
departments, and renowned scholars. It
also set up an administrative oice especially for the conference and recruited 50 student volunteers to ensure
the successful convening of the conference.
The Local Arrangements Committee
also organized four dierent kinds of
music performances, to both enhance
the atmosphere of the conference and
to pull together its various themes. The
rst concert, Silk and Bamboo Music
and the Past and Present of Chinese
Music on Traditional Instruments, was
performed by the Conservatorys Chi-

Opening Ceremony of the 42nd World Conference of the International Council for
Traditional Music

cially invited group from Vietnam. This

ance of several jazz numbers, thus re-

type of international collaboration was


in even greater evidence during the
concert East Asian Night, where per-

producing for the audience the popular


music style of those bygone eras.

formances of Chinese guqin zither music, Korean sanjo on the komungo and
ajaeng zithers, Vietnamese Ca tr, and
Japanese Tsugaru shamisen gave the
conference delegates a taste of musical
traditions from East Asia. On the other
hand, the symphonic work Music
Passed Down from the Tang Dynasty,
commissioned by the LAC, showed how
a contemporary composer reinvents
history and tradition.

nese Instrumental Music Department,


and featured solo performances as well

The fourth concert featured performances of popular music in Shanghai

as small and large forms of Chinese


instrumental ensembles. The second
concert featured the music and dance

during the 1930s and 1940s, interspersed with spoken commentary, thus

of non-Han minority groups of the


Yunnan Province, such as the Yi, Dai,
Zhuang, Hani, Limi, Wa, Miao, and
Tibetan ethnic groups. This concert,
called Colourful Clouds of the South,
also showcased a performance by a spe-

giving the international delegates a


chance to listen to echoes of Shanghai's
urban music during those periods. During the concert, 91-year old Zheng
Deren, the former bandleader of
Shanghai's Paramount Jazz Band, conducted the orchestra for the performBulletin of the ICTM Vol. 123 October 2013 Page 9

Concert of popular Shanghai music of the


1930s and 1940s

Besides these full-edged concerts, we


also invited members of the Shanghai
Pingtan Troupe, the Shanghai Beijing
Opera Troupe and the Shanghai Kunqu
to perform during the opening reception of the conference, thereby giving
Conference participants a chance to
enjoy the charm of China's opera and
sung oral narrative traditions.

During this conference, there was also a


new and creative innovation in book

Daily, and many others, which gave


multifaceted reports on the conference

exhibits. At the suggestion of ICTM


Secretary General, Svanibor Pettan,

from various angles, with many writing


about the huge scope of the conference,

the LAC established a system of academic exchange through the exhibition

the large attendance numbers, the rich


diversity of the topics presented, and

of publications by individual scholars


who were attending the conference.
This added colour to the previous

the rarity of such an event. At the


same time, there was also television
news coverage on the conference, thus

method of exhibiting books which was


mostly through academic booksellers
and publishing houses.

ensuring more than adequate publicity


and exposure for the event.

To facilitate the attendance and participation by Chinese scholars in this

West, beautiful and vibrant Shanghai


bears the encounter of dierent cultures

ICTM conference, the LAC collaborated with the ICTM China National
Committee during the preparation for

from around the world. Hosting the


42nd World Conference of the International Council for Traditional Music

the conference, and as a result close to


a hundred Chinese scholars attended

has not only given inspiration and new


perspectives to Chinese local music

the conference and presented papers. In


addition, the LAC arranged for simultaneous translation from English to

research and the work of protecting


contemporary traditional culture; it has
also further promoted academic dia-

Chinese during the plenary sessions of


the conference, and from Chinese to

logue and exchange between experts


and scholars from dierent regions of

English during those paper sessions


which were presented only in Chinese.

the world.

The Local Arrangements Committee


also exerted much eort in recording
and documenting both academic and
other activities during the conference.
It arranged for photographic and video
recording of the opening and closing
ceremonies as well as the plenary sessions and General Assembly in their
entirety. Arrangements were also made
for the photographic and video recording of highlights of the conference, the
footage of which has been made into a
short lm which will be handed over to
the ICTM Secretariat for storage and
dissemination (editors note: available
online here).
The conference drew the attention of
various Shanghai media outlets, including Jiefang Daily, Wenhui Bao, Shanghai Morning Post, Xinmin Evening
News, Music Weekly, Dongfang Daily,
Xinhua News, Shanghai Daily, China

Delegates attending a session with


simultaneous translation.

Being at the intersection of East and

Peng Yu (left) leading a workshop on


Chinese traditional percussion music.

Anthea Skinner presenting her paper at the


plenary session on New Research.

Program Committee
Report

considerable cross-cultural appeal. As a


result, along with the expected large

by J. Lawrence Witzleben, Program


Chair

number of participants from China,


signicant numbers from Southeast

The Program Committee received 630


proposals for papers, panels, roundta-

Asia and Kazakhstan, a sizeable contingent from much of Africa, and participants from nearly every country in

bles, workshops, and lms. The nal


program featured 491 participants (including panel chairs, discussants, and

Europe made this a truly international


conference.

roundtable participants). Although


there were some inevitable last-minute

On each day of the conference, a plenary session focusing on one of the con-

cancellations, the fact that presenters


were required to register well in ad-

ference themes was organized based on


paper proposals that had been very
highly rated by the Committee mem-

vance signicantly reduced the number


of no shows in this years conference.
The Program Committee of Samuel
Arajo, Dan Bendrups, Salwa ElShawan Castelo Branco, Frederick Lau,
Alvin Petersen, Svanibor Pettan, and
Xiao Mei did a marvellous job of formulating conference themes that had
Bulletin of the ICTM Vol. 123 October 2013 Page 10

bers. The presenters in these sessions


were also selected with a mind to including a broad representation of nationalities, locales and genres being
discussed, topics within the themes,
and theoretical orientations, and the
Committee also intentionally chose a

mixture of junior, senior, and midcareer scholars. An added bonus in


these sessions was the inclusion of simultaneous translation, which enabled
all the Chinese participants, including
those with still-developing English
skills, to become acquainted with the
ideas and work of a large number of
scholars from around the world. A centrepiece of the Program was the Keynote Address by Shen Qia, which introduced the ideas of a foundational
contributor to the development of ethnomusicology in China to an international audience.
The Program was complemented by a
stellar series of concerts featuring faculty and students from the Shanghai
Conservatory of Music, an array of musicians and dancers from many of
Chinas ethnic minorities, ensembles
from Japan, Vietnam, Korea, and elsewhere in Asia, and a celebration of
Shanghais golden age of popular song.
The close and friendly working relationship between the Program Committee, Local Arrangements Committee,
and ICTM Secretariat made the formidable job of putting together this
World Conference a pleasant and
memorable experience for all those involved.

Keynote address by Shen Qia (left); session chaired by J. Lawrence Witzleben.

July 2013 from 15:30 to 17:00. Chair:


Adrienne L. Kaeppler.

Rice, Razia Sultanova, and Xiao Mei


(Executive Board Members).

President Adrienne L. Kaeppler opened


the meeting at 15:32, local time.

Minutes of the Previous General

Apologies for absence

4a. Approval of the minutes

The President announced the formal

Kaeppler called for a motion to ap-

apologies for absence of Barbara B.


Smith and Wim van Zanten.

prove the Minutes of the 40th General


Assembly, as published in the Bulletin

In memoriam

of the ICTM 118 (October 2011).


Moved by Beverley Diamond, seconded
by Lasanthi Manaranjanie Kalinga

The President asked all members to


stand in memory of those members of
the ICTM community who passed away
since the previous General Assembly.

The 2014 Yearbook for Traditional Music will be largely devoted to articles

Presidents Report

based on papers presented at this


years conference. This issue will be
guest edited by myself, in conjunction

The President thanked the Co-Chairs


of the Local Arrangements Committee

with our new Yearbook General Editor


Kati Szego. Submission details can be
found on the Information for Authors
section in any recent Yearbook (p. v) or
on the ICTM website.

Minutes of the 41st General


Assembly of the ICTM
Held at the Shanghai Conservatory of
Music, Shanghai, China, on Tuesday 16

Xiao Mei and Yang Yan-di, the Program Chair J. Lawrence Witzleben,
and especially the helpers and volunteers who had made the World Conference a success.
Those retiring from the Executive
Board after the announcement of the
election results were Adrienne L.
Kaeppler (President), Salwa El-Shawan
Castelo-Branco (Vice President), Ursula Hemetek, Don Niles, Timothy

Bulletin of the ICTM Vol. 123 October 2013 Page 11

Assembly

Dona, motion passed.


4b. Business arising from the
Minutes
The President announced that the decision of the 40th General Assembly to
allow for electronic voting in ICTM
elections had been ratied by the
membership in February 2012, and that
the level of participation in the 2013
ICTM elections had shown it had been
a very successful move.
Kaeppler communicated news on the
UNESCO Traditional Music of the
World CD series. According to Daniel
Sheehy, Curator and Director of Smithsonian Folkways Recordings (the notfor-prot record label and on-demand
archival audio service responsible for

41st General Assembly of the International Council for Traditional Music. 16 July 2013, Shanghai.

the publication of the series), at least


six of the previously unpublished re-

symposium was given by members of


the Executive Board, a workshop on

The Secretary General stressed the importance of delegates from soft cur-

cordings, together with at least 50 of


the previously published recordings

overtone singing was led by Trn


Quang Hi, and the publication of a

rency countries attending World Conferences, and urged those able, to con-

would be launched during the next


meeting of the Intergovernmental
Committee of the 2003 UNESCO Con-

Chinese translation of Timothy Rices


book May It Fill Your Soul was
launched and presented to the author.

sider taking out additional Supported


Memberships (at 30 EUR per year) and
donating to the Barbara Barnard

vention about Safeguarding Intangible


Cultural Heritage, which will be held in
Baku, Azerbaijan in December 2014.

Report of the Executive Board


Secretary General Svanibor Pettan reported rst on the 42nd ICTM
World Conference, as it had involved
the combined work of the Executive
Board, the Secretariat, the Program
Committee and the Local Arrangements Committees for a considerable
amount of time.
At its meeting on the day following the
conclusion of the previous ICTM World
Conference in St. Johns, Canada, the
Executive Board approved the Program
Committee and the Themes of the next
World Conference.
At its 2012 meeting in Shanghai, the
Executive Board visited the venues and
accommodation facilities for the participants of the next Conference. A

In January 2013 the Program Chair,


LAC Co-Chairs, and Secretary General
met for an intense three days, over
which the rst draft of the Conference
Program was produced. Pettan thanked
Xiao Mei, Qin Si and Chen Daiying for
their hospitality, and added that thankfully the outbreak of Asian inuenza
had not aected the attendance of the
Shanghai Conference.
On 9-10 July 2013 the Executive Board
had its 109th Ordinary Meeting, where
last-minute Conference matters were
addressed.
The LAC had nancially supported
seven delegates from African countries,
while the Barbara Barnard Smith
Travel Award had done so for an additional seven participants from other
parts of the world, reaching an unprecedented total of 14 participants
who had their travel and/or accommodation expenses supported.
Bulletin of the ICTM Vol. 123 October 2013 Page 12

Smith Travel Award fund and the


newly created ICTM Membership Development Fund.
Study Groups
Pettan reported that a new Study
Group on African Musics (Chair: Patricia Opondo) had been recognized by
the Executive Board since the previous
General Assembly, and that most of the
remaining 18 ICTM Study Groups had
been active, holding Symposia in various parts of the world and publishing
remarkable volumes of proceedings.
The Study Groups on Maqm and on
Music in the Arab World had experienced a noticeable revitalization in the
previous two years. Special gratitude
was extended to Jrgen Elsner, Jasmina Talam, Gisa Jhnichen, Scheherazade Hassan, Salwa El-Shawan
Castelo-Branco, and Nidaa Abou Mrad
for their combined eorts.

The Secretariat was working with the


leaders of the Study Group on Music

directed to Executive Assistant Carlos


Yoder before that major project would

Wim van Zanten, long-time ICTM representative at UNESCO, was succeeded

and Gender to nd a means for its revitalization, and invited the members

start.

by Naila Ceribai, who had already


attended three experts meetings.

of the Assembly to collaborate in that


eort.
Colloquia
Since the previous General Assembly,
one Colloquium had been held in
Portel (Portugal) on 15 December
2011, devoted to the discussion of PanMediterranean Poetic Competitions
and their Music: Historical Perspectives
and Contemporary Practice.
Publications
Volumes 43 and 44 of the Yearbook for
Traditional Music were printed in
Ljubljana in 2011 and 2012, respectively, and distributed to more than
1000 addresses all over the world.
Gratitude was extended to General
Editor Don Niles and his editorial team
for their outstanding work on the Yearbook.
Four issues of the Bulletin of the ICTM
were distributed electronically since the

Finally, the Secretary General highlighted the value of Study Group publications, and recommended all Study
Group Chairs to make available their
lists of publications through their respective websites.
World Network
Thanks to new initiatives adapted at
previous Executive Board meetings,
systematic steps were taken by the Secretariat to examine and improve the
ICTM World Network, which resulted
in the Council having oicial representation in 85 countries and territories.
Since the previous General Assembly,
11 new countries had been added to
the World Network, two new National
Committees had been recognized, ve
new Liaison Oicers of existing countries had been appointed, and 13 new
Chairs of National/Regional Committees had been elected.
ICTM Elections 2013

RILM
Pettan informed the Assembly that the
Council was a member of RILMs governing body, along with the International Music Council and International
Association of Music Libraries. Thanks
to initiatives led by Zdravko Blaekovi
(Chair of the ICTM Study Group on
Iconography of the Performing Arts,
and Executive Editor at RILM), ICTM
and RILM were increasingly nding
grounds for cooperation.
Since the previous General Assembly
the ICTM representatives at RILM had
changed, welcoming Virginia Danielson,
Margaret Kartomi, Terada Yoshitaka,
and Xiao Mei to their appointed functions.
ICTM Website
The Secretary General invited all National and Regional Representatives to
consider enriching the ICTM website
with their content, by taking advantaged of the possibility to administer
their own country/region subpages at

previous General Assembly. The positive feedback received and the steadily
increasing number of submissions to

The Secretary General commended the


work of the Nomination Committee for
producing an excellent ballot, and

the Bulletin had clearly indicated that


the move to a rich, free, online-only

announced that the response to the


very rst electronic ICTM elections had

publication had constituted a major


step in improving communications between the Council, its members, and

been very strong.

In October 2012 the Secretariat pro-

UNESCO

duced a new ICTM Brochure, which


was sent to National and Regional
Representatives, Chairs of Study

the public.
However, as the April 2013 Bulletin
had reached 100 pages, the Executive
Board had agreed to increase the frequency of the Bulletin to three times a
year, adding an additional issue in
January.
The Online Membership Directory
would be reworked and relaunched
within the next 12 months, and that
any suggestions to improve it should be

Pettan considered that the Council, as


a Non-Governmental Organization in
Formal Consultative Relations with
UNESCO, had marked interests in
being actively involved with the ongoing processes led by UNESCO, reminding the Assembly that ICTM had been
elected into the Consultative Body of
the 2003 UNESCO Convention about
Safeguarding Intangible Cultural Heritage until 2015.

Bulletin of the ICTM Vol. 123 October 2013 Page 13

the ICTM website.


New ICTM Brochure

Groups, and Chairs of LACs. The response to it was so positive that a new
batch had to be commissioned. Pettan
invited those assembled to take home
as many issues of the brochure as they
pleased from the Secretariats oice.
Farewells
In the last two years four very active
members of the Council had passed
away: Gerlinde Haid (Austria), Katalin

Kovalcsik (Hungary), Olive Lewin (Jamaica), and Barbara Sparti (Italy). He

ing costs of the 2011 Yearbook due to


Slovenias smaller economy), which re-

Pettan introduced the candidacy of


Marianne Brcker to become Honorary

praised their remarkable work at the


regional, national, and international

sulted in savings exceeding 10,000


USD, and practically no decit.

Member of ICTM, highlighting her


years of service on the Executive

levels, and informed that the obituaries


for Haid and Kovalcsik had been published in the April 2013 Bulletin,
whereas those for Lewin and Sparti
would be included in the October 2013
Bulletin (editors note: read more on
pages 6-7).
Expressions of Gratitude
The Secretary General shared that he
had wondered whether the Council had
suiciently honoured its outstanding
members during their lifetimes, a
thought that took him to Bamberg
(Germany) in March 2013, to present

At the next General Assembly in 2015,


a full comparative nancial report of
expenditures and revenues for 2012,
2013, and 2014 would be presented.
The year 2012, the rst 12-month period completely operated by the
Ljubljana Secretariat, was a nancially
very strong year for ICTM, especially
in back sales, institutional subscriptions
(including electronic subscriptions via
JSTOR), and royalties.
Pettan remarked that while ICTM
membership numbers had usually de-

Marianne Brcker, who was organizing


the Symposium of the Study Group on

creased in o-conference years, during


2012 the number of members and sub-

Folk Musical Instruments despite an


incurable health condition, with a Lifetime Recognition Award expressing the

scribers in good standing had indeed


increased.

Councils gratitude for her extraordinary contribution ... in a number of

The Secretary General showed a slide


detailing all revenues and expenditures
for 2012, and concluded his report by

dierent capacities over a period of four


decades.
The Secretary General concluded his

remarking that as of 31 December


2012, revenues had exceeded expenditures by a large amount.

report considering that the period July


2011-July 2013 had been very active,

been transferred in the middle of that


year. However, he noted that great efforts had been made to operate in positive gures during the second half of
2011 (e.g., halving the budgeted print-

Joseph H. Kwabena Nketia, probably


the best known and most highly respected ethnomusicologist on the musics of Africa to become an Honorary
Member of ICTM, due to his contributions in research, education, and policy
making, and to his long service to the
Council in many capacities, including
Executive Board Member (1960-1971),
and Chair of Local Arrangements of
the 1966 World Conference in Ghana.
Kidula added that as far as she could
ascertain, Prof. Nketia had been the
rst Black African scholar to present a
paper at an ICTM World Conference,
and to serve at the Executive Board.
Kaeppler introduced the candidacy of
Barbara Barnard Smith to become an
Honorary Member of ICTM, for her
contributions to research, publications,

seven generations of ethnomusicologists. She had served the Council as


Chair of the ICTM Study Group on

and support shown by the membership.

The Secretary General announced that


a full nancial report for 2011 would
not be provided, as the Secretariat had

Kidula introduced the candidacy of

ogy in 1960 at the University of Hawaii


at Manoa, where she trained at least

Executive Board, he expressed his sincere gratitude for the continuing trust

previous two years

Germany National Committee for


twenty years.

and teaching of Pacic and Asian Music for more than six decades. Smith
introduced a program in ethnomusicol-

characterized by increased participation


owing to a growing and increasingly
diverse membership. On behalf of the

Financial reports for the

Board, her involvement with multiple


Study Groups, and the Chairing of the

Svanibor Pettan (right) reporting on the


activities of the Council during the past two
years.

New Honorary Memberships


Kaeppler thanked Pettan for his reports, and asked the General Assembly
to consider awarding Honorary Memberships to ve individuals for their
extraordinary services to ICTM over a
long period of time.
Bulletin of the ICTM Vol. 123 October 2013 Page 14

Music and Dance of Oceania, Chair of


Local Arrangements of the 1977 World
Conference in Honolulu, and by contributing to the Travel Award grant
which bears her name.
Trn introduced the candidacy of Trn
Vn Kh to become an Honorary
Member of ICTM, for his contributions
to Vietnamese, French, and global ethnomusicology, his service to ICTM as
Vice President, and to UNESCO, as

President of the International Music


Council for over 30 years.
Wild introduced the candidacy of Wim
van Zanten to become an Honorary
Member of ICTM, for his service to the
Council as Executive Board member,
Vice President, Editor of the UNESCO
record series, ICTM representative at
UNESCO before and after the proclamation of the 2003 Convention about
Safeguarding Intangible Cultural Heritage, and Program Chair of the 2007
and 2009 World Conferences.
The President summarized the candidates names, and the General Assembly approved their nominations by applause.

would be supplemented by reviews


from the respective editors: Sydney
Hutchinson (books), Byron Dueck
(audio), Lisa Urkevich (lms/videos),
and Barbara Alge (websites).
Beginning with the 2013 issue, Niles
reported, Michael Silvers would be Assistant Book Notes Editor, Web. He
would be responsible for book reviews
that will appear on the ICTM website,
a decision which would greatly expand
the number of books reviewed.
Urkevich would be retiring as lm/
video reviews editor after the 2013 volume, and that the position would be

Johns, Newfoundland, Canada. The


journals were distributed in early November, eectively moving the schedule
up a full month, to ensure that the
journal would be printed and distributed before the holidays. The 2012
Yearbook was also uploaded to JSTOR,
so it could be made available publicly
through their Current Scholarship Program.
Niles informed that 2013 Yearbook (to
be published in November 2013) would
be divided in two sections, one devoted
to the topic of Music and Poverty (edited by Klisala Harrison), and another
open for general submissions.
The authors included in the Music and
Poverty section were Klisala Harrison,
Pirkko Moisala, Samuel Arajo and

Waseda Minako, Miriam Rovsing


Olsen, and Jrgen Torp. The articles

Yearbook for Traditional Music

Guest Editors of the 2012 Yearbook,


which had focused on the themes from
the 2011 World Conference in St.

were Margaret Kartomi, Imani Sanga,


Ray Casserly, Adrienne L. Kaeppler,

The General Editor announced that

Shawan Castelo-Branco, Beverley Diamond, and Kati Szego on their work as

Je Todd Titon, and Stefan Fiol. The


authors included in the general section

Report of General Editor of the


Don Niles congratulated Salwa El-

taken up by Terada Yoshitaka starting


with the 2014 Yearbook.
Niles announced that he would be retiring as General Editor after the completion of the 2013 Yearbook, after serving
in that position since 2005. He extended his gratitude to the Executive
Board and the Secretariat for their
trust and support, and to all Guest
Editors, Review Editors, authors, referees, and reviewers, who helped to create the 2006-2013 volumes and to
maintain the scholarly reputation of
the Yearbook.
Finally, Niles wished the incoming
General Editor all his best.
Kaeppler explained the a special Executive Board committee had convened
to appoint a new General Editor of the
Yearbook, and that after many proposals were considered, Kati Szego had
been appointed for the position.

Vincenzo Cambria, Rebecca Dirksen,

Don Niles giving his last report as General


Editor of the Yearbook for Traditional
Music.

Proposed Changes to ICTM


Rules
Pettan introduced the changes to Rule
7b of ICTM, explaining that the
change was made necessary by the recent extension to the rights of Corporate Members.
Kaeppler called for a motion to approve the changes to Rule 7b. Moved
by Dan Bendrups, seconded by Inna
Naroditskaya, motion passed.

Report of the Nomination


Committee
Stephen Wild, Convener of the Nomination Committee (consisting of himself, Dan Bendrups, and Gisa Jhnichen), reminded the Assembly of the
process for nominating and electing
members of the Executive Board, and
summarized the positions which would
become vacant at the present General
Assembly: three Ordinary Members,
one Vice President, and the President.
The Nomination Committee had prepared a slate of candidates according to
the ICTM Rules, consisting of nine
nominations for the three vacant Ordinary Members, three nominations for
Vice President, and two for the position of President.
Wild reported that the 2013 Elections
had been the rst to allow for electronic voting (as approved by the General Assembly in 2011 and ratied by

Bulletin of the ICTM Vol. 123 October 2013 Page 15

postal ballot in February 2012), and


that the response had been very positive, with only a small number of queries regarding security or anonymity.
The total number of votes in the ICTM
2013 Elections was 441, out of 933 eligible, with only 5 votes being invalid.
Wild considered the turnout a considerable improvement over the previous

Other Business
Kaeppler presented the recently published volume of proceedings from the
2nd Symposium of the Study Group on
Performing Arts of Southeast Asia, and
reminded the assembly that copies
could be obtained from the exhibit
room.

elections, and expressed that electronic


voting had been a resounding success.
Wild nished his introduction by

The President then opened the oor for


questions and/or comments.

thanking the other members of the


Nomination Committee and to Execu-

for Kenya, on behalf of the participants


from Africa and her Diaspora expressed

tive Assistant Carlos Yoder for their


hard work, and considering hat the
success of the election was in greater
part thanks to their eorts.
Wild then announced the names of the
successful candidates for the vacant
positions, as follows:

For Ordinary Members of the Executive Board: Jonathan Stock, Terada


Yoshitaka, and Xiao Mei.

For Vice President: Don Niles.


For President: Salwa El-Shawan
Castelo-Branco.

After the applause from the Assembly


had concluded, Wild encouraged those
who were not elected to run again next
time.

Announcement of Program
Chair of next World Conference
The President announced that the Executive Board had appointed Razia
Sultanova as the Program Chair of the
2015 ICTM World Conference.

Charles Nyakiti Orawo, Liaison Oicer

his gratitude to the Executive Board of


ICTM and to the Local Arrangements
Committee of the World Conference,
for the sponsorship and support African participants had received, which

started at the University of Chulalongkorn (editors note: see page 41 for


more).
Kimasi Browne announced the publishing of A Festschrift in Honor of Jacqueline Cogdell DjeDje, co-edited by
himself and Jean Kidula, adding that
many of its contributors were present
at the Conference.
As there were no further contributions
from the assembly, Pettan thanked everybody for the level of communication
which had occurred during the previous
two years, and thanked Executive Assistant Carlos Yoder for his hard work
in implementing a number of ideas and
suggestions from the Executive Board
and the membership at large.

had contributed in a major way towards enabling them to attend the


World Conference.

The Secretary General then presented

Gisa Jhnichen proposed to organize a


system of exchange of language exper-

Editor of the Yearbook for Traditional


Music, respectively.

tise, from people who are native English speakers to those who are not, to
volunteer to proofread and revise
manuscripts.
Frederick Lau announced the next
Symposium of the Study Group on
Musics of East Asia in Nara (editors
note: see Call for Papers on page 30).
George Dor commented on the Conference which had been held in honour of
Prof. Nketias 90th birthday in Ghana
in 2011, and reported that the book
The Life and Works of Emeritus Professor J.H. Kwabena Nketia, the second
Festschrift presented to Prof. Nketia,

Sultanova briey reported that the


Program Committee was already working on the themes for the next Confer-

would soon be published by the African


Studies Center of the University of

ence, also considering those which had


been suggested by participants of the

Bussakorn Binson, Liaison Oicer for


Thailand, invited the assembly to join

Shanghai Conference.

Michigan.

the project of making available short


online music lessons, as they had

Bulletin of the ICTM Vol. 123 October 2013 Page 16

Kaeppler and Niles with certicates


expressing the Councils gratitude to
their work as President and General

Adjournment
Kaeppler called for a motion to adjourn
the 41st General Assembly of the
ICTM at 17:07, local time. Moved by
David Harnish, seconded by James Isabirye, motion passed.

Minutes of 12th Assembly


of ICTM National and
Regional Representatives
Held at the Shanghai Conservatory of
Music, Shanghai, China, on Saturday
13 July 2013. Chair: Adrienne L.
Kaeppler.

Opening of the meeting


The Chair opened the Assembly at
14:06, local time.

Minutes of the previous meeting


The minutes of the previous Assembly
of ICTM National and Regional Representatives were amended by Ursula
Hemetek. Kaeppler called for a motion
to approve the amended Minutes of the
11th Assembly of ICTM National and
Regional Representatives. Moved by
Hemetek, seconded by Joe Peters, motion passed.

Introductions
After those assembled had introduced
themselves, Secretary General Svanibor
Pettan expressed his satisfaction regarding the communication between
the members of the ICTM World Network, and encouraged them to continue
cooperating for the benet of the
Council and its members. He said that
the Executive Board routinely reviews
all National and Regional Representatives, and that many shared initiatives
had been started, the results of which
were evidenced by the steady extension
of the ICTM World Network in the
previous two years.
Made Mantle Hood expressed his gratitude for the great job the Secretariat
had been doing for the Council in the
previous years.
Hemetek introduced the subject of
Country Subpages (i.e., subpages on
the ICTM website dedicated to countries and territories having oicial
ICTM representation), to which ICTM
Executive Assistant and Webmaster
Carlos Yoder answered, summarizing
the dierent ways by which Country
Subpages could be edited, and their
benets and shortcomings.

Krister Malm considered that a policy


should be established by the Executive

to the Nomination Committee of the


2015 ICTM Elections.

Board about the contents of Country


Subpages, to prevent misuse and en-

Other business

courage standard practices. Pettan


agreed, adding that the Executive
Board would discuss that issue at their
next Ordinary Meeting, immediately
after the World Conferences conclusion.

Appointment of two members to


the Nomination Committee
Stephen Wild, Convener of the Nomination Committee (consisting of himself, Dan Bendrups, and Gisa Jhnichen), reported on the 2013 ICTM
Elections, briey summarizing the election of the members of the Nomination
Committee, the Call for Proposals for
Nominations, the slate of candidates,
and the particularities of the rst
ICTM elections conducted primarily
electronically (editors note: for a full
report, please see pages 15-16).
Kaeppler thanked Wild, Jhnichen,
Bendrups, and Yoder for their coordinated eorts in making the rst electronic ICTM elections a success.
The responsibilities of the members of
the Nomination Committee were outlined by Wild, and Niles considered
that the main purpose of the Committee was to nd good candidates.
Hemetek nominated Malm to become a
member of the Nomination Committee.

Bendrups expressed his strong support


for creating Regional Committees for
Micronesia and similar regions, but
considered it should not be a task to be
left to individual ICTM members. He
asked the Executive Board to create a
mechanism to evaluate and regulate
similar multinational committees. Bendrups added that Guam would likely
not be able to negotiate in the same
terms as other independent states of
Micronesia, because of it being an unincorporated territory of the USA, and
asked the politics of the issue to be
explored by the Executive Board.
A discussion, led by Wild and Bendrups, followed regarding the status of
the Musicological Society of Australia
(MSA) within the larger Australia and
New Zealand Regional Committee, as
the President of MSA (Aaron Corn)
had been excluded from the Assembly
of ICTM National and Regional Representatives, as it had been assumed that
a Regional Committee grouping two or
more countries would necessarily supersede their individual representation.
Bendrups, noting that MSA had a constitutional relationship with ICTM,
formally asked the Executive Board to
revisit, or even revise, the rules governing the creation of Regional Committees and their impact in those societies

He accepted.

which are joined or dissolved.

Tan Sooi Beng nominated Hood, but

The 12th Assembly of ICTM National

he declined, as he intended to run for a


seat on the Executive Board.

Yoder considered that the Country


Subpage of the Philippines (link here)

Don Niles nominated Waseda Minako.


She accepted.

was a good example of what could be


done. Furthermore, Yoder invited those

As there were no further nominations,

present who had not yet opened their


Country Subpages, to do so.

it was agreed (by applause) to appoint


that Krister Malm and Waseda Minako

Bulletin of the ICTM Vol. 123 October 2013 Page 17

and Regional Representatives was adjourned by Kaeppler at 15:35, local


time.

43rd ICTM World Conference


16-22 July 2015
Kazakh National University of Arts, Astana, Kazakhstan.
First Notice and Call for
Proposals
You are cordially invited to attend the
43rd ICTM World Conference which
will be held in the summer of 2015 in
Astana, Kazakhstan, hosted by the
Kazakh National University of Arts.
The ICTM World Conference is the
leading international venue for the
presentation of new research on music
and dance. Many new initiatives
emerge at World Conferences and, perhaps even more crucially, discussion at
these meetings helps us shape our ongoing work. A successful World Conference is a truly stimulating place to be.
A conference website is in preparation.
Details will be provided in the April
2014 issue of the Bulletin, and will also
be forthcoming on the ICTM and conference websites.

Programme Committee
Co-Chairs
Razia Sultanova (UK)
Timothy Rice (USA)
Members
Jean Kidula (USA)
Maria Elizabeth Lucas (Brazil)
Inna Naroditskaya (USA)
Svanibor Pettan (Slovenia)

Contact information
Razia Sultanova
Centre of Development Studies
Alison Richard Building
7 West Road, Cambridge CB3 9DT
United Kingdom
Email: [email protected]
Tel: +44 (0) 7946870030
Timothy Rice
Department of Ethnomusicology
UCLA Los Angeles, CA 90095-1657
USA
Email: [email protected]

Local Arrangements Committee


Co-Chairs
Aiman Mussakhajayeva
Saida Yelemanova
Members
Dsen Kaseinov
Gulnara Abdirakhman
Galia Akparova
Alibek Batyrov
Farida Bashirova
Umitzhan Dzhumakova
Karim Ensep
Serik Erkimbekov
Vladimir Manyakin
Bazaraly Muptekeev
Meruert Myltykbaeva
Saule Utegalieva

Mark Slobin (USA)

Contact Information

Terada Yoshitaka (Japan)

Tauelsizdik dangyly, 50, Kazakh National University of Arts


Astana, Kazakhstan, 010000

Saida Yelemanova (Kazakhstan)

Email: [email protected],
[email protected]
Bulletin of the ICTM Vol. 123 October 2013 Page 18

Tel: +7172 506 947, +7013 287 287,


+7172 705 498
Fax: +7172 705 494

Conference Themes
1. Music and New Political
Geographies in the Turkic
Speaking World and Beyond
A conference held in Kazakhstan, a
nation-state formed in 1991, provides a
perfect opportunity to consider the role
of music and dance in the formation, in
our time, of new political and cultural
geographies. Such new geographies may
include new nation-states in the wake
of the collapse of the Soviet Union; new
alliances along transnational ethnic
lines, as in the cases of the Turkicspeaking area of the worlds twentyeight countries, republics and districts,
or the formation of the European Union; the challenge to national identity
posed by globalization; and the rise of
new subnational, regional sensibilities
as a response to nationalism, transnationalism, and globalization. This topic
is particularly relevant to the location
of the meeting, but also inspires new
submissions for other regions of the
world aected by new political geographies. How have these new and emerging political and cultural alliances at
the junction of a decision to merge or
to choose independence used music to
further their geopolitical goals and how
have musicians and their audiences resisted new forms of economic and political domination and hegemony
through music-making and dancing?

2. The Creators of Music and


Dance

to broaden their studies from music to


the more general area of sound. Ques-

about, traditional and popular musics


in these new media?

In a eld of study that tends to focus


on the music and dance of groups of

tions are being asked about the relationship between the sounds of war and

6. New Research

people, what is the status of studies of


individual creators of music, dance,
artistic institutions, and scholarship?
These creators may be musicians, singers, dancers, composers, choreographers, instrument-makers, social activists, government oicials, or scholars.
How do we understand the role of these
individual creators in particular societies? How do we dene creativity in
terms of contributions to aesthetic
forms? What cultural and social power
do we attribute to individual creators?
What cultural and social restraints do
individual creators work under in par-

industrialization and the sound of music. Other questions concern the change
of natural and musical sounds in environments altered by climate change.
How is ethnomusicology responding to
developments in the eld of sound
studies? How might ethnomusicological
methods and perspectives contribute to
sound studies? How do individuals and
communities respond to their sound
environments through personal listening choices, the building of new performance venues, the creation of new
songs, performance styles, and genres,
and the use of new electronic media

ticular communities?

and listening devices?

3. Music, Dance, the Body,


and Society

5. Visual Representation of
Music Cultures

Music and dance performance in many

From Persian miniatures to YouTube


and Vine, music and dance have nearly

societies are events that bring some


people together while excluding other
people. How do these processes of inclusion and exclusion work at the intersection of the body and society? How is
the body politic formed by musicking
and dancing bodies? How does society
use music and dance performances to
heal ailing bodies and reintegrate them
into society? How do people use their
able or (dis)abled bodies to counter
social exclusion through music and
dance performance? How is the gendered body interpreted and made in
music and dance performance? How do
minorities, immigrants, and displaced
people use their musical and dancing
bodies to deal with the power of the
mainstream to dene their social
status?
4. Sound Environments: From
Natural and Urban Spaces to
Personal Listening
In the last decade there have been a
number of calls for ethnomusicologists

always and nearly everywhere been the


subject of visual representation. Such
representations have presented music
historians with many problems under
the rubric of musical iconography.
What methodological and theoretical
issues are still prominent in this longestablished area of study? On the other
hand, how do new electronic visual
media aect the transmission of
musical and dance knowledge? How do
they aect the social life of music and
dance in particular societies? How are
these new media altering our research
methods? How can the visual images in
these new media be adequately archived and preserved? How do these
new media, and the opportunities they
provide for self-expression, alter the
balance of representation between researchers and research subjects? What
is the relationship between representations of, and the ow of knowledge

Bulletin of the ICTM Vol. 123 October 2013 Page 19

Proposals on new research on other


relevant topics are also welcome.

Abstracts
Abstracts should be no more than 300
words in length, and written in English
(papers may be presented in either
English or Russian, but all abstracts
must be in English). Guidelines for
submission will be included in the April
2014 Bulletin. Following evaluation by
the Programme Committee, authors
will be notied by December 2014.
1. Individual paper
Individual paper should be 20 minutes
long and followed by 10 minutes of discussion. The proposal must include a
300-word maximum abstract.
2. Panel
Organized panels are 90 minutes (three
papers, each 20 minutes, followed by 10
minutes of discussion) or 120 minutes
long (four papers, or three papers and
a discussant). A proposal by the panel
organizer (300 words) as well as one by
each individual presenter (300 words
each) are required. Where an independently submitted abstract appears
to t a panel, the program committee
may suggest the addition of a panellist.
The program committee may also recommend acceptance of only some of the
papers on a panel.
3. Film/video session
Recently completed lms introduced by
their author and discussed by conference participants may be proposed.
Submit a 300-word abstract including
titles, subjects, and formats, and indicate the duration of the proposed
lms/videos and introduction/
discussion.

4. Forum/Roundtable
Forum/Roundtable sessions provide
opportunities for participants to discuss
a subject with each other and with
members of the audience. Sessions of
up to two hours long should include at
least four but no more than ve presenters. We encourage formats that
stimulate discussion and audience participation. The organizer will solicit
position papers of up to 15 minutes
from each presenter and will facilitate
questions and discussion for the remaining time. Proposals for forums/
roundtables should be submitted by the
session organizer (300 words).

Guidelines for Abstracts


Abstracts should include a clear focus
of the problem, a coherent argument,
evidence of the authors knowledge of
previous research, and a statement of
the implications for ethnomusicology,

opportunity for the benecial sharing


of knowledge and cultural experiences
from all over the world, in Kazakhstan.
The oicial languages of the Conference
will be English and Russian.

members. The aim of Trksoy is to


develop cultural and artistic relations
among people and countries of the

the World leaders Summit the same


year.

Turkic speaking world whilst assisting


in the development of music, both in

The capital city, Astana, is a rapidly


evolving administrative centre, annually hosting several politically and economically motivated global events. This
is a perfect opportunity for the addition of a cultural inuence such as that
of ICTM.
Today Astana is one of the most ad-

Timeline

Deadline for submission of proposals:


7 September 2014

Notication of acceptances: December 2014.

The Preliminary Program will be published in the April 2015 Bulletin.

Local Arrangements
ICTM has never held a World Conference in the territories of the former
Soviet Union or in Central Asia. Thus,
we believe that holding this most representative scholarly gathering for ethnomusicology in the capital of Kazakhstan, would create an excellent

The main sponsor of the forthcoming


ICTM conference in Astana will be

Central-Asian state within the European Higher Education Area, the rst
to chair the OSCE in 2011 and to hold

tural activities in Central Asia, and as


such increasingly becomes a regular

traditional music as one of its fundamental interests.

UNESCO-like model, its administrative


centre in Ankara currently has 14
countries and autonomous regions as

ing large international events have successfully been met. The city represents
the core of political, economic and cul-

Second call for proposals: April 2014

integrated and successful ailiate of the


European community, as reected in
the fact that Kazakhstan is the only

do not include your name, the names of


other panellists, or the names of fellow
researchers in the body of the abstract.

Kazakhstan has become a well-

vanced cities of the former USSR,


where the demanding criteria for host-

First call for proposals: October 2013

Trksoy, the cultural organization of


the Turkic-speaking world. Based on a

ethnochoreology, or other disciplines.


Because abstract review is anonymous,

academic and artistic forms. Trksoys


Secretary General, Dsen Kasseinov,
was present at the 2013 ICTM World
Conference, where he invited all participants to the next World Conference
in Astana in 2015.
In honour of the conference, we shall
organize many fabulous concerts including a special event titled Music of
the Turkic-speaking World, as well as
many unique workshops with famous
musicians from Kazakhstan, Central
Asia and other parts of the world. We
are condent that your trip to Astana
will be wonderful and unforgettable,

venue for important international forums, symposia and conferences.

and we welcome you heartily to our


city, and to the 43rd ICTM World Conference at the Kazakh National Univer-

Astana has an international airport

sity of the Arts.

conveniently connected with hubs such


as Frankfurt, Vienna, Moscow, Istan-

A note about visas

bul, Kiev, Minsk, Tashkent, Abu


Dhabi, and Beijing.

Citizens of 40+ countries do not re-

Our host in Astana in 2015 will be the

istry of Internal Aairs of the Republic


of Kazakhstan to obtain a visa to enter
Kazakhstan for up to 30 days.

Kazakh National University of the


Arts; directed by world famous violinist
Ayman Musahadjayeva. The Kazakh
National University of Arts plays an
important role in establishing a cultural presence, through both performance orientated teaching and theoretical education of its students. It has its
own research institute, and considers

Bulletin of the ICTM Vol. 123 October 2013 Page 20

quire oicial invitations issued by the


Ministry of Foreign Aairs or the Min-

Visit the website of the Embassy of


Kazakhstan in London, UK, for more
information.
www.kazembassy.org.uk

Announcements
Call for Papers: 4th
Symposium of the ICTM
Study Group on Applied
Ethnomusicology
30 June4 July 2014.
East London, Hogsback, and
Grahamstown, South Africa.
Submissions deadline: 25 Nov 2013.
The International Council for Traditional Musics Study Group on Applied
Ethnomusicology welcomes proposals
for its 4th Symposium, which will be
hosted by Bernhard Bleibinger of the
University of Fort Hare Music Department on South Africas Eastern Cape.
The symposium will begin at the University of Fort Hares campus in the
seaside city of East London, and in the
brand-new Miriam Makeba Centre of
Performing Arts, which houses the
Eastern Cape Audio Visual Centre.
After a brief tour to the National Heritage and Cultural Studies Centre in
Alice, the symposium will continue in
Hogsback village amidst the beautiful
Amathole Mountains at the universitys
conference facility Hunterstoun Centre.
The nal day of the symposium features a tour in Grahamstown of the
International Library of African Music
at Rhodes University and African Music Instruments, maker of African instruments. Delegates will have the opportunity either to return by shuttle to
Hogsback and then East London, or to
remain by their own arrangement in
Grahamstown for the National Arts
Festival. Shuttles between the dierent
conference venues will be provided
gratis by the Local Arrangements
Committee.

Symposium themes
For all themes, papers are invited from
people who undertake reexive applied
research on music and dance processes.
This includes ethnomusicologists as
well as scholars and practitioners from
other disciplines.
Theme 1: Applied
ethnomusicology and
institutions
Many activities of people doing applied
work are inuenced by, directed towards or occurring within institutions.
Institutions may be dened robustly, as
formal and informal rules, procedures
and norms and as socially constructed
and shared schemas that are cognitive
and interpretive, or, more specically,
as formal organizations.
Papers are welcomed on the relationship of applications of musical expressions to all sorts of institutions. Possible paper topics might include, but are
not limited to, musical applications in
relation to regulative bodies, such as
legal systems; and the relationship of
applications of musical expressions to
formal organizations. Other examples
of topics and questions are the role of
applied work in schools, including in
intercultural encounters, and the role of
music in cultural economies, for instance involving festivals and folklorization processes, as means of institutional
inuence or control. Which legal implications and ethics are faced by people
doing applied work? What is the role of
frameworks of regional, national and
international institutions (e.g.,

cologists do in terms of establishing


institutional infrastructures and institutionalization?
Proposals are also welcomed on the
meaning of institutionalization and
instituting in relation to applied ethnomusicology. This may not be tied to
conventional views of institution. Papers might also contest bringing
musical interventions into such a
framework at all. Is institutionalization
necessary?
Theme 2: Music and media
This theme addresses the rich variety of
music and media relationships in applied work. What is the role of modern
mass media? How are engaged artists
doing applied work making use of modern media featuring music and other
contemporary arts? What is the state
of applied work in video ethnomusicologymaking videos, and analysing
videos as well as any issues beyond
video production (e.g., legal issues)?
What are the social, political and cultural impacts of mass media involved in
applied work? Who and what is controlling such impacts, media and applications? Is it governmental or economic
forces? Where can ethnomusicologists
make interventions? What are the
problematic issues of such cultural production? Papers also can address the
participation in media work of the advisor or critic, and the collaboration of
ethnomusicologists with music groups,
communities and academic units in
order to produce media, among other
relevant topics.

UNESCO), and frameworking or the


setting up of broader contexts for act-

Theme 3: New work in applied


ethnomusicology

ing, policy making and dealing with


governments? What can ethnomusi-

This theme welcomes new work in ap-

Bulletin of the ICTM Vol. 123 October 2013 Page 21

plied ethnomusicology, on all topics,

and new applied research on music and


dance. Presentations can address new
approaches, challenges and works in
progress. Possible topics are engage-

ments with extra-academic


communities/social groups, and chal-

lenges in the dialogues between academic and extra-academic subjects.

Visit to the International Library of


African Music, to African Music In-

Shuttle costs from the airport are


approximately R130 per trip.

struments, and time to explore the National Arts Festival in Grahamstown.

Travel from East London to Hogsback via Alice, between Hogsback

Saturday 5 July: shuttle from Hogs-

should you decided to remain in


Grahamstown or undertake personal
travel outside of the study group

The Program Committee consists of


Klisala Harrison, Chair (Finland),
Britta Sweers (Switzerland), Anthony
Seeger (USA), Diane Thram (South

costs of the shuttles will be at individual expense).

and Grahamstown, and back to East


London will be provided by the Local
Arrangements Committee. However,

Proposals

Africa), Samuel Arajo (Brazil) and


Bernhard Bleibinger (South Africa).

schedule you will need to make your


own travel arrangements, at your
own expense.

Symposium closing.
back to East London for departure
ights.

Accommodation
Symposium accommodation
schedule
East London: nights of Sunday 29
June, Monday 30 June, Tuesday 1 July.

We invite proposals for presentations in

Several car rental companies do operate at the East London Airport

Hogsback: nights of Wednesday 2


July, Thursday 3 July, Friday 4 July.

four basic formats, not excluding others. These are: individual papers, or-

should you wish to book your own


vehicle.

The entities listed below have been


identied as conference accommodation

ganized sessions, lecture demonstrations, and lms.


Please submit abstracts of 250 words
maximum to
[email protected] by 25

Currency

1 Euro equals 13.70 South African


Rand.
1 US Dollar equals 10.19 South African Rand.

November 2013, to enable peer review


by years end.

Symposium schedule and tours

Proposals for organized sessions should

Monday 30 June: Symposium Day 1

options. You are responsible for securing your accommodation for the symposium. The rates presented below are
per person, per night and inclusive of
breakfast.
Accommodation
recommendations in East
London

include an abstract for the session as


well as an abstract for each individual

East London. Symposium opening.


Papers and presentations.

paper.

Tuesday 1 July: Symposium Day 2


East London. Papers and presentations.

Wednesday 2 July: Symposium Day

Local arrangements
The Local Arrangements Committee
consists of Bernhard Bleibinger, Chair,
Germaine Gamiet, David Manchip,
Zoliswa Twani, Jonathan Ncozana,
Gwyneth Lloyd, Mkululi Milisi and
Lotta Matambo.

Delegates need to plan for East London Airport (ELS) to be their nal
arrival and departure destination.

Phone numbers to specically selected shuttle services will be supplied for delegates to contact for
travel from the airport to hotels and
conference venues (please note the

3. Shuttle itinerary: East London


Alice Hogsback (140 km). Tour of the
National Heritage and Cultural Studies
Centre at the University of Fort Hare
Alice Campus, and a free afternoon to
explore Hogsback.
Thursday 3 July: Symposium Day 4
Hogsback. Papers and presentations.

Gleneagles Bed and Breakfast: R450


single. Contact.

All three of the above accommodation


options are at one intersection (in walking distance from each other), and
some oer room sharing options.
Accommodation
recommendations in Hogsback

Bulletin of the ICTM Vol. 123 October 2013 Page 22

Santorini Guest House: R580 single.


Visit website.

Friday 4 July: Symposium Day 5


Shuttle itinerary: Hogsback Grahamstown Hogsback (280 km return trip)

Jemimas Bunker on Bailie Guest


House: R600 single. Visit website.

Kings Lodge: R400 single. Visit website.


Arminel: R875 single. Visit website.

News from the ICTM


Study Group on
Ethnochoreology

tat) will accept proposals submitted


online through the Symposium website
or via email. Presenters are encouraged to submit proposals ranging from

The Sub-Study Group on Round


Dances-19th Century Derived
Couple Dances (Egil Bakka, Chair)
met in Prague, Czech Republic on 9-12

28th Symposium

individual papers, media presentations,


panels, roundtables and Film/DVD

The Study Group on Ethnochoreology


is happy to report that Croatia's

presentations. Notication of acceptance or rejection will be announced by


31 December 2013.

Publications

Further details about the Symposium,


including information on the accommodations, transportation, registration,

Irish World Academy of Music and


Dance, University of Limerick, with

Commission for UNESCO has oicially


approved its support for the Study
Groups 28th Symposium, which will
take place between 7 and 17 July 2014.
The meeting is hosted by the Institute
of Ethnology and Folklore Research in
cooperation with the Tourist Board of
Korula.
The themes for the 28th Study Group
Symposium are:
1. Dance and Narratives
Narratives are connected to dance in
various contexts, past and present.
Sometimes they appear as constituent

and excursion plans can be found on


the Symposium website
(korcula-2014-ictm.info), which will
also provide updates on the program,
schedule, and post-symposium publication guidelines as the information becomes available. In addition to presentations, participants will enjoy excursions to Lastovo island, Pupnat village,
and, post-symposium, to Dubrovnik
area villages.

elements of human expressive complexes (music, movements, gestures,

Sub-Study Groups

drama, play, and so on) and are positioned within dierent hierarchical
structures (equal or subordinated to

Since our last Symposium in Limerick,


Ireland in July 2012, several of our sub-

each other). At other times narratives


occur in the discourses of socio-cultural
contexts, such as local dance events,
ritual complexes, historical reconstructions, cultural tourism, dance performance.

study groups have held meetings, such


as the Dance, Field Research, and Interethnic Perspectives research experience in the village of Svinia, Romania,
4-8 May 2013, organized by the SubStudy Group on Field Research
Theory and Methods (editors note:

2. Dance as Intangible and


Tangible Cultural Heritage

see page 44 for a full report).

Problems of dance-heritage creation

Group on Movement Analysis (Siri


Mland, Chair) held its rst meeting

and safeguarding heritage as Intangible


Cultural Heritage (ICH), developing
heritage industries and heritage communities are part of a multifaceted and
multilevelled phenomenon oering new
paths for ethnochoreological research.
The deadline for proposals is 10 October 2013. The program committee
(Irene Loutzaki-chair, Barbara Alge,
Ivana Katarini and Kendra Steppu-

The newly established Sub-Study

in November 2012 as a part of the


Memorial Sessionin honour of Gyrgy
Martin, on the anniversary of his 80th
birthday at the Institute for Musicology of the Research Group on Humanities of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences, and as a part of a HungarianNorwegian collaboration with 3D technology in recording dance and dance
analysis.
Bulletin of the ICTM Vol. 123 October 2013 Page 23

December 2012.

The proceedings of our 2012 Limerick


Symposium will be published by the

funding from the European Cultural


Contact Point. The proceedings from
our 2010 symposium in Te, Czech
Republic, can be ordered from Jan Svec
under the title Dance, Gender, and
Meanings from the production of AMU
Press. Those in Europe may nd it easier to order it from www.namu.cz in eshop or to order it directly from
[email protected].
The proceedings from our 24th Symposium, From Field to Text and Dance
and Space, has now been published by
the Institutul Pentru Studierea
Problemelor Minoritatilor Nationale,
Cluj Napoca, Romania. Write to Csilla
Knczei ([email protected]) for
information about acquiring the Cluj
publication.
Our searchable DVD publication encompassing the proceedings from ten
Symposia between 1988 and 2008 is
still available from the HeritageCulture Educational Electronic Library
([email protected]). The cost is 35
Euro (including shipping) and payments can be made via bank transfer or
PayPal.

In Memoriam
The Study Group will greatly miss the
presence and contributions of three
long-time members who passed away in
recent months: Massimo Zacchi, Barbara Sparti, and Marianne Brcker.

Call for Papers: 20th


Symposium of the ICTM
Study Group on Historical
Sources of Traditional
Music
1217 May 2014.
Aveiro, Portugal.
Submissions deadline: 1 Oct 2013.
We are pleased to announce that the
20th Symposium of Study Group on
Historical Sources of Traditional Music
will take place at the University of
Aveiro, Portugal, on 12-17 May 2014.
We would like to inform in advance
that the local organizer cannot provide
any nancial support, so please try to
get funding from your home institution
for travel, accommodation and stay in
Aveiro.
The meeting will focus on the topic
Individual memory Collective
history: Historical sources as a
meeting-point.
Collections of historical sources, e.g.
sound recordings, oral history and written documents, whether safeguarded in
institutional archives or organized by
individuals in private collections, may
be regarded as sites for encounters of
many kinds. The items of collections
very often represent cultural expressions performed by individuals or small
groups, and they have mostly been recorded by individual collectors. These
individual memories stored and combined in collections and archives are
creators of our collective history; they
have played signicant roles in multiple
individual, collective and political discourses of national or ethnic history
and identity.
Archives are built on various concepts
(historical, ethnic, regional, genreoriented etc.), and shaped by dierent
strategies and specic requirements. In

the era of the so-called knowledge society, due to the contribution of information technologies, much knowledge can
now be connected through the Web.
What kind of challenges does this
situation promote for ethnomusicological research and inquiry?
Individual collections have been integrated in institutional archives and
thus become part of cultural heritage.
What are the roles of individuals and
cultural institutions in these processes?
How can ethnomusicologists integrate
the collectors knowledge and experience in researching, studying and identifying the collection? How do private
collections contribute to the construction of a collective history?
How do we ethnomusicologists pay attention to and study the potential dialogues between dierent individual cultural memories and expressions from
dierent times and places? Can we use
knowledge about e.g. social contexts or

cations, and/or the forthcoming meeting, please contact us.


Details about accommodation, travel,
and technical facilities will be given
later this year.
We look forward to seeing you in
Aveiro!
Local organizer: Susana Sardo, University of Aveiro, INET-MD
Study Group Co-Chairs: Susanne
Ziegler & Ingrid kesson.
Symposium Committee
Susana Sardo, Local Organizer
([email protected])
Susanne Ziegler, Co-Chair
([email protected])
Ingrid kesson, Co-Chair
([email protected])
Gerda Lechleitner
([email protected])

musical characteristics gained from one


cultural area to shed light on similar
traits in another place or time?

Call for Papers: ICTM


Ireland Annual Conference

This symposium invites scholars to reect on historical sources, in sound ar-

2123 February 2014.


Galway, Ireland.

chives as well as in private collections,


as an interface or meeting-point.
Paper proposals, not exceeding 300

Submissions deadline: 2 Nov 2013.


Music, Place, and Community
with a keynote address by Martin

words, should be sent to the programme committee consisting of Su-

Stokes, King Edward Professor of Music, Kings College London.

sanne Ziegler, Ingrid kesson, Gerda


Lechleitner and Susana Sardo before 1

Throughout the history of ethnomusicology, the relationship between music,


place, and community has been a cen-

October 2013. We also encourage presentations in the format of panels, which


should consist of at least three presenters. The Programme Committee reserves the right to accept those proposals that, in their opinion, t best into
the scheme of the symposium, and that
can be accommodated within the time
of the Symposium.
If you have any questions regarding the
Study Group, former meetings, publiBulletin of the ICTM Vol. 123 October 2013 Page 24

tral concern. While we no longer occupy ourselves with the musical mapping of the planet, as the early comparative musicologists did, it can be
argued that notions of place and community gure even more prominently in
current discourse. At the same time,
musicians in every locality nd novel
inspiration in their surroundings and
communities, be it geographically or

ainity-based. This is partially in response to an increasing sense of displacement, stimulated by the intensication of globalization, and by the
technologies of access that allow us to
see (and hear) the world instantly,
freely, and without context. What is
remarkable today is the resilience of
the connections between music, place
and community, and the fact that music still evokes and organizes collective
memories and presents experiences of
place with an intensity, power, and
simplicity unmatched by any other social activity (Stokes 1994).
The theme for this years conference
invites scholars to address the complexities of imagined, constructed, and
contested relationships between musics,
places and communities. Papers that
address the following topics will be especially welcome:

musical constructions of place

music and boundaries

music and placelessness

performing local music

acoustemologies and soundscapes

musical communities (real, imagined,


physical, virtual)

music and relocation/migration

music, the nation, the trans-nation

music and the local

Conference conveners welcome submissions of 200 word abstracts from all


relevant academic elds. Session presentations will be 20 minutes long.
Shorter postgraduate presentations of
works in progress may also be considered. ICTM Ireland aims to include an

Deadline for submissions is Monday


2 November 2013.
Abstracts can be sent to Jaime Jones,
[email protected].
Please visit www.ictm.ie for more details.

Call for Papers: 10th


Symposium of the ICTM
Study Group on
Mediterranean Music
Studies
2729 June 2014.
Cambridge, United Kingdom.
Submissions deadline: 15 Jan 2014.
The ICTM Study Group on Mediterranean Music Studies will hold its 10th
Symposium at St Johns College, Cambridge, from 27 to 29 June 2014, on the
theme Mysticism, Magic, and the
Supernatural in Mediterranean
Music.
Because of its highly abstract nature, its
almost complete lack of explicit verbal
or representational content, music is
perhaps the most sensitive indicator of
the culture, and of all the arts it is the
most closely tied to the subconscious
attitudes and assumptions on which we
build our lives within a society which
must be why, in all cultures, music is
the art most closely associated with the
practice of magic.
(Christopher Small, Music, Society,
Education, 1977)
In 1909, Jules Combarieu published La
musique et la magie, the rst extended

even mix of research on Irish and nonIrish case studies. Once again we par-

study devoted to the relation between


organized/meaningful sound and
activities/rituals meant to give human

ticularly welcome short (10 minute


max.) video extract submissions, which
will be shown between panel sessions.

nature itself.

beings power over nature or over realities thought to exist above or beyond

Bulletin of the ICTM Vol. 123 October 2013 Page 25

The Mediterranean area is one where


such relation has been frequently observed and investigated. What makes
the Mediterranean especially fascinating from this angle is that its ethnographic present is frequently examined
in historical perspective. In this respect, Ernesto De Martinos The Land
of Remorse: A Study of Southern Italian Tarantism (1961, Eng. trans. 2005),
Gary Tomlinsons Music in Renaissance Magic (1993) and Joscelyn Godwins Music and the Occult, French
Musical Philosophies, 1750-1950 (1995)
are landmark studies, but the topic still
deserves more comprehensive attention.
That is why in proposing the theme
Mysticism, Magic, and the Supernatural in Mediterranean Music the ICTM
Study Group on Mediterranean Music
Studies is seeking contributions from
ethnomusicology, music history, and
other related elds that will highlight
signicant aspects of this fascinating,
and in some respects universal, relation
between music-making and esoteric
practices.
The programme committee for this
Symposium consists of Stefano Castelvecchi (St Johns College, Cambridge), Ruth F. Davis (Corpus
Christis College, Cambridge), Michael
A. Figueroa (University of Chicago),
Goredo Plastino (Newcastle University), and Marcello Sorce Keller (MMS
Chair). All wishing further information,
and interested in submitting a paper
proposal (one page at the most), are
cordially invited to contact the Chair,
Marcello Sorce Keller, at
[email protected]. The submission
deadline is 15 January 2014.

Second Call for Papers: 4th


Symposium of the ICTM
Study Group on Music and
Dance in Southeastern
Europe

2. Professionalization of
music and dance in
Southeastern Europe

2430 September 2014.

international levels these are just


some of the phenomena that testify to

Belgrade and Petnica Science Center,


Valjevo, Serbia.
Submissions deadline: 1 Nov 2013.
We are pleased to announce the 4th
Symposium of the ICTM Study Group
on Music and Dance in Southeastern
Europe and invite proposals to be
submitted by 1November 2013.

Themes
1. Improvisation in music and
dance of Southeastern Europe
Ethnomusicologists and ethnochoreologists have long considered the importance of improvisation and/or variability in traditional music and dance.
What values do contemporary actors
attach to improvisation in Southeastern
Europe? Do such values dier in terms
of ethnicity, class, gender, age and/or
other dimensions of social identication? What is the relationship between
(the craft of) improvisation, a personal
version and (the art of) precomposition? What kind of music and
dance material is used as a point of
departure or inspiration for improvising, and how is it treated? What is the
place of virtuosity in local taxonomies
of improvisation? What kind of training is characteristic for distinguished
improvisers, and generally, what is the
place of improvisation in the process of
learning within a given music and
dance tradition? What kind of approaches can be employed in analysing
improvisation?

Balkan beats, folk song and dance


ensembles, networks of performing venues, certied education, a variety of
experts and institutions at national and

the growing professionalization of traditional music and dance in Southeastern


Europe. Symposium participants are
invited to address in particular economic aspects of professionalization
(payment and other forms of compensation), professionalized transmission of
knowledge (formalization, standardization, specialization, etc.), and professionalized dissemination and promotion
of the knowledge in society. What fac-

the relationship between local schools


of thought and globally dominant
trends; 4) The remodelling of
ethnomusicology/ethnochoreology in
the direction of a thrilling postdisciplinarity rather than a coherent
disciplined discipline. What contributions do Southeastern European studies
of music and dance make to such disciplinary perspectives?
We welcome proposals for individual
presentations, panels and round tables
that address one or more of these questions and other related issues that arise
directly from the themes. They are to
be sent by email before November 1,
2013.

Languages

new era?

English is the oicial language of the


symposium, and only papers to be delivered in English can be accepted.

3. Inter/postdisciplinarity in
ethnomusicology and
ethnochoreology

Proposal format

tors are being used to distinguish professionals from non-professionals in this

How do ethnomusicology and ethnochoreology correspond to the new,


post-disciplinary alliances of todays
academia? In order to encourage debate on the boundaries between
ethnomusicology/ethnochoreology and
other humanities and social sciences,
the following topics are proposed: 1)
The development of new eldwork approaches and the emergence of new
sites for ethnography that challenge
traditional disciplinary parochialism; 2)
The emergence of meta-discourses formulatedwithinethnomusicology and

Proposals must be submitted in English.

Please send your proposal by email.


The text should be pasted into the
body of the email or sent as a
Word.doc or Rich Text Format (RTF)
attachment to ensure access. The proposal should include:

Name of person submitting

Institutional ailiation

Mailing address

Phone/fax number

Email address

ethnochoreology that extend to wider


scholarship, and vice versa, the domestication of important theoretical trends
formulated elsewhere (e.g. identity politics, semiotics, biopolitics and the
body, post-colonialism); 3) The history
of ideas in ethnomusicology/
ethnochoreology, especially in regard to

Bulletin of the ICTM Vol. 123 October 2013 Page 26

Are you a current member of the


ICTM? Only abstracts from members will be considered

Type of presentation (individual,


media, panel, round table)

Title

Equipment required (PC or Mac,


slide projector, audio, other visual or

spatial requirements, other technical


requirements)

ABSTRACT TEXT (no more than


300 words)

Please label all communications clearly


with yourfull contact details. It is expected that all individual presentations
and panels will provide new insights.
Proposals for presentations that were
previously given or have appeared in
print, or in other formats, will be rejected.
Please note that participants are
limited to a single presentation.
The Program Committee reserves the
right to accept those proposals that, in
their opinion, t best into the scheme
of the symposium, and that can be accommodated within the time frame of
the symposium.

Program Committee

Naila Ceribai Chair, Croatia

Sonia Tamar Seeman, USA

AncaGiurchescu, Denmark/
Romania

24 September

Opening ceremony Faculty of Music, Belgrade


Departure to Petnica Science Center,
Valjevo.

30 September

Closing ceremony Petnica Science


Center, Valjevo

Departure to Belgrade

The local organizer will provide transportation to and from Petnica.


Program schedule, excursions and
payment details will be detailed in later
announcements.

Accommodation
The following prices are for full accommodation.
Single room: 43 per person, per day.
Double/triple rooms: 38 per person,
per day.
All rooms have bathrooms with showers, air conditioner and wireless.

Belma Kurtiolu, Turkey

Mirjana Zaki, Serbia

Symposium fees

Velika Stojkova Seramovska, Mace-

(Covers opening reception, abstract

Local Organizer Committee:

Selena Rakoevi Chair,


email:[email protected]

Iva Neni

Zdravko Ranisavljevi

Ana ivi

Nada Jefteni

Milica Suboti

Local Organizer: Faculty of Music,


University of Arts, Belgrade,
www.fmu.bg.ac.rs
Co-organizer: Petnica Science Center
www.petnica.rs

Preliminary Schedule

donia

and program booklet, and other organizational needs.)


50

Where to send the proposals


Proposals should be sent by email to
both:

Liz Mellish, secretary of the ICTM


Study Group on Music and Dance in
Southestern Europe,
[email protected].

Naila Ceribai Chair of the Program Committee, [email protected]

The committee cannot consider proposals received after the deadline of 1


Bulletin of the ICTM Vol. 123 October 2013 Page 27

November 2013. Notication of acceptance or rejection will be announced by


31 January 2014. If you have a deadline
for funding applications for travel, accommodation, and so on, please notify
the Program Committee of your deadline date.

Membership
Please note that the Program Committee will only consider proposals by current members of the ICTM in good
standing for 2013. Please contact the
Chair, Velika Stojkova Seramovska at
[email protected] and/or the Secretary, Liz Mellish at
[email protected] for membership
of the Study Group. Members may join
and submit a proposal at the same
time. Membership application forms
are available at the ICTM website. For
membership questions, contact the
ICTM Secretariat directly.

Presentation formats
You may present only once during the
symposium. Please clearly indicate
your preferred format. If members have
any questions about the program, or
the suitability of a proposal, please
contact the Program Chair or a member of the Program Committee and ask
for assistance. Colleagues are advised
to bring alternative modes of presentation delivery if using PowerPoint, DVD,
or other format in case of unexpected
technical diiculties on the day of presentation.
Individual Presentations
The Program Committee will organize
individual proposals that have been
accepted into one and a half hour panel
sessions. Each presentation will be allotted 20 minutes inclusive of all illustrations, audio-visual media or movement examples, plus 10 minutes for
questions and discussion. There will be
no deviation allowed from this time

allotment. A 20-minute paper is normally around 5 pages of double spaced

individual paper proposal, as described


under Individual Papers above, for each

type. Please submit a one page abstract (about 300 words) outlining the

presenter. All of the proposals for a


panel should be sent together. Propos-

content, argument and conclusion, its


relation to the symposium theme you

als should address one or more aspects


of the established themes of this meet-

have chosen to address, plus a brief


bibliography and/or statement of
sources, if appropriate, on a second

ing. Total length of a panel will be one


hour (with an additional 20 minutes for
comments and responses).

page. Please include the type of illustrations to be used in the presentation,


such as slides, DVD, video (including
format), or other materials.
Media Presentations

Roundtables
We also encourage presentations in the
form of roundtables. These are sessions
that are entirely planned, coordinated,

Media presentations should be no more

and prepared by a group of people, one


of whom is the responsible coordinator.

than 20 minutes in duration. You will


be allotted 10 minutes extra for questions. Your presentation should engage

The aim is to generate discussion between members of the roundtable who


present questions, issues, and/or mate-

critically with the media (video, CD,


DVD, and so on) and key material for

rial for about 5 minutes on the preselected unifying theme of the roundta-

viewing should be pre-selected. It is


essential that your presentation address
one of the three themes. Please submit

ble. The following discussion, at the


conveners discretion, may open into
more general discussion with the audi-

a one page abstract (about 300 words)


outlining content, argument and con-

ence. The total length of a roundtable


will be one and a half hours inclusive of

clusion, the relevance of the media


presentation to the selected theme, plus
a brief bibliography and/or other

all discussion.

sources.
Panels
We encourage presentations in the form
of panel sessions. Panel sessions are a
group of papers that are entirely
planned, coordinated, and prepared by
a group of people, one of whom is the
responsible coordinator. Proposals may
be submitted for panels consisting of
three or four presenters and the struc-

Proposals may be submitted for a


roundtable consisting of up to 10 presenters, and the structure is at the discretion of the convener who will chair
the event. The proposal must explain
the overall purpose, the role of the individual participants, and signal the
commitment of all participants to attend the symposium. Each roundtable
proposal will be accepted or rejected as
a whole.

Call for Papers: 8th


Symposium of the ICTM
Study Group on Music and
Minorities
1824 July 2014.
Osaka, Japan.
Submissions deadline: 1 Dec 2013.
The ICTM Study Group on Music and
Minorities will hold its 8th Symposium
on 18-24 July 2014, at the National
Museum of Ethnology in Osaka, Japan.
There will be four themes as described
below and colleagues are warmly invited to join the meeting and present
papers. Research papers should be
based on original research and should
not have already been presented elsewhere. Papers should be designed and
presented to take no more than 20
minutes, including audio and audiovisual materials. The oicial language
of the symposium is English.
The deadline for submission of all
proposals (not to exceed one doublespaced printed or typewritten page) is
1 December 2013.
Please note that all presenters must be
current ICTM members and must preregister for the symposium. Presenters
who do not meet these two requirements will be dropped from the program and will not be permitted to present at the symposium.

Themes
1. Cultural Policy and
Minorities

ture is at the discretion of the coordinator. The proposal must explain the
overall purpose, the role of the individ-

The link between a minority and a majority is an essential one: a minority


presupposes a majority. Minority-

ual participants, and indicate the


commitment of all participants to at-

majority interaction is therefore inevitable. Cultural policy governing minor-

tend the symposium. Each panel proposal will be accepted or rejected as a


whole. Submit a short summary (one-

ity music, dance, and expressive culture


in general is one result of that interaction. This theme seeks to explore the

page) of the panel overview, and an

Bulletin of the ICTM Vol. 123 October 2013 Page 28

ways in which such policy comes into


being, is enacted, and shapes cultural

increase in the world population of


those who fall under the category, this

life as a whole.

theme seems particularly apt. Innovative and experimental approaches to

2. Tourism and Minorities


The music and dance of minority
groups are an important component of
tourism in many countries. They are
used to promote the idea of authenticity and cultural diversity in many
places. This theme should examine the
eect of tourism on the music and
dance of minorities that are required to
present their culture to foreign audiences in stagedand articial situations.
The dynamics of the relationship between ethnography and tourism -marked by complementarity, compromise, or conict -- illuminates possible
eects on cultural practices, musicians'
employment, and local reappraisal of

the study of music and minorities will


be particularly welcome.
Proposals for panel presentations and
lm screenings are also welcome.

Program Committee

Ursula Hemetek (University of Music


and Performing Arts Vienna), chair

Essica Marks (Zefat Academic College)


Inna Naroditskaya (Northwestern
University)
Adelaida Reyes (New Jersey University)

music and dance traditions.

Terada Yoshitaka (National Museum


of Ethnology)

3. Gender and Sexual


Minorities

Local Arrangement Committee

Gender has been a popular topic in


ethnomusicology for many decades, but

for the concerns of our study group, it


needs to be recontextualized. Sexuality,
on the other hand, has been one of the
least researched topics in our study of
music and minorities and we need to
include this hitherto unexplored dimension in our attempt for general theorization of the minority concept. While
gender and sexuality have important
dierences, they also share many com-

Terada Yoshitaka (National Museum


of Ethnology), chair
Takemura Yoshiaki (National Museum of Ethnology), secretary general

Fukuoka Madoka (Osaka University)

Fukuoka Shota (National Museum of


Ethnology)

Ito Satoru (Graduate University for


Advanced Studies)

Ko Jeongja (Kobe University)

mon features and are frequently inseparable. This theme treats gender and

Yoneyama Tomoko (Kansai Univer-

sexuality as one unit of inquiry as the


intersection of these two identities is

often crucial in understanding the


complexity of the issue.
4. New Research

sity)
Yoshida Yukako (National Museum
of Ethnology)
Contact email address:
[email protected]

For the rst time in the history of the

Tentative Schedule

Music and Minorities study group, we


have added the theme New Research.

18 July (Fri) Arrival of participants.

With the growing importance of the


category, minorities, and the dramatic

19 July (Sat) Day 1: Registration,


Opening session, Paper/lm sessions.
Bulletin of the ICTM Vol. 123 October 2013 Page 29

20 July (Sun) Day 2: Paper/lm sessions.


21 July (Mon) Day 3: Paper/lm
sessions, Business meeting.
22 July (Tue) Day 4: All-day Excursion.
23 July (Wed) Day 5: Paper/Film
sessions.
24 July (Thu) Departure of participants.

Costs
The costs of travel and accommodation
will have to be covered by participants.
There is also a registration fee of 5,000
yen (approximately $50 US) payable at
the time of registration. The fee covers
the cost of the excursion to Osakas
minority neighbourhoods on 22 July
(inclusive of dinner).

Hosting Organization
The National Museum of Ethnology
(popularly known as Minpaku), the site
of the symposium, was founded in 1974
as one of the Inter-University Research
Institutes, which are expected to play a
leading role in promoting joint research
projects throughout Japan. Minpaku is
unique in that it is equipped with a
museum where our research is shared
with our visitors and that it also provides graduate-level training in anthropology and ethnology. Minpaku regularly hosts international symposia and
conferences. Our meeting in 2014 will
take place in a large seminar room that
accommodates about 70 people and is
equipped with all the technical equipment necessary for academic presentations. Please explore the following website for the various activities and facilities of the museum:
www.minpaku.jp/english.

Location
Minpaku is located north of Osaka, the
third largest city and one of the commercial and cultural centres in Japan.
A bustling, multicultural city, Osaka is
best known for its unique cuisine, its
castle, and down-home hospitality.
Minpaku is also located within a day
trip to Kyoto and Nara, two world famous and ancient capital cities with
magnicent temples, shrines and gardens.

Travel
Delegates should y to the Kansai International Airport (KIX). A reliable
shuttle bus service is available between
the airport and various destinations in
the area. For those staying at the hotels suggested below, take the bus
bound for Ibaraki. Details can be found
at the following site:
www.kansai-airport.or.jp.
A train is also available from the airport, but we recommend the shuttle
bus as it brings you directly to your
destination.

Accommodation
There are a variety of hotels which are
located within a short bus or taxi ride
to the museum. We recommend hotels
close to railway or monorail stations for
easier access to restaurants and the
downtown area. There are several hotels near the Japan Railway (JR) Ibaraki Station and the room charges
range from $50 to $120 per night per
person. There are a limited number of
rooms available at a good discounted
rate if you make an online reservation
in advance. Please contact the local
arrangement committee for assistance.

Ursula Hemetek
Institut fr Volksmusikforschung und

2. Music in digital culture/


mass media

Ethnomusikologie
Anton von Weber Platz 1

Mass media such as radio, television,


lm and, more recently, the internet,

1030 Wien
Tel: + 711 55-4211
Fax: + 711 55-4299
email: [email protected]

Call for Papers: 4th


Symposium of the ICTM
Study Group on Musics of
East Asia
2123 August 2014.
Nara, Japan.
Submissions deadline: 20 Dec 2013.
The Study Group for Musics of East
Asia (MEA), which was formed within
the framework of the International
Council for Traditional Music in 2006,
is pleased to announce its fourth symposium, to be held from 21 to 23
August 2014 at Nara University of
Education. Those interested in East
Asian Musical Cultures are welcome to
become members and attend the symposium to exchange knowledge and
ideas and further develop the eld.

Themes
1. East Asian musics from a
cross-cultural perspective
Recent years have seen increasing diversication in East Asian musicmaking, with traditional genres being
performed outside their regions or cultures of origin, and genres from outside
the region have been adopted within
specically East Asian contexts. What
new meanings arise when musical genres cross cultural borders? We invite
papers exploring these cross-cultural
musical phenomena.

Please send proposals (by 1 December


2013) to:

have all been important contexts for


music-making in East Asia, providing
opportunities for performance, dissemination, and teaching of music, as well
as the creation of listening communities. We invite papers examining the
role of mass-media in East Asian
music-making.
3. Music and ritual
Nara, the site for the 2014 meeting, is
one of the most important historical
centres for ritual music in Japan. As in
most human cultures, music-making in
East Asia has historically been hugely
inuenced by ritual belief, while shared
ritual beliefs and traditions are perhaps
one of the most important factors in
considering East Asia as a cultural region. We look forward to receiving proposals dealing with any aspect of music
and ritual in the region.
4. Restoration and
reconstruction of musical
traditions
As a region with a particularly long
recorded history of musical performance, East Asia has produced many
examples of interaction with ancient or
partially forgotten musical traditions.
What techniques have been used in
restoring these traditions? What meanings have they been assigned in the
modern world? We encourage papers
that examine the way historical aspects
of music have been re-imagined or reconstructed in the present.
5. Music and gender
The role of gender and sexuality in
East Asian musical traditions remains a
little-explored, yet highly important
area for research. How does gender affect the career paths of musicians? How
is gender portrayed or performed in

Bulletin of the ICTM Vol. 123 October 2013 Page 30

musical performance? How does gender


inuence the way listeners engage with
musical genres? We invite papers considering these and other issues.
6. New research
New research on other topics is also
welcome.

Presentation formats
We invite three presentation formats:
1.

2.

Individual paper presentations (20


minutes in length, with 10 minutes
at the end for questions).
Group panels of either three or four
individual papers on linked sub-

that presenters save all audio/visual


data to their own computers or memory devices.

Family name of presenter #1


Given name of presenter #1
Institutional ailiation of presenter #1 (*please indicate if you
are a student, as a prize will be
oered for best student paper)
Email address of presenter #1
Postal address of presenter #1
Title of individual paper
AV equipment required

Proposal formats

one of the panel members is a discussant, please provide their details, as fol-

1.

lows:

Individual paper proposals should


consist of the following:

Family name of discussant


Given name of discussant

a) An email in which you paste the

Institutional ailiation of discussant


Email address of discussant

following capitalized headers with


the following information:
Family name
Given name

Postal address of discussant

b) As a PDF or DOC attachment, an

Institutional ailiation (*please


indicate if you are a student, as a

English-language abstract of the


panel as a whole, not exceeding
350 words (please do NOT include

prize will be oered for best student paper)


Email address

your names in the body of the


panel abstract, since abstract review is anonymous).

Postal address
Title of proposed paper

c) As PDF or DOC attachments,

AV equipment required

individual English-language ab-

b) As a PDF or DOC attachment, an

stracts by each presenter, not exceeding 350 words (please do


NOT include your names in the

English-language abstract of no
more than 350 words (please do
NOT include your name in the

In-house PCs (though you may also


bring and use your own Mac or PC)

available through computers provided


by the venue. We strongly recommend

Please continue with the same information for presenters #2, #3, and #4. If

Projector for PowerPoint presentations, etc.

Access to the internet will only be

[email protected].

The following will be available:

CD players

Individual paper proposals should be


submitted by email to

AV equipment

Submissions

meeting. Only proposals and presentations in English will be considered.

Multi-region VHS and DVD players

ceptance of papers will be made by 20


March 2014.

Roundtable discussion with up to


six participants (90 minutes)

The deadline for proposal submissions


is 20 December 2013. Decisions on ac-

English is the oicial language of the

cation of acceptance

Language

Deadline for submissions / noti-

jects (total 90 minutes for three


speakers, 120 minutes for four
speakers).
3.

body of any individual abstracts,


since abstract review is anony-

body of the abstract, since abstract review is anonymous).


2.

Group panel proposals should include:

a) An email in which you paste the


following capitalized headers with
the following information:
Family name of panel organizer
Given name of panel organizer
Institutional ailiation of panel
organizer
Postal address of panel organizer
Title of panel

Bulletin of the ICTM Vol. 123 October 2013 Page 31

mous).
3.

Proposals for roundtable discussion


should include:

a) An email in which you paste the


following capitalized headers with
participants' information:
Family name of roundtable organizer
Given name of roundtable organizer
Institutional ailiation of roundtable organizer

Email address of roundtable organizer


Postal address of roundtable organizer
Title of roundtable
Names of roundtable presenters
AV equipment required
Family name of participant #1
Given name of participant #1
Institutional ailiation of participant
#1
Email address of participant #1
Postal address of participant #1
Please continue with the same information for the other participants.

a) As a pdf or .doc attachment, an


English-language abstract of the
roundtable, not to exceed 350
words (please do NOT include
your names in the body of the
abstract, since abstract review is
anonymous).

Membership
Following ICTM policy, all participants
whose proposals have been accepted for
the programme must be ICTM members. New members may join and submit a proposal at the same time. Proposals from students are strongly encouraged. Membership applications are
available at the ICTM website.

Programme Committee
Kim Heesun (Korea), Lee Ching-huei
(Taiwan), Qi Kun (China), Waseda
Minako (Japan), Victor Vincente
(Hong Kong), and Matt Gillan (Japan)
as chair. For further questions about
the programme for MEA 2014, please
contact Matt Gillan by e-mail at
[email protected]

Symposium website
For further information and updates,
please visit the symposium website:

Call for Papers: 3rd


Symposium of the ICTM
Study Group on Performing
Arts of Southeast Asia
(PASEA)

Themes

14-19 June 2014.

region, bringing with them their music,


dance and theatre. Trade, colonialism,
religious evangelization, and transna-

Denpasar, Bali, Indonesia.


Submissions deadline: 1 Nov 2013.
We are pleased to announce the 3rd
Symposium of the ICTM Study Group
on Performing Arts of Southeast Asia
(PASEA) and oer this call for Abstract proposals to be submitted by 1
November 2013. This symposium
will focus on the themes noted below
that will form the basis of the presentations and discussions.

1. Interculturalism and the


Mobility of Performing Arts
in Southeast Asia
Throughout the history of Southeast
Asia, people have moved across the

tionalism have promoted the diverse


ow of the arts, for example, the circulation of Muslims and associated
music/dance genres in Southeast Asia,
early exchanges between the courts of
Yogyakarta and Siam, the presence of
gong chime ensembles throughout insular Southeast Asia, the current pop
music scene, and so on. Southeast
Asian music and dance have also been

The main hosts and local arrangers for


this symposium comprise a collabora-

displayed in world's fairs in Europe,


North America, and other countries.

tive eort by the Udayana University


and STIKOM Bali (College of Informa-

What happens when the performing


arts move across the regions or continents? What are the reception and the

tion Management and Computer Technology) in Denpasar, Bali, Indonesia.

Tentative Schedule:
14 June (Saturday): Registration &
opening of symposium in conjunction
with opening of the Bali Arts Festival,
and sessions begin at Udayana Univer-

impact of the performing arts in question in their new cultural space? How
do people, musicians, dancers and other
artists represent cultural dierence and
appropriation? These are some of the
pertinent questions that would challenge us to explore the kind of trans-

15 June (Sunday): Sessions at Udayana

formations that take place when the


performing arts travel outside their
home country, in the past and the pre-

University, Denpasar campus.

sent.

16 June (Monday) Excursion: gong


foundry, kecak workshop and perform-

2. Sound, Movement, Place:


Choreomusicology of Humanly
Organized Expression in
Southeast Asia

sity, Denpasar campus.

ance, and other events.


17 June (Tuesday): Sessions at
STIKOM campus, Denpasar.
18 June (Wednesday): Sessions at
STIKOM campus, Denpasar.
19 June (Thursday): Sessions at
STIKOM campus, Denpasar, closing
ceremony, departure of participants.

sites.google.com/site/meanara2014.

This theme opens a platform for a rich


description of the various aural and
visual elements involved in Southeast
Asian performing arts. Cross-modal
relationships between sound and
movement have deep implications for
the way we perceive objects, moving
bodies, colour and sonic events among
others. The interactions between sound

Bulletin of the ICTM Vol. 123 October 2013 Page 32

and movement are not always congruent even though the two mediums may
cohabit the same space. Analysing the
convergence and divergence of sound,
movement, and place is crucial to an
understanding of the emotional, perceptual, and aective features of humanly organized expression. In music,
dance, puppetry, and other movement

3.

Mohd Anis Md Nor, Local Arrangements Co-Chair,Email:

[email protected].
More details on the Symposium are
available on the Study Groups website).

arts, the variable relationships between


sound and movement reveal characteristics of performance traditions housed
in culturally organized social contexts.
This theme brings attention to multisensory experience, the interactions
between sound and movement, the eld
of metonymic relationships between
music, dance, and space in Southeast
Asian societies.
3. New Research

Language
English is the oicial language of this
symposium, however, the oicial language of the host country is Indonesian
and papers may be presented in Indonesian with English language Powerpoint and Abstract, and a detailed outline of the presentation in English to be
handed out at the time of the session.
The proposal Abstracts are to be submitted in English for review and selection purposes.

Proposals
Please send proposals by 1 November
2013 to the three e-mail addresses
listed here:
1.

The Chair of the Program Committee, Tan Sooi Beng,


[email protected].

2.

Made Mantle Hood, Local Arrangements Co-Chair,


[email protected].

Bulletin of the ICTM Vol. 123 October 2013 Page 33

Reports from ICTM National and


Regional Representatives
Austria
by Thomas Nubaumer,
Chair of National
Committee

means of his eldwork on traditional


music in the border triangle.
The second panel, focused on
Perceptive/Acoustic space, brought a

Symposium on
Music & Space

variety of themes. Ignazio Macchiarella


described buskers music in urban
spaces as shocking sounds in unusual

On 31 May 2013, the Austria ICTM


National Committee held its annual

contexts. Jrgen Schpf (Vienna) explained the connections between eth-

general meeting. The event was followed on 2 June by a joint symposium


with the ICTM National Committees
of Italy and Switzerland in Mals/Malles
Venosta (Italy), in the border triangle

nomusicology, soundscapes, and soundscape art. Bernd Brabec de Mori


(Graz) reported about a project in
Paris on imaginary soundscapes. Two
Italian lm presentations, Il sangue nel

of Austria, Switzerland, and Italy. The


symposium, entitled Music & Space,
was held entirely in English and di-

canto (by Paolo Vinati, La Valle) and


Voci alte (by Renato Morelli, Trento),
concluded the panel.

vided into three panels: Virtual and/or


(inter) Cultural Space, Perceptive/

The third panel, Social Space, was


concentrated on two subjects: Women

Acoustic Space and Social Space


(with a nal discussion). The panels
were chaired by Gerd Grupe, Gerda
Lechleitner, and Ursula Hemetek (all
from the Austrian committee).

in sound recordings from Romagna of


the 1970s and 1980s, presented by
Cristina Ghirardini (Ravenna), and
Gender issues: Is there a creative space
under the glass ceiling? by Regine

The rst panel Virtual and/or (inter)


Cultural space started with a paper by
Grazia Tuzi (Rome/Valladolid) about

Allgayer-Kaufmann (Vienna).

the signicance of origin culture for


the Calabrian communities in Argen-

bouring village Laatsch/Laudes, carried


out by folk musicians of the border

tina. Marc-Antoine Camp (Lucerne)


talked about processes of constructing
intangible cultural heritage in Switzerland, also for touristic aims. Lorenz
Beyer (Vienna) pointed out transcultural music processes in Upper Bavaria
(Germany), referring to phenomena like
New Folk Music and Bavarian Pop
Music, whereas Thomas Nubaumer
(Innsbruck) discussed the question The
border triangle Austria, Switzerland,
and Italy a cultural region? by

The nal event of the joint meeting was


a folk-music presentation in the neigh-

Instrumentation and Instrumentalization of Sound. Local Multipart Music


Cultures and Politics in Europe. The
instrumentation of sound is an inseparable part of music-making processes in
local musical practices and is closely
connected with the formation and perception of a common sound familiar to
the performers and communities they
are embedded in. This process is crucial, particularly for multipart music
practices. In spite of the intensive research carried out, the instrumentation
of sound has seldom been an investigative target in this framework.
These views were presented and discussed during the symposium by researchers with extensive eldwork experience from more than a dozen countries in Europe and from the USA.
Most of them took part for the rst
time at the European Voices. The
main theme was examined from dierent perspectives, focusing on Sound
and Society, Performance as Instrumentation and Tradition, Revival and
Practice.

triangle.
Further activities and
publications by members of
the Austrian National
Committee
An international symposium was held
in commemoration of Gerlinde Haid on
26-28 April 2013, at the Institute of
Folk Music Research and Ethnomusicology at the University of Music and
Performing Arts, organized by Ardian
Ahmedaja: European Voices III. The

Bulletin of the ICTM Vol. 123 October 2013 Page 34

Photo: Walter Deutsch upon the occasion of


his 90th birthday during the symposium,
Photo: Alfred Luger.

During the Symposium Walter


Deutsch, the founder of the insti-

Department of Folk Music at the IEL


became the Department of Ethnomusi-

2006 these conferences have had international status, mainly because of the

tutewhose 90th birthday was celebrated on this occasionpresented a

cology at the ELM, thus marking the


oicial return of the centre of Estonian

active participation of our Finnish colleagues.

keynote lecture on Traditional Forms


of Multipart Music in Austria. The

ethnomusicology to Tartu. Additionally,


for many years research into traditional

keynote at the opening came from the


other side of the Atlantic: Philip Bohlman spoke about But Glorious It

music has also been carried out by ethnomusicologists from the Department
of Musicology of the Estonian Academy

Was The Pilgrims Progress and the


Musical Instrumentation of the Heavenly Host.

of Music and Theatre (EAMT) in Tallinn (formerly the Tallinn Conservatoire); the number of scholars in this

Estonia

eld at the EAMT, however, has always been fairly small.

by anna Prtlas,
Liaison Oicer
This report provides an
overview of ethnomusicological activities in
Estonia during the last decade. Before
we pass to the facts relating to the period in question, it would be useful to
give a brief description of the historical
background to the contemporary situation.
Historically, the study of traditional
music in Estonia has been centred predominantly in the city of Tartu, where
the main archive of Estonian folk music
the Estonian Folklore Archives was
established in 1927. Since 1940 this has
been a branch of the Estonian Literary
Museum (ELM), which is currently the
main national research institution dedicated to collecting, preserving, and
studying the cultural heritage of Estonia. Until 2000, however, there was no
department at the ELM which oicially
focused on the study of traditional music. The rst such department was created at the Institute of Language and
Literature (now the Institute of the
Estonian Language (IEL)) in Tallinn in
1978, and in the years between 1978
and 2000 virtually all of Estonias ethnomusicologists were connected with
this institution. In 2000, however, the

Nowadays most of the ethnomusicological activities that take place the eld
work, conferences and publications
are organized by the ELM and the
EAMT. At the moment there are about
10 researchers in Estonia who are more
or less actively involved in the study of
traditional music. Sadly, during the last
decade we have suered the loss of two
of our esteemed colleagues, Vaike Sarv
(1946-2004) and Anu Vissel (19522005), both of whom were members of
the ICTM.

Conferences
Owing to the small number of ethnomusicologists in Estonia, conferences
dedicated specically to subjects relating to traditional music are rather rare.
The most typical local events at which
Estonian ethnomusicologists participate
are the so-called Regilaulukonverentsid
(conferences on runic songs), which are
organized by the Estonian Folklore Archives (sometimes in conjunction with

One international conference devoted


specically to ethnomusicology was
organized in Tallinn in 2004 jointly by
the Department of Musicology of the
EAMT and the Department of Ethnomusicology of the ELM. The theme of
the conference was Finno-Ugric Multipart Music in the Context of the Music
Culture of the Slavic and Baltic Nations. At this conference ethnomusicologists from Russia, Lithuania and
Finland participated alongside their
Estonian colleagues.
In 2005 the ELM, in collaboration with
the Estonian National Folklore Council,
held an international ethnomusicological conference in Tallinn to celebrate
the 70th birthday of Ingrid Rtel. The
conference was titled The Individual
and Collective in Traditional Culture.

Dissertations/theses
During the last decade doctoral and
masters theses in the eld of ethnomusicology were defended in three institutions: the EAMT (the Department of
Musicology), the University of Tartu
(Faculty of Philosophy, Department of
Literature and Folklore), and Tallinn
University (The Estonian Institute of
Humanities).
Doctoral theses

the Department of Literature and Folklore of the University of Tartu) and

[Estonian Prosody and Words/Music


Relationships in Estonian Old Folk

held every two years in Tartu, and


where the majority of the participants
are philologists, folklorists, mythologists and other specialists in related
elds. During the last decade ve such
conferences have been held, in the years
2004, 2006, 2008, 2010, and 2012. Since

Bulletin of the ICTM Vol. 123 October 2013 Page 35

Srg, Taive. Eesti keele prosoodia


ning teksti ja viisi seosed regilaulus.

Songs] PhD diss., University of


Tartu, 2005.

Oras, Janika. Viie 20. sajandi naise


regilaulumaailm. Arhiivitekstid, kogemused ja mlestused. [The regilaul
World of Five 20th Century Women:
Archival Texts, Experiences and

2008.

three collections of articles are mostly


in Estonian, the fourth in English and

which includes, amongst others, papers


by Estonian ethnomusicologists. During

Estonian, and the fth mostly in Russian. The issues of the last decade are:

the last decade two such collections


were issued:

Sildoja, Krista. Phja-Prnumaa

Estonian Academy of Music and


Theatre, 2004.

Kmmus, Helen. Meloodia var-

tions in Folk Hymn Melodies Collected by Cyrillus Kreek in 1921]


Masters thesis, University of Tartu,

2006.
Laanemets, Liisi. Setu lauliku Anne
Vabarna viisirepertuaarist ERA helisalvestiste phjal. [The Melodic
Repertoire of Setu Singer Anne
Vabarna as Documented in the Estonian Folklore Archives] Masters thesis, Estonian Academy of Music and
Theatre, 2007.
Laanemets, Liisi. Iseendaks olemisest eneselavastamiseni Tallinna setode leelokoori Ssar nitel. [From
Being Yourself to Performing Yourself: the Case of the Seto Choir
Ssar] Masters thesis, Tallinn University, 2007.

Publications
Collections of articles
Among ethnomusicological publications
in Estonia during the last decade the
series Tid etnomusikoloogia alalt
(Works on Ethnomusicology), published by the Department of Ethnomusicology of the ELM, should be named

Primusmuusika muutuvas hiskonnas 2 [Traditional Music in a Changing World], edited by Ingrid Rtel.
Tartu: Eesti Kirjandusmuuseum,
2004 (Tid etnomusikoloogia alalt 2).

ieerimine Cyrillus Kreegi 1921. aastal


salvestatud rahvakoraalides. [Varia-

that after each Regilaulukonverents the


ELM publishes a collection of articles

Northern Prnumaa and Their Manner of Playing in the First Half of


the 20th Century] Masters thesis,

(Estonia, Finland, Russia, Lithuania,


Hungary, Romania, etc.). The rst

viiuldajad ja nende mngumaneer 20.


sajandi I poolel. [The Violinists from

Memories] PhD diss., Estonian


Academy of Music and Theatre,
Masters theses

Regilaul loodud vi saadud? [The


Runic Song Created or Received?],
edited by Mari Sarv. Tartu :Eesti
Kirjandusmuuseum, 2004.

Primusmuusikast populaarmuusi-

Regilaul esitus ja tlgendus [The


Runic Song Performance and In-

kani [From Traditional Music to


Popular Music], edited by Triinu

terpretation], edited by Aado Lintrop. Tartu: Eesti Kirjandus-

Ojamaa, Taive Srg, and Kanni Labi.


Tartu: Eesti Kirjandusmuuseum,
2005 (Tid etnomusikoloogia alalt 3).

muuseum, 2006 (Eesti Rahvaluule


Arhiivi toimetused 23).
Ethnomusicological questions are

Individual and collective in traditional culture, edited by Triinu Oja-

touched upon in the collection of articles dedicated to the sound recordings

maa and Andreas Kalkun. Tartu:


Eesti Kirjandusmuuseum, 2006 (Tid
etnomusikoloogia alalt 4).

of Estonian songs and speech which


were made in the German prisoner-ofwar camps in 1916-1918:

[Finno-Ugric Multi-Part
Music in the Context of Other Music
Cultures], edited by Triinu Ojamaa
and anna Prtlas. Tartu: Eesti Kirjandusmuuseum, Eesti Muusika- ja
Teatriakadeemia, 2008 (Tid etnomusikoloogia alalt 5).
Articles in the eld of ethnomusicology
have also been published in the journal

Encapsulated Voices. Estonian Sound


Recordings from the German
Prisoner-of-War Camps in 19161918, edited by Jaan Ross. Kln,
Weimar, Wien: Bhlau, 2012.

From time to time Estonian ethnomusicologists also publish their research


papers in the electronic journals on
folklore studies Folklore (in English)
and Metagused (in Estonian).

Res Musica in 2012. Res Musica,


founded in 2009, is the scholarly yearbook of the Estonian Musicological

Monographs

Society and the EAMT. The fourth


issue of this yearbook (2012) was dedi-

Ars musicae popularis:

cated to ethnomusicological research,


and consisted of papers by authors
from Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, and

Monographs in the eld of ethnomusicology have been published in the series

Changing Society]. Tartu: Eesti Kirjandusmuuseum, 2004 (Ars musicae

Russia. The articles are in Estonian


and English.

rst. Established in 2002, ve books


have so far been issued in this series.
Each issue has a specic theme, and

A number of ethnomusicological articles may be also found in the collections dedicated to runic songs pub-

the authors are from dierent countries

lished by the ELM. It is a tradition


Bulletin of the ICTM Vol. 123 October 2013 Page 36

Vissel, Anu. Lasteprimus muutuvas


hiskonnas [Childrens Folklore in a

popularis 15).

Rtel, Ingrid, and Ene-Margit Tiit.


Primuskultuur Eestis kellele ja
milleks I [Traditional Culture in Estonia to Whom and Why]. Tartu:
Tartu likooli Kirjastus, 2005 (Ars

musicae popularis 16).

Rtel, Ingrid, and Ene-Margit Tiit.


Primuskultuur Eestis kellele ja
milleks II [Traditional Culture in

jda: valik meenutusi, artikleid,


uurimusi [Changing and Remaining
Oneself. Choice of Memoirs, Articles,
Studies]. Tallinn: TEA, 2010.

and Elke Unt. Tallinn: Hugo Lepnurme Muusikahing, 2010.

Ojamaa, Triinu. 60 aastat eesti koorilaulu multikultuurses Torontos [60


Years of Estonian Choral Singing in
Multicultural Toronto]. Tartu: Eesti

Sound recordings
The ELM publishes collections of sound
recordings of Estonian traditional music in the series Helisalvestusi Eesti
Rahvaluule Arhiivist (Recordings from
the Estonian Folklore Archives):

Kirjandusmuuseumi Teaduskirjastus,
2011.

Erna Tampere, Ottilie Kiva, Janika


Oras, Vaike Sarv, and Ergo-Hart

Rtel, Ingrid. Eesti uuema rahvalaulu kujunemine [The Development


of Newer Estonian Folk Song]. Tartu:
Eesti Kirjandusmuuseumi Teaduskirjastus, 2012.

Eesti rahvamuusika antoloogia [Anthology of Estonian Traditional Music], edited by Herbert Tampere,

Vstrik. Tartu: Eesti Kirjandusmuuseum, 2003 (3 CDs) (Helisalvestusi Eesti Rahvaluule Arhiivist 3).

Leiko lauluq [The Songs by the Leiko


Choir], edited Andreas Kalkun.

Publications of musical
sources

Tartu: Eesti Kirjandusmuuseum,


Seto Talumuuseum, 2004 (Helisalves-

Estonian runic songs with their melodies are regularly published by the

tusi Eesti Rahvaluule Arhiivist 4).

Eesti parmupill [The Estonian Jew's


Harp], edited by Ctlin Jaago. Tartu:
Eesti Kirjandusmuusumi Teaduskirjastus, 2011 (Helisalvestusi Eesti
Rahvaluule Arhiivist 6).

Siberi setode laulud [The Songs of


Siberian Seto], edited by Andreas
Kalkun and Anu Korb. Tartu: Eesti
Kirjandusmuusumi Teaduskirjastus,
2012 (2 CDs and 1 DVD) (Helisalvestusi Eesti Rahvaluule Arhiivist 7).

Kihnu tantsulood [Kihnu dance

12 rahvakoraali [12 folk hymns], edited by Krri Toomeos-Orglaan,


Ergo-Hart Vstrik, Helen Kmmus

Other monographs

Other collections of musical transcriptions:

Eesti Kirjandusmuuseum, 2009 (includes 2 CDs).

Kold, Udo. Folkloori olemust otsides

tusi Eesti Rahvaluule Arhiivist 5).

10).

Siberi eestlaste laulud [The Songs of


Siberian Estonians], edited by Anu
Korb. Tartu: Eesti Kirjandusmuuseum, 2005 (2 CDs) (Helisalves-

Paide ja Anna regilaulud [The runic


songs from Paide and Anna], edited

Hiieme. Tartu: Ilmamaa, 2009


(Eesti mttelugu 85).
Rtel, Ingrid. Muutudes endaks

Lganuse regilaulud [The runic songs


from Lganuse], edited by Ruth Mi-

tunes], edited by Ingrid Rtel, transcriptions by Krista Sildoja. Tallinn:


Tallinna likooli Kunstide Instituut,

Tartu: Ilmamaa, 2013.

Tampere, Herbert. Lauluvelised


[Mighty Singers], edited by Mall

[Searching for the Nature of the


Folklore], edited by Madis Arukask.

by Ottilie Kiva and Janika Oras.


Tartu: Eesti Kirjandusmuuseumi
Teaduskirjastus, 2012 (Vana kannel

popularis 18).
tinguished Estonian ethnomusicologists
have been published during the last
decade:

2009 (Vana kannel 9).

from Karksi with their Melodies].


Tartu: Eesti Kirjandusmuuseumi
Teaduskirjastus, 2008 (Ars musicae
Three collections of the works of dis-

rov and Edna Tuvi. Tartu: Eesti Kirjandusmuuseumi Teaduskirjastus,

2006 (Ars musicae popularis 17).


Srg, Taive. Karksi vanad rahvalaulud viisidega I [The Old Folk Songs

ELM in the series Vana kannel (The


Old Kannel):

Estonia to Whom and Why].


Tartu: Eesti Kirjandusmuuseum,

Electronic editions
The rst three volumes of the biggest
collection of Estonian folk songs, compiled by Herbert Tampere between
1956 and 1965, is now available in an
electronic edition:

Tampere, Herbert. Eesti rahvalaule


viisidega I-III [Estonian Folk Songs
with Melodies], E-edition prepared
by Ingrid Rtel, Taive Srg, Sander
Laumets, Hanno Artur Srg, and
Andres Kuperjanov. Tartu: Eesti
Kirjandusmuuseumi Teaduskirjastus,
2010 (www.folklore.ee).

Indonesia
by Made Mantle Hood,
Liaison Oicer
In October of 2012, I
received an invitation
from the ICTM Executive Board to serve as Liaison Oicer
for Indonesia. I accepted with enthusiasm. Since then, I have been working
with colleagues both in and outside the
country to increase academic dialog
and exchange between ICTM and our
Indonesian colleagues. The following is
a brief report with a more extensive

Bulletin of the ICTM Vol. 123 October 2013 Page 37

account to follow in subsequent Bulletins.


In 2010, the ICTM Study Group on
Performing Arts of Southeast Asia
(PASEA) met in Singapore, and in
2012 in Manila. At both meetings only
a few members from Indonesia participated, evidencing a slump in communications between the Council and active

ranked research institution: Universitas


Gajah Mada. ICTM PASEA Facebook
pages register new Friends from Indonesia on a daily basis. However, there is

culture beyond traditional parameters.

much work to be done on having this


popular mode of communication trans-

Stepputat, Kendra, ed. (2013). Performing Arts in Postmodern Bali:


Changing Interpretations, Founding
Traditions. From shadow plays,

late into papers read at international


symposia.

topeng masked dances, and arts institutions to topics such as aesthetics,


neo-traditionalism, the negotiation of

Often the language barrier prevents

authenticities are just some of the


extremely relevant subjects addressed
in this edited volume on one of the

Indonesian scholars. Many PASEA attendees expressed concern that more


eorts were needed to bolster participa-

Indonesian scholars from traversing


national boundaries into the international arena, where English dominates

tion, not only from Indonesias established university academics, but also

discourse. ICTM PASEA has made


provisions to bridge the language gap

from its emerging graduate students


and future arts community leaders.
Therefore the PASEA Executive Com-

through several means. It has invited


Indonesian scholars to read papers in
Indonesian so long as they complement

mittee deliberated on a strategy to


generate more participation from Indo-

their papers with PowerPoint presentations, written abstracts, and outline

islands in terms of performing arts


traditions, no book-length work has

nesia, the largest ASEAN member


country but one with the fewest number of active ICTM members.

handouts in English.

existed until now. This work is the


culmination of Kartomis life-long
dedication to Sumatras vibrant and

The Executive Committee entertained


several bids from member countries to

ars is the use of a virtual mentor system. Active ICTM members who are

host its 2014 Symposium. However,


Indonesia was chosen to host the next
ICTM PASEA meeting in Denpasar,

bilingual in English and Indonesian are


encouraged to be paired with Indonesian researchers who may request trans-

Bali from 14 to 19 June 2014, in an


eort to increase participation in schol-

lation and interpretation assistance.


This mentoring arrangement is de-

arly endeavours.

signed as an informal on-line buddy


system between existing and future
scholars of Indonesian performing arts.

The themes of the Symposium are in


accordance with PASEA's fundamental

Another means bridging the language


gap to include more Indonesian schol-

principle of encouraging integrative


approaches in performing arts research

There have been numerous publications


on Indonesian music in recent years. A

where visual, movement, and sonic expressions resist separation into the reductive categories of music, dance and

very short list is presented below with


a more extensive compilation to follow
in subsequent reports from Indonesia,

theatre(Editors note: read more about


this Symposium on pages 32-33).

an area where ICTM membership will


increase signicantly in the coming

Because Indonesias many arts institutions are also built on this integrative

most studied islands in the Indonesian archipelago.

years.

McGraw, Andrew (2013). Radical

Kartomi, Margaret (2012). Musical


Journeys in Sumatra. Despite being
one of Indonesias most richly diverse

ever-changing provinces.

Harnish, David, and Anne Rasmussen eds. (2011). Divine Inspirations: Music and Islam in Indonesia.
This edited volume complies the
work of 11 scholars who show the
diversity of religion and performance
expressions in the world's largest
Muslim nation. Authors address a
multiplicity of approaches including
history, politics, spirituality, and issues of gender and ethnicity to the
fore of research on Indonesian artistic
expression.

Ireland
by Ioannis Tsioulakis,
Secretary of National
Committee

and holistic model, there are strong


expressions of interest in the Symposium from Indonesias arts institutions

Traditions: Reimagining Culture in


Balinese Contemporary Music. The
rst monograph on Balinese contem-

Over the past year,

in major cities, including ISI Denpasar,


Yogyakarta, Surakarta, and Padang

porary music which combines theory,


critical analysis and ethnography to

Panjang, as well as Indonesias top-

inform academic circles on expressive

events and publications, which have


managed to bring music scholars, musicians, and acionados closer together,

Bulletin of the ICTM Vol. 123 October 2013 Page 38

ICTM-Ireland has been


active with a number of

and increase the visibility of both the


National Committee and the Council.
The established Annual Conference was
this year organized in collaboration
with the British Forum for Ethnomusicology, and was hosted between 4 and 7
April at Queens University Belfast.
The chosen theme, Ethnomusicology in
the Digital Age, facilitated very engaging and productive academic discussions, as well as ensured the vibrant
presence and contribution of junior
scholars and postgraduate students.
The event featured a large number of
delegates and a very high standard of
presentations, epitomized by Leslie C.
Gays (University of Tennessee) keynote speech and an esteemed keynote
panel comprising Carlos Sandroni (Federal University of Pernambuco), Ren
Lyslo (University of California, Riverside), Jonathan Dueck (Duke University), and Simon Waters (Queens University Belfast).
Two more events were successfully organized by ICTM Ireland in the past
twelve months, both targeting students,
thus increasing the combined scholarly
and performative educational impact of
the institution. Notes on Notes was an
exciting new development by ICTM
Ireland. Bringing together undergraduate and postgraduate students from
various third level institutions, Notes
on Notes included instrumental workshops and round-table discussions focusing on the performance of traditional music. Organised by Daithi
Kearney, the event was hosted on Saturday, 24 November 2012 at the Dundalk Institute of Technology, with facilitators including the established musicians and educators Niall Keegan
(University of Limerick) and Mel Mercier (University College Cork). Furthermore, the committees Education
Oicer Sheryl Lynch organized the annual postgraduate skills development

The Joint BFE and ICTM-Ireland Conference Organizing Committee including (from left to
right): Noel Lobley, Ray Casserly, Ioannis Tsioulakis, Suzel Reily, and Gordon Ramsey.

day, entitled Misneach. The event,


which was held at University College

eld audio recordings made by members and ailiates of the organization.

Dublin on 20 October 2012, included


sessions concerning lm-making, writ-

The featured musics provide snapshots


of the diverse interests of ICTM-Ireland

ing skills, and music workshop facilitation, and received very positive feedback from all who attended.

members, expanding from Ireland to


Eastern Europe, South America, the
Middle East, East Asia, and South Af-

Simultaneously, ICTM Ireland has increased its publishing activities with a

rica.

number of print and audio outputs.


The organizations peer-reviewed journal Ethnomusicology Ireland released
its latest issue (2/3) in August 2013,
and is now available for open online
access, thus contributing to the free
and unhindered communication of music and dance research in Ireland and
abroad. The issue was edited by Colin
Quigley and includes a number of articles on Irish music and other ethnomusicological topics. It was further announced that Liz Doherty and Tony
Langlois will be taking over editorial
responsibility for the next edition.
An exciting new development was the
release of the rst ICTM Ireland Fieldwork CD, which features a range of
Bulletin of the ICTM Vol. 123 October 2013 Page 39

ICTM Irelands CD Fieldwork. Artwork by


Brian Hanlon.

The CD also features some classic


pieces by such pioneers in the eld as

terms of dating, organological studies


are of high importance, since musical

Tom Munnelly and John Blacking. Edited by Tony Langlois and Desi Wilkin-

instrumentsarchaeological objectsare primary pieces of evidence

son with technical support by Aoife


Granville, and funded by the Arts

for research.

Council in Ireland, the projects aim is


to illustrate ICTM-Irelands unique mix
of research into local and transnational
indigenous musics, and to encourage
newcomers to this eld. The CD is now
available to order from the Irish National Committees website. Finally,
two issues of ICTM Irelands biannual
Bulletin, Spis, were published within
the past twelve months, edited by
Sheryl Lynch. Bringing together timely
contributions from scholars and students including short articles, news,
and reports on events and music releases, Spis is steadily increasing its
visibility and impact in ethnomusicol-

Relations with foreign


institutions
Besides academical collaborations with
Tokyo Geijutsu Daigaku, Indiana University of Bloomington and the British
Museum, the collaboration with the
University of Vienna has led to numerous publications and the production of
audiovisual archives. Recently, the
Phonogrammarchiv of the Vienna
Academy of Sciences restored data on
Malagasy music (including songs, stories, and interviews) which will be
available online. Indeed the Internet
has become an indispensable tool for
the advancement and dissemination of

ogy within and beyond Ireland.

research in Madagascar.

Madagascar

Recent and upcoming


activities

by Mireille Mialy
Rakotomalala, Liaison
Oicer
The study of the Malagasy musical
culture, like all other oral cultures, has
required extensive eldwork, analysis,

Two oicials of the Brooklyn Academy


of Music came to Madagascar to select
a group of dancers which will represent
the country at the DanceAfrica festival,
to be held in New York in May 2014.
They both were impressed by the

wealth and originality of the cultural


heritage of Madagascar.
Furthermore, the Angaredona Festival
of traditional music will take place
from 15 to 21 September 2013. Its purpose consists in giving young artists the
opportunity to be acknowledged by the
public. At the same time, foreign and
Malagasy researchers will lead conferences on archives and research.
A seminar on education and data updating will be held at the University of
Antananarivo in October, more precisely in the Department of Arts and
Humanities, in close collaboration with
the University of Reunion Island and
the Institute of Research and Development of France.
Moreover, conferences and communications regularly take place at the Malagasy Academy of Arts, Letters and Sciences, more particularly about musical
instruments which are the subjects of
ongoing research.
We hope to get the opportunity to attend conferences and events organized
by ICTM in the future, for it will be a
chance to share our knowledge.

and dissemination. Thus, the interdisciplinary nature of institutions such as


the Ethnomusicology Laboratory of the
Institute of Civilization of the University of Antananarivo (which includes
archaeologists, historians, sociologists,
and linguists) has greatly contributed
to acknowledge ethnomusicology as a
discipline to better understand the origin of Madagascars population.
With that aim in mind, the Ethnomusicology Laboratory is interested in
making comparative studies primarily
with other cultures of the Indian
Ocean, Africa, and Asia. The more recent inuence of European culture
should not be ignored, however. In

Dance group Bakomena, selected to represented Madagascar at the 2014 edition of the
DanceAfrica Festival in New York.
Bulletin of the ICTM Vol. 123 October 2013 Page 40

Thailand
by Bussakorn Binson,
Liaison Oicer

The Southeast Asian


Performing Arts Committee
Along with the online Thai music lesson project, the Faculty of Fine and

Though ethnomusicology is still a small disci-

Applied Arts at CU invited representative members of ICTM to formulate

pline in Thailand, our recent 42nd


ICTM World Conference in Shanghai
had a record number of Thai attendees

SEAPAC, the Southeast Asian Performing Arts Committee. SEAPACs

(over 30) as more scholars in Thailand


are becoming interested in ICTM.
Online Thai music lessons
However, Thai music at the international level remains somewhat remote,
due to a barrier of language and geography. To help educators and scholars,
Thailand, with the assistance of the
students at Chulalongkorn Universitys
Faculty of Fine and Applied Arts, has
launched a series of online Thai Music Lessons. This is a pioneering project to assist our ICTM colleagues in
their understanding of Thai music and
for use in their Ethnomusicology classrooms.
We hope to create and put online a
worldwide collection of ICTM music
lessons that will serve as an exchange
vehicle for traditional music knowledge
and practice as well as to promote
ICTM as an educational network. Thailand is the rst country of the ICTM
World Network to begin oering content online, and we encourage all National and Regional Representatives to
initiate the development of similar content to facilitate a better understanding
of their countrys traditional music.
For those who are interested, please
search YouTube for ICTM Thailand
Chulalongkorn University - Thai Music
Lesson, or click on this link. Lessons
range from focusing on individual instruments to ensembles from the dierent regions of Thailand. Folk music and
formal court music are also included.

principal objectives centre on designing


a graduate curriculum that may serve
ASEAN universities with programs in
performing arts.
SEAPAC met from 6 to 8 September
2013 in Pattaya, Thailand, to consider
graduate research and training programs that may benet from oering
joint programs of outstanding quality
at Masters and Doctoral levels. In
2008, the European Union initiated a
similar program administered by
EACEA (The Education, Audiovisual
and Culture Executive Agency of the
European Union) to encourage cooperation and mobility between institutions of higher education in the EU and
other countries. With the approach of
increased unilateral development for
ASEAN 2015, SEAPAC proposes a
joint postgraduate research program to
be developed in the Performing Arts of
Southeast Asia as a means to increase
the quality and training of degree programs.
There have already been similar initiatives such as the ASEAN composer
forum, rst implemented in Banawe,
Philippines, in 1989 and the Sonic Orders in ASEAN Traditional Music in
Singapore in 2003. However, there has
yet to be a sustained graduate research
program shared between ASEAN member states that oers postgraduate theory and method relevant to Southeast
Asian Performing Arts. The initial step
is to initiate a Summer School program
in 2014 attended by graduate research
students and teachers and implement a
pilot program.
Bulletin of the ICTM Vol. 123 October 2013 Page 41

Reports from ICTM Study Groups


African Musics
by Alvin Petersen,
Study Group Secretary
With the only exception
of the 40th World Conference of the ICTM,
which was hosted by the School of Music of the University of KwaZulu Natal
in Durban, South Africa, there was a
record number (in excess of 30) of delegates from Africa at the 42nd World
Conference of the International Council
for Traditional Music, held in Shanghai
in July 2013. This was facilitated by
the nancial sponsorship awarded by
the Local Arrangements Committee to
nine delegates from Kenya. Besides,
there were delegates from France, Finland, the USA, the UK, and elsewhere,
whose chief research interest is African
music, either in Africa or in the diaspora.
About 40 delegates attended the meeting of the ICTM Study Group on African Musics. Svanibor Pettan, Secretary
General of ICTM, was also present at
the meeting. Robert Chanunkha, Dep-

uty Chair, deputized to Patricia


Opond,o who was indisposed. The atmosphere was lively and the business
was accomplished within the given time
aorded by the conference time schedule. There is still a vacancy in the position as Treasurer.
Two of the 15 plenary presentations
concerned African music. On behalf of
the AMSG, may I take this opportunity to congratulate Susanne Frniss
(France), and Marie-Agatha Ozah
(USA) for being wonderful ambassadors
for the cause of the AMSG. Besides
these, more than thirty papers were
presented on a wide spectrum of topics
from diverse regions of Africa as well as
the diaspora.
During the General Assembly of the
Shanghai World Conference, Charles
Nyakiti Orawo (Liaison Ocier for
Kenya) thanked the Local Arrangements Committee and its Co-Chair
Xiao Mei in particular, for sponsoring

inclusion in the Yearbook for Traditional Music.


AMSG members are also urged to refer
regularly to the Study Group website
for news about a forthcoming AMSG
Study Group Symposium during 2015.
Further details concerning the location
and dates will be given as soon as they
become available.
New Study Group Subsection
During the AMSG general meeting,
Marie Agatha Ozah presented a proposal for the formation of a North
American Subsection of the AMSG.
She explained that it had been near
impossible for members in North America to interact in a scholarly manner
with those in the continent. The aim of
the Subsection is to increase the frequency of research activities and collaboration among scholars in the larger
study group. The Subsection will hold
biannual meetingssymposia in North

some Kenyan delegates.

America and the activities of the Subsection will be reported to AMSG bi-

AMSG members are urged to develop


their paper presentations into articles

annually. After a brief deliberation,


AMSG members approved the formation of the Subsection.

and submit them to ICTM for possible

The North American Subsection of the


ICTM Study Group on African Musics
met for the rst time on 17 July 2013
during the 42nd ICTM World Conference in Shanghai, China. Nine members
were present at the inaugural meeting.

Members of the Study Group on African Musics present at the Shanghai World Conference
Bulletin of the ICTM Vol. 123 October 2013 Page 42

Applied
Ethnomusicology
by Britta Sweers, Study
Group Secretary

Minutes of the 6th Meeting of


the ICTM Study Group on
Applied Ethnomusicology
Shanghai Conservatory of Music,
Shanghai, (12 July 2013, 16:00-17:15).
Co-chairs: Klisala Harrison (Study
Group Chair), Samuel Arajo (Vice
Chair), Britta Sweers (Secretary).
Approximately 30 members were present, including Evert Bisschop Boele,
Genevieve Campbell, Aaron Corn,
Denis Crowdy, Beverley Diamond, Nina
Grae, Ana Hofman, Keith Howard,
Heejin Kim, Kwon Oh-Sung, Bo-Hyung
Lee, Marcelo Lopes, Dan Lundberg,
Daniel Milosavljevi, Pirkko Moisala,
Min Y. Ong, Marie Christine Parent,
Svanibor Pettan, Franois Picard,
Sabrina Salis, Mary Saurman, Todd
Saurman, Huib Schippers, Anthony
Seeger, Anthea Skinner, Shzr Ee Tan,
and Nathan Watkins.

2. Location of the next


Symposium

approached Ashgate and Routledge,


and the former was interested, while

The assembled decided that the 4th


Symposium of the Study Group will

the latter expressed its preference for


textbooks. Svanibor Pettan suggested

take place in South Africas Eastern


Cape in 2014. The main organizer, who
was very keen to host the Study Group,
is Bernhard Bleibinger of the University of Fort Hare, who gave a presentation via Skype. The assembled participants discussed venue options of vari-

Bleibinger will take care to select a


range of accommodation aordable for

editors. We were informed that a number of papers were collected, and there
a table of contents also existed. As past

all. It was suggested that it would be


reasonable to visit the National Arts
Festival in Grahamstown, which takes
place in early July.
Security was discussed. As Bleibinger
pointed out, it is no problem to walk in
groups; likewise, one can take taxis.
One can y to an airport in East London via Johannesburg and Capetown.
Seeger and Howard also asked for the
option of visiting the International Library of African Music (ILAM) and
African Musical Instruments (AMI) in

Harrison informed members about the


history and biennial symposia of the

3. Themes for the 2014


Symposium

Study Group, which was initiated by


Svanibor Pettan in 2007. The Study
Group has had three symposia so far:

The themes of the 2014 symposium

themes covered so far, including the


topics of the highly interactive talking
circles that have been a central feature
of all Study Group Symposia.
The assembled discussed the option of
a creating Facebook page for the Study
Group, and Hofman volunteered to
create it.

other possible venue. The intention is


to produce a peer-reviewed volume.
Those assembled discussed delays re-

Grahamstown during the symposium.

(2012). A summary of the Cyprus


Symposium was provided and the main

of Musicology of the University of


Ljubljana, Musicology Annual. The
World of Music was mentioned as an-

ous campuses of the University of Fort


Hare in East London, Alice, and Hogsback.

1. Study Group Activities

in Ljubljana, Slovenia (2008), in Hanoi,


Vietnam (2010), and in Nicosia, Cyprus

the option of publishing the volume as


part of the journal of the Department

were announced. They are:

Applied ethnomusicology and institutions

Music and media

New work in applied ethnomusicology

(Editors note: please see this symposiums Call for Papers on page 21.)
4. Study Group Publications
Plans are in progress to publish a
mega-volume from the Cyprus and
South Africa Symposia. Harrison had

Bulletin of the ICTM Vol. 123 October 2013 Page 43

garding a volume planned in 2010 that


suered from the withdrawal of its two

and present Study Group chairs had


never had access to those papers, the
authors were being asked to send in
their latest versions in hopes to restart
the process. Schippers and Diamond
suggested an online publication in this
case.
A book featuring the work of Study
Group members, Applied Ethnomusicology: Historical and Contemporary
Approaches (2010), continues to attract
interest and readership.
5. Additional Business
Members informed about recent publications and projects. For Australian
examples, Corn spoke about the Information Technology and Indigenous
Communities project, while Campbell
described The Strong Kids Songs project. Examples of publications on applied ethnomusicology within the past
year include an article by Harrison in
Ethnomusicology (vol. 56, no. 3) and an
interview with Seeger published in the
journal El odo pensante (vol. 1, no. 2).
Publications in development include
the Oxford Handbook of Applied Ethnomusicology, edited by Svanibor Pettan and Je Todd Titon.

Ethnochoreology
by Liz Mellish
The Ethnochoreology:
Sub-Study Group on
Field Research Theory and Methods held a research experience entitled
Dance, Field Research, and Interethnic
Perspectives in the village of Svinia,
Romania, 4-7 May 2013.
A small group from the Sub-Study
Group spent four days in the village of
Svinia in the Danube Gorge in Romania. The villages along the Gorge are
ethnically divided into Romanian and
Serbian settlements. Svinia is the most
eastern Serbian village, which was geographically and historically separated
from the others. The trip was organized
by Selena Rakoevi in co-ordination
with Nicolae Kuri, the mayor of
Svinia, and we were delighted that
Anca Giurchescu, also Secretary of this
Sub-Study Group, was able to join us
and guide us during the trip.
The purpose of the trip was to record
Easter customs in the village, and in
particular the custom of giving a dance
or giving alms to the dead that is performed on the second day of Easter,
and in addition we were able to observe
and document the contemporary dance
practice in Svinia during two evening
dance balls that are held on Easter
Sunday and Monday.
We arrived in Svinia on Easter Saturday evening, and were entertained by
the local dance group Dunav who performed Serbian dances for us. Anca
stayed in the village with Cveta Novak,
one of the elderly village ladies,
whereas the rest of the group stayed at
a local pension.

Participants of the Svinia eldwork experience.

dead known as izlivanje. We returned


to the church for the mid-morning service and then followed a procession to
the local graveyard, where the priest
blessed the graves, and relatives of the
deceased left cakes and drinks for their
departed loved ones. Later in the day
we took part in the village competition
in breaking coloured Easter eggs, and
then spent the evening both recording
and joining in the dancing at the village ball.
On the following day in the afternoon
the mayor organized, and we recorded,
the custom of giving a dance or giving
alms to the dead, which is still alive in
this village and was performed at the
start of the second night of the evening
ball. On our nal day we made interviews with the mayor and one of the
local musicians.
The results of our observations will be
published towards the end of this year
in co-operation with the Union of Serbs
in Timioara. We were very grateful to
the mayor and people of Svinia for
their hospitality.

Folk Musical
Instruments
by Gisa Jhnichen,
Study Group Chair

Report on the 19th Symposium


of the ICTM Study Group on
Folk Musical Instruments,
Bamberg, 2023 March, 2013
On 20-23 March 2013, the ICTM Study
Group on Folk Musical Instruments
held its 19th Symposium in Bamberg,
Germany, invited by Marianne Brcker,
who organized the symposium in the
Concert Hall of the Schwenk & Seggelke Werksttte fr innovativen Klarinettenbau, and who was able to mobilize local support from various companies, colleagues and students. Forty-two
Study Group members met in the heart
of this wonderful World Heritage city
and had an inspiring time in a great
atmosphere with unique evening events.
The Symposium was dedicated to two
main topics. The rst topic dealt with
Wind Instruments in Regional
Cultures, whereby special emphasis
was given to reed instruments due to

After the all-night Easter service, early


in the morning all of us went to a special place outside the village to record a

the outstanding venue of the Symposium. The topic comprised the history

village custom of pouring water for the


Bulletin of the ICTM Vol. 123 October 2013 Page 44

of regional standards, as in the papers


of Christopher Meinel, Aspects of

vi, Masters Work: Constructing Music Instrument as a Material, Cultural

Georgia, and Manfred Bartmann,


Open G Tuning + Banjo + Cassette

Koncertina Playing in Upper Franconia, Rinko Fujita, Chin-don-ya

and Social Object, Juan Javier Rivera


Andia, An Amazonian Flute in the

Recorder = Rolling Stones. Traditional


Tunings of Banjos, Bouzoukis, and 5-

: Adaptation of Reed Aerophones

Andes? Morphology and Distribution of


an Exceptional Aerophone in Peru,

String Guitars in Rock Music, Folk


Music and Beyond. The latter also pre-

and Otgonbayar Chuluunbaatar: The


Cuur as Endangered Musical Instrument of the Uriankhai Ethnic Group in

sented an interesting multi-themed


poster for general discussion. Finally,
Madeleine Modin gave an overview on

the Mongolian Altai Mountains. Furthermore, Ulrich Morgenstern introduced his recent eldwork on Russian

her research of Ernst Emsheimers Extensive Network.

in Japan, Gisa Jhnichen, Sound Aesthetics in Lue Pi Performances, Lolita


Surmanidze, Chiboni: A Traditional
Wind Instrument as a Symbol of The
Region, Rewadee Ungpho, Pi Gayok:
the Musical Instrument of Urak Lawoi
Martial Arts, Arle Lommel, Standardization and Diversication of Bagpipes in the Carpathian Region, Ka-

double clarinets and ebnem Senerman spoke about the Organological

On Saturday afternoon, 23 March 2013,


the Study Group members discussed
some important points such as how

trin Lengwinat, Construction, Social


Practice and Music Production of two
Reed Instruments among the Wayuu

and Metaphorical Adaptation of Zurna


to the Changes in the Market.

Indians from Western Venezuela, or


Jrgen Elsner, A Wind-Instrument of

Another group of papers served the

papers will be submitted to the next


volume of Studia instrumentorum musicae popularis. Also, the existing pro-

second topic of the Symposium, Social


Signicance of Instrumental Music

cedures for elections of Study Group


Chair and Co-Chair were conrmed by

Practice. This topic explored musicians and teachers of instrumental mu-

present Study Group members.

Its Own: The Mizmar of Yemen, Construction and Production, Musical Prociency and Social Function.
Papers focusing mainly on regional ensembles and their social functions were
contributed by Ali Fuat Aydin, The
Kaba Zurna Tradition in the Aegean
Region of Turkey, Rta arskien,
The Role of Brass Bands in Funeral
Rituals of Samogitia, Timkehet Teffera, Brass Instruments in Ethiopian
Popular Music, as well as one panel
presented by Danka Laji-Mihajlovi,
Mirjana Zaki, and Miroslava LukiKrstanovi, The Festival Of Folklore
Trumpetry In Gua (Serbia): Music as
Aesthetics and Communication, and
the panel led by Rudolf Pietsch with
participation of Daniela Mayrlechner,
Manfred Riedl, and Marie-Theres
Stickler about The Edler-Trio.
Cross-disciplinary papers on wind instruments were delivered by Chinthaka
P. Meddegoda, Adaptation of the
Harmonium in Malaysia: Indian or
British Heritage?, Irina Popova,
About Teaching Methods of Playing
the Harmonica in the Folk Traditions
of the Russian North, Rastko Jakovlje-

sic and their social status within their


communities, general status issues and
politics on the instrumental music
market and other status dichotomies.
Contributions came from Nana Zeh,
Musicians and Musical Leaders, their
Social Status within their Communities
and the Changes Due to the Entrance
of Scholars, Susana Moreno, From
Marginalized Musical Instrument to
Regional Identity Symbol: the New
Status of the Rabel in Cantabria
(Spain), Vida Palubinskien, The

Topics for the next Symposium were


discussed after collecting proposals during the three days of the Symposium.
So far, the following topics were suggested:

Dance instruments Song instruments


Instrumental ensembles and cultural
discontinuities
Emotional implications of instrumental sound

The Study Group members were in-

Lithuanian Traditional Kankls and


Kankls players on Festivals, Marko

vited to discuss a change or modication of the name of the Study Group.

Aho, The introduction of Art Music


Elements to Folk Music Performance
and High Social Status: the Case of

It was agreed to conduct the next


Study Group Symposium in the World

Kantele-Master Eino Tulikari, Gaila


Kirdien, Signicance of Instrumental
Music Making of Lithuanians in Forced
Exile, Jasmina Talam, Players of traditional folk instruments in Bosnia and
Herzegovina, Margita Matuskova,
Status Dichotomies Regarding Instrumental Music Practice in Childrens
Folklore Ensembles, Nino Makharadze,
Childrens Musical Instruments in
Bulletin of the ICTM Vol. 123 October 2013 Page 45

Heritage city of Luang Prabang, Laos,


on 10-13 June 2015. The program
committee consists of Rinko Fujita,
Manfred Bartmann, and Rewadee
Ungpho. Local organizers are Thongbang Homsombat and Gisa Jhnichen.
The coordination is institutionally
bound to the Archives of Traditional
Music in Laos at the National Library
of Laos.

Travel grants cannot be provided. Long


term planning of attendance may keep

and a moment of silence was then


observed for Gerlinde Haid and

theme suggested by the local organizer was especially considered,

the costs for plane tickets low. The registration fee will not exceed 120 USD

Katalin Kovalcsik, who had passed


away since the last meeting of the

and Terada Yoshitaka suggested a


focus on gender and sexuality. A

per person, and students will be oered


a discount. The Symposium venue and

Study Group in 2012.

vote was called for, and the following three themes were thus se-

accommodation will be in one place.


Other, very low priced accommodation
will be available within walking distance. A call for papers will be circulated by January 2014 at the latest.

2.

3.

cles, which will be peer reviewed,


has been set for 15 August 2013.
The editing committee consists of

decades. All present Study Group


members and friends heartily appreci-

Ursula Hemetek, Adelaida Reyes


and Essica Marks.
4.

a big heart for her colleagues and students work, uncounted academic con-

5.

c) Music/Dance, Minorities and


Tourism
Besides these three themes, new research was added for the rst time in
the history of the Study Group to accommodate other worthy issues.
7.

Essica Marks. The last two members volunteered to serve in that


capacity upon the Chairs solicitation.

Terada Yoshitaka extended a formal invitation to the assembled to


8.

Group on Music and

a) Statelova, Rosemary. 2013. Musikalische Begegnungen bei den Sorben (Musical encounters with the
Sorbs). Bautzen: DomowinaVerlag (in German language).

dates, and possible excursions followed. A Call for Papers will be


announced in September and the

Minorities
Shanghai Conservatory of Music, 16

b) Pettan, Svanibor. 2012. Music


and minorities: An ethnomusicological vignette. In New Un-

deadline for the paper proposals


will be 1 December 2013

July 2013
6.

known Music. Essays in Honour


of Niksa Gligo, edited by Dalibor
Davidovi and Nada Bezi, 447-

In addition to the themes proposed


during the last Study Group Symposium in Zefat (postcolonial theory, cultural policy, digital media,
refugees, and sexuality), a few others were suggested at the meeting:
denitions of the minority concept,
and tourism. As is customary, a

Bulletin of the ICTM Vol. 123 October 2013 Page 46

The release of the following publications was announced.

and facility. A general discussion


about travel, accommodations,

Meeting of the ICTM Study

The Program Committee of the


next Symposium will consist of the
members of the Executive Committee, plus Inna Naroditskaya and

of Ethnology in Osaka, Japan. He


provided a PowerPoint presentation
showing the museums activities

Minutes of the 2013

Introductory remarks included a


warm welcome to members present;

The Chair announced a plan to


establish the website of the Study
Group and solicited cooperation

hold its next symposium on 19-23


July 2014 at the National Museum

Study Group Secretary

1.

b) Cultural Policy and Minorities


Music/Dance

the establishment of the website.

by Terada Yoshitaka,

chaired by Ursula Hemetek. The meeting was called to order at 6:00 PM.

Studies

from those with expertise. Wei Ya


Lin volunteered her service toward

tributions, and a never dwindling thirst


for knowledge.

ence in Shanghai, China (11-17 July


2013), the Study Group on Music and
Minorities held its business meeting,

Essica Marks reported that Cam-

2012 Symposium in Zefat. The new


due date for the submission of arti-

prised Marianne Brcker with a certicate of gratitude for her outstanding


service to ICTM during more than four

During the 42nd ICTM World Confer-

a) Gender and Sexuality in


Music/Dance and Minority

bridge Scholars Press had agreed to


publish the collection of essays
based on papers presented in the

ICTM Secretary General Svanibor Pettan attended the Symposium, and sur-

Music and
Minorities

lected.

2012 Symposium in Zefat were approved unanimously by hand vote.

Finally, it should be mentioned that

ated this gesture of recognition, and


joined his congratulation to one of the
most outstanding ICTM members, with

The Minutes of the Study Groups

456. Zagreb: DAF.


9.

The Chair thanked all present and


adjourned the meeting at 6:55 PM.

Calendar of Events
2123 Aug 2014: 4th Symposium of the ICTM

Upcoming ICTM Events


1 Jan 2014: Deadline for submissions, 2014 Yearbook for Traditional Music.
2123 Feb 2014: ICTM Ireland Annual Conference.
Location: Galway, Ireland.
Read more about the Symposium on pages 24-25.
15 Apr 2014: Second Call for Proposals for the
43rd ICTM World Conference.
1217 May 2014: 20th Symposium of the ICTM
Study Group on Historical Sources of Traditional
Music.
Location: Aveiro, Portugal.
Read more about the Symposium on page 24.
14-19 Jun 2014: 3rd Symposium of the ICTM
Study Group on Performing Arts of Southeast
Asia.
Location: Denpasar, Bali, Indonesia.
Read more about the Symposium on pages 32-33.
2729 Jun 2014: 10th Symposium of the ICTM
Study Group on Mediterranean Music Studies.
Location: Cambridge, United Kingdom.
Read more about the Symposium on page 25.
30 Jun4 Jul 2014: 4th Symposium of the ICTM
Study Group on Applied Ethnomusicology.
Location: East London, Hogsback, Grahamstown
(South Africa).
Read more about the Symposium on pages 21-22.
717 Jul 2014: 28th Symposium of the ICTM
Study Group on Ethnochoreology.
Location: Korula, Croatia.

Study Group on Musics of East Asia.


Location: Nara, Japan.
Read more about the Symposium on pages 30-32.
2430 Sep 2014: 4th Symposium of the ICTM
Study Group on Music and Dance in Southeastern
Europe.
Location: Belgrade and Valjevo, Serbia.
Read more about the Symposium on pages 26-28.
Dec 2014: notification of acceptances of proposals
for the 43rd ICTM World Conference.
16-22 Jul 2015: 43rd ICTM World Conference.
Location: Astana, Kazakhstan.
Read more about the World Conference on pages
18-20.

Upcoming events of related organizations


14-17 Nov 2013: 58th Annual Meeting of the Society for Ethnomusicology.
Location: Indianapolis, USA.
Read more about the meeting here.
22-26 Sep 2014: 7th International Symposium on
Traditional Polyphony.
Location: Tbilisi, Georgia.
Read more about the Symposium here.
16-18 Oct 2014: The Transnationalization of Religion through Music, International Conference.
Location: Montral, Canada.
For more information, please contact Hugo Ferran,
chair of the organizing committee.

Read more about the Symposium on its website.


1824 Jul 2014: 8th Symposium of the ICTM
Study Group on Music and Minorities.
Location: Osaka, Japan.
Read more about the Symposium on pages 28-30.

Bulletin of the ICTM Vol. 123 October 2013 Page 47

Recent Publications by ICTM


Members
Local and Global
Understandings of
Creativities: Multipart
Music Making and the
Construction of Ideas,
Contexts and Contents
Ardian Ahmedaja, ed.
Cambridge: Cambridge Scholars
Publishing, 2013.
In music making in
company, the protagonists have to
follow the rules of
interaction and create the cohesion of
being together. At
the same time, they
try to promote personal goals that depend on specic personal treasure
troves of experience. These are continuously being modied also as a result of the exchange between individuals. The perspective of the individuals
in company leads the emphasis of the
investigations to the ways in which the
acts of performance, interpretation and
local discourse give shape to creative
processes in multipart music making
and to the denition of the individual,
collective, and collaborative dimensions
in this context.
Focusing on the creators rather than
on the produced object, the studies
included in this volume explore the
diversity of the roles, powers, symbolism, meanings and values given to the
polyphony of voices in secular and
religious traditions based on extensive
eldwork experience. The contributors
to this volume also consider the

UNESCOs Intangible Cultural Heritage List in this context, as well as the

Hardcover, 374 pages.

role of local, national and international


awards. By understanding culture as a

ISBN: 978-2-336-00821-9.

drug, whose absorption is realized


within interacting cells, culture appears
as a cellular network and music as
quite an eicient device for its functioning.
Hardcover, 380 pages.
Language: English.
ISBN: 978-1-4438-4741-4.
Price: GBP 49.99.
Available from Amazon.

La polyphonie dans les


Pyrnes gasconnes:
Tradition, volution,
rsilience
Jean-Jacques Castret
Paris: LHarmattan, 2013.
In the region of
Pyrenean Gascony,
multipart singing is
frequently performed at Sunday
masses, patronal
festivities, or festive
gatherings. It has,

Language: French.
Price: EUR 37.50.
Available from the publisher.

Dschila le Romendar andar


o Burgenland - Lieder der
burgenlndischen Roma
Christiane Fennesz-Juhasz and
Emmerich Grtner-Horvath.
Uprutni Schica Oberschtzen, 2013.
This volume presents a collection of
songs which are
sung to this day by
the Roma peoples of
Burgenland, Austria. The songs were
collected in the areas of Oberwart and
Lovara (northern Burgenland), during
eldwork conducted in the middle of
the twentieth century. The samples
were selected and prepared by Christiane Fennesz-Juhasz from the Phonogrammarchiv of the Austrian Academy
of Sciences and Emmerich Gardener
Horvath, from the Roma Association
service, Kleinbachselten.

however, long been neglected by ethnomusicological research.

Paperback, 76 pages, photos, musical


transcriptions.

After fteen years of research, this

ISBN: 978-3-200-03109-8.

book invites the reader to discover a


social practice that draws on a very
classical and post-modern eld. The
author explores beyond the history of
this very resilient practice: the process
of transmission in the last fty years in
the context of mutation of the traditional society.

Bulletin of the ICTM Vol. 123 October 2013 Page 48

Language: German, Romany.


Available from the author.

Triguna: A Hindu-Balinese
Philosophy for Gamelan
Gong Gede Music
Made Mantle Hood.

The author combines ethnography,

A fast-changing

gamelan gong gede, the largest gamelan


orchestra of bronze gongs and percussion on the island of Bali, Indonesia.
This is the rst monograph to address
Balinese temple music through historical and religious texts. The rst section
gives voice to a small but representative group of communities in Balis
mountainous highlands. Through interviews, the book empowers musicians
local narratives about the origins and
ownership of their ancient heirloom
orchestras of bronze gongs and metallophones. The second section involves
an hermeneutic analysis of composition
titles according to Hindu-Balinese religious philosophies. The nal section uses
colours to highlight modal movement
within melodies. The analyses take into
account indigenous Balinese musical
terminology to describe tonal hierarchies in the most widespread repertoire
of religious instrumental music on the
island.
Paperback, 476 pages, illustrations,
musical analysis transcriptions in
colour, charts, diagrams.

Gisa Jhnichen and Chinthaka


Meddegoda, eds.
Serdang: UPM, 2013.

cial context and


musical praxis of

(Music Dance)
Environment

Berlin: Lit Verlag, 2010.

philosophy, and
musical analysis and
applies it to the so-

sound environment
creates re-structured
musical experiences
from various historical, social and ethnic backgrounds,
which inuence one of the most signicant cultural identity markers: the
auditive self-positioning in space and
time including related dynamic movements. Due to new dimensions of mobility this kind of self-positioning becomes even more important than the
real local placement of individuals. It
represents distinctiveness, inclusion and
exclusion of soundscapes and movement
patterns in a multilayered relationship
among dierent groups.
The fth volume of the Universiti Putra Malaysia book series on music research deals with the many aspects of
music and dance in and as environment. The title expresses in a formula
the dual existence as being part of and
being part within a whole that deter-

Trapped in Folklore?
Studies in Music and Dance
Tradition and Their
Contemporary
Transformations
Drago Kunej and Ura ivic, eds.
Zrich, Berlin: LIT, 2013.
Questions like
Trapped in folklore? open up many
possibilities for reection and prompt
dierent answers.
This thematic publication with a rather
provocative title discusses questions as
to whether the selected musical phenomena are a fossilized form of tradition, folklore and folklorism and, as
such, are trapped in a museum-like
image isolated from contemporary cultural life, or whether we are looking at
active events, changes and adjustments
within contemporary society.
The aim of the publication is to present
the openness and diversity of views on
folklore and to create a connection between (past and present) folklore phenomena, between researchers and between their elds of expertise.

mines features and functions of music


and dance throughout their history.

Hardcover, 222 pages, illustrations,


transcriptions.

Paperback, 286 pages, photos, transcriptions, CD-ROM with audiovisual


examples.

Language: English.

Language: English.
ISSN: 2289-3938.
Available from the publisher.

Language: English.
ISBN: 978-3-8258-1230-0.
Price: USD 74.95.
Available from Amazon.

Bulletin of the ICTM Vol. 123 October 2013 Page 49

ISBN: 978-3-643-90232-0.
Available from the editor.

The Art of n Ca Ti T
and Styles of Improvisation
Le Van Ton, Phm Minh Hng, eds.
Hanoi: Hong Duc, 2011.
This volume contains the proceedings of the International Conference
The Art of n Ca
Ti T, which was
held in Ho Chi
Minh City on 9-11
January 2011. It features 33 papers by authors from Cyprus, France, Germany, Japan, Korea,
Philippines, Singapore, and Vietnam.
Hardback, 400 pages, photos, transcriptions, diagrams.
Language: English.
Price: EUR 10 plus shipping.

Hardback, 464 pages.


Language: Ukrainian and English.

Java to demonstrate how Western performing arts practices were adapted

Musical Traditions.
Discovery, Inquiry,
Interpretation, and
Application

into the Javanese pallet of expression.


The author has made a comprehensive

Pl Richter, ed.
Budapest: HAS, Research Centre for
the Humanities, 2012.
This volume of proceedings from the
XXVI European
Seminar in Ethnomusicology, includes 26 papers by
authors from Australia, Austria, Czech
Republic, Greece, Hungary, Ireland,
Israel, Lithuania, Poland, Slovakia,
Slovenia, and Switzerland, the John

Blacking Memorial Lecture by Felfldi


Lszl, and the Keynote Paper by Vilmos Voigty.

Instruments of the Hutsuls]


Ihor Matsiyevsk,.
Vinnytsia: Nova Kniga, 2012.
This is a study of
the musical instruments of the Carpathian Ukrainians
known as Hutsuls. It
covers their entire

tions of form, the author looks back to


nineteen century colonial encounters in

Available from the publisher.

Available from the publisher.

[Musical

Paperback, 440 pages, photos,


musical transcriptions.
Language: English.
ISBN: 978-615-5167-01-1.
Available from the editor.

Javanese Gamelan and


the West

treatment of the hybridized construction of modern Javanese performing


arts and evidences how an art form
may dramatize cultural transformation,
change, and development processes.
Hardback, 280 pages, illustrations,
charts, diagrams.
Language: English.
ISBN: 978-158-0464-45-1.
Price: USD 79.58.
Available from Amazon.

Bartk Bla hangszeres


magyar npzenei gyjtse
knyvbemutatja
Tari, Lujza.
Dunaszerdahely: Cultural Institute
Csemadok, 2011.
This book represents the collections
of Bla Bartk, an
outstanding personality in both Hungarian and international ethnomusicology. Bartk collected Hungarian
instrumental folk music between 1906

ethnic area including Galicia, Bu-

Sumarsam.
New York: Rochester University Press,

and 1914. This collection is only now


released as a whole. Bartk transcribed

covina, and Transcarpathia both in


Ukraine and in Romania. The study is

2013.

based on a great variety of sources,


namely printed matter, manuscripts,
iconographic materials, oral evidence,

This book examines


the development of
Javanese performing
arts from the per-

the tunes very carefully after listening


to his phonograph recordings. The results of his collection are introduced in

and data from museums and private


collections, but mainly on the authors
own research on traditional instrumental music in the daily life and creative
practice of the Hutsuls.

spective of its contact with Western


culture. With a focus on changes in
meaning and adaptaBulletin of the ICTM Vol. 123 October 2013 Page 50

chronological order and in the order he


visited the villages of Hungary before
World War I. Bartks collections from
Nagymegyer and Iploysg (1910) bear
special signicance for the Hungarian
minorities of Slovakia, as his family ties
in the area in Pozsony and Gmr
country made the trips unique for the

composer as well. Many of the tunes


that were collected in the area became
parts of Hungarian and European music through Bartk, Weiner, and

Price: AUD 24.95 (print on demand),


or free download from publishers
website.

Kodlys utilization of folk songs in


classical music. This publication salutes
Bla Bartk on his 130th birthday anniversary.
Hardback, 396 pages, photos, musical
transcriptions.
Language: Hungarian.
ISBN: 978-80-89001-53-8.
Available from the author.

One Common Thread: The


Musical World of Lament
(Humanities Research
Volume XIX No. 3. 2013)
Wild, Stephen, Di Roy, Aaron Corn,
and Ruth Lee Martin, eds.
This volume includes a selection of
papers based on
those presented at
the 21st ICTM Colloquium on Laments, held in Canberra, Australia, on 20-22 April 2011.
The concept of laments was broadly
conceived as the musical expression of
loss and bereavement. There were three
main themes: (1) loss of place/
displacement; (2) personal loss, death,
funerals; and (3) cultural loss/language
loss. Musical cultures represented in
the colloquium included Scots Gaelic,
Chinese Australian, Fijian, Hawaiian,
Mongolian, Irish, Irish Australian,
Uzbekistani, Western popular music,
Papua New Guinean, and Australian
Aboriginal. Most of the presentations
appear as papers in the published volume.
Language: English.
ISSN: 1440-0669 (Print version),
ISSN 1834-8491 (Online).
Bulletin of the ICTM Vol. 123 October 2013 Page 51

ICTM World Network


The ICTM World Network is composed of individuals (Liaison Oicers) and representatives of organizations (National and
Regional Committees). All act as a link between the Council and the community of individuals involved with traditional music
and dance in their country or region.

Albania

Brazil

Ecuador

Sokol Shupo

Eurides Souza Santos

Mara Gabriela Lpez Ynez

Liaison Oicer

Chair of National Committee

Liaison Oicer

Send e-mail

Send e-mail

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Argentina

Bulgaria

Estonia

Silvia Citro

Rosemary Statelova

anna Prtlas

Liaison Oicer

Liaison Oicer

Liaison Oicer

Send e-mail

Send e-mail

Send e-mail

Australia and New


Zealand

Canada

Ethiopia

Sherry Johnson

Timkehet Teera

Dan Bendrups

Chair of National Committee

Liaison Oicer

Chair of Regional Committee

Send e-mail

Send e-mail

China

Finland

Austria

Xiao Mei

Jarkko Niemi

Thomas Nubaumer

Chair of National Committee

Chair of National Committee

Chair of National Committee

Send e-mail

Send e-mail

Cte d'Ivoire

France

Hien Si

Susanne Frniss

Sanubar Bagirova

Liaison Oicer

Chair of National Committee

Liaison Oicer

Send e-mail

Send e-mail

Croatia

Georgia

Bangladesh

Tvrtko Zebec

Joseph Jordania

Mobarak Hossain Khan

Chair of National Committee

Liaison Oicer

Chair of National Committee

Send e-mail

Send e-mail

Cyprus

Germany

Belarus

Panikos Giorgoudes

Dorit Klebe

Elena Gorokhovik

Chair of National Committee

Chair of National Committee

Liaison Oicer

Send e-mail

Send e-mail

Czech Republic

Greece

Zuzana Jurkov

IreneLoutzaki

Anne Caufriez

Liaison Oicer

Liaison Oicer

Liaison Oicer

Send e-mail

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Denmark

Guatemala

Eva Fock

Matthias Stckli

Chair of National Committee

Liaison Oicer

Send e-mail

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Azerbaijan

Send e-mail

Send e-mail

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Belgium

Send e-mail

Bosnia and
Herzegovina
Jasmina Talam
Chair of National Committee
Send e-mail

Bulletin of the ICTM Vol. 123 October 2013 Page 52

Hungary

Republic of Korea

Mexico

Sipos Jnos

Sheen Dae-Cheol

CarlosRuiz Rodriguez

Chair of National Committee

Chair of National Committee

Liaison Oicer

Send e-mail

Send e-mail

Send e-mail

India

Kuwait

Mongolia

Shubha Chaudhuri

Lisa Urkevich

Otgonbayar Chuluunbaatar

Chair of National Committee

Liaison Oicer

Liaison Oicer

Send e-mail

Send e-mail

Send e-mail

Indonesia

Laos

Montenegro

Made Mantle Hood

Bountheng Souksavatd

Zlata Marjanovi

Liaison Oicer

Liaison Oicer

Liaison Oicer

Send e-mail

Send e-mail

Send e-mail

Iran

Latvia

The Netherlands

Hooman Asadi

Martin Boiko

Evert Bisschop Boele

Liaison Oicer

Liaison Oicer

Liaison Oicer

Send e-mail

Send e-mail

Send e-mail

Ireland

Lebanon

Nigeria

Jaime Jones

Nidaa Abou Mrad

Richard C. Okafor

Chair of National Committee

Liaison Oicer

Liaison Oicer

Send e-mail

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Send e-mail

Israel

Lithuania

Norway

Edwin Seroussi

Rimantas Sliuinskas

Bjrn Aksdal

Liaison Oicer

Chair of National Committee

Chair of National Committee

Send e-mail

Send e-mail

Send e-mail

Italy

Oman

Ignazio Macchiarella

Macedonia
(FYROM)

Chair of National Committee

Velika Stojkova Seramovska

Chair of National Committee

Send e-mail

Japan

Chair of National Committee


Send e-mail

Khalfan al-Barwani
Send e-mail

Palau

Komoda Haruko

Madagascar

Howard Charles

Chair of National Committee

Mireille Rakotomalala

Liaison Oicer

Send e-mail

Kazakhstan

Liaison Oicer
Send e-mail

Send e-mail

Papua New Guinea

Saule Utegalieva

Malawi

NaomiFaik-Simet

Liaison Oicer

Robert Chanunkha

Liaison Oicer

Send e-mail

Kenya

Liaison Oicer
Send e-mail

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Peru

CharlesNyakiti Orawo,

Malaysia

Efran Rozas

Liaison Oicer

Tan Sooi-Beng

Liaison Oicer

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Liaison Oicer

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Bulletin of the ICTM Vol. 123 October 2013 Page 53

Philippines

Spain

Ukraine

Jos Buenconsejo

Enrique Cmara de Landa

Olha Kolomyyets

Liaison Oicer

Chair of National Committee

Liaison Oicer

Send e-mail

Send e-mail

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Poland

United Kingdom

Ewa Dahlig

Sri Lanka

Chair of National Committee

Lasanthi

Chair of National Committee

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ManaranjanieKalinga Dona

Send e-mail

Portugal
Salwa El-Shawan Castelo-

Liaison Oicer
Send e-mail

Keith Howard

United States of
America

Branco

Sudan

Chair of National Committee

Mohammed Adam Sulaiman

Chair of National Committee

Send e-mail

Abo-Albashar

Send e-mail

Romania
Constantin Secar

Liaison Oicer
Send e-mail

Liaison Oicer

Sweden

Send e-mail

Krister Malm

Russia
Alexander Romodin

Chair of National Committee


Send e-mail

Liaison Oicer

Switzerland

Send e-mail

Raymond Ammann

Serbia
Danka Laji-Mihajlovi

Chair of National Committee


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Harris Berger

Uruguay
Marita Fornaro
Liaison Oicer
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Uzbekistan
AlexanderDjumaev
Liaison Oicer
Send e-mail

Chair of National Committee

Taiwan

Vanuatu

Send e-mail

Tsai Tsung-Te

Raymond Ammann

Chair of Regional Committee

Liaison Oicer

Singapore
Joseph Peters

Send e-mail

Send e-mail

Liaison Oicer

Tanzania

Venezuela

Send e-mail

Imani Sanga

Katrin Lengwinat

Liaison Oicer

Liaison Oicer

Slovakia
Oskar Elschek

Send e-mail

Send e-mail

Chair of National Committee

Thailand

Vietnam

Send e-mail

Bussakorn Binson

Phm Minh Hng


Chair of National Committee

Slovenia
Mojca Kovai

Liaison Oicer
Send e-mail

Chair of National Committee

Turkey

Send e-mail

Arzu ztrkmen

South Africa
Alvin Petersen

Chair of National Committee


Send e-mail

Liaison Oicer

Uganda

Send e-mail

James Isabirye
Chair of National Committee
Send e-mail

Bulletin of the ICTM Vol. 123 October 2013 Page 54

Send e-mail

Zambia
Mwesa I. Mapoma
Liaison Oicer
Send e-mail

Zimbabwe
Jerry Rutsate
Liaison Oicer
Send e-mail

Study Groups
ICTM Study Groups are formed by ICTM members sharing a common area of scholarly study. Their general provisions are
dened by the Memorandum on Study Groups, and they are typically governed by their own further bylaws.
Study Groups organize meetings and symposia, and publish their own works.

African Music

Maqm

Music and Minorities

Chair: Patricia A. Opondo

Chair: Jrgen Elsner

Chair: Ursula Hemetek

Send e-mail to Chair

Send e-mail to Chair

Send e-mail to Chair

Visit Study Group website

Visit Study Group website

Visit Study Group website

Applied Ethnomusicology

Mediterranean Music

Music Archaeology

Chair: Klisala Harrison

Studies

Chair: Arnd Adje Both

Send e-mail to Chair

Chair: Marcello Sorce Keller

Send e-mail to Chair

Visit Study Group website

Send e-mail to Chair

Visit Study Group website

Ethnochoreology

Visit Study Group website

Music in the Arab World

Chair: Lszl Felfldi

Multipart Music

Chair: Scheherazade Hassan

Send e-mail to Chair

Chair: Ardian Ahmedaja

Send e-mail to Chair

Visit Study Group website

Send e-mail to Chair

Visit Study Group website

Folk Musical Instruments

Visit Study Group website

Music of the Turkic-

Chair: Gisa Jhnichen

Music and Dance in

Speaking World

Send e-mail to Chair

Southeastern Europe

Chairs: Dorit Klebe & Razia Sul-

Visit Study Group website

Chair: Velika Stojkova

tanova

Send e-mail to Chair

Send e-mail to Chairs

Visit Study Group website

Visit Study Group website

Co-Chairs: Susanne Ziegler & Ingrid

Music and Dance of Oceania

Musics of East Asia

kesson

Chair: Denis Crowdy

Chair: Frederick Lau

Send e-mail to Chairs

Send e-mail to Chair

Send e-mail to Chair

Visit Study Group website

Visit Study Group website

Visit Study Group website

Iconography of the

Music and Gender

Performing Arts of

Performing Arts

Chair: Barbara Hampton

Southeast Asia

Chair: Zdravko Blaekovi

Send e-mail to Chair

Chair: Patricia Matusky

Send e-mail to Chair

Visit Study Group website

Send e-mail to Chair

Historical Sources of
Traditional Music

Visit Study Group website

Visit Study Group website

Bulletin of the ICTM Vol. 123 October 2013 Page 55

Salwa El-Shawan Castelo-Branco

Don Niles

Stephen Wild

President

Vice President

Vice President

Portugal

Papua New Guinea

Australia

Svanibor Pettan

Carlos Yoder

Secretary General

Executive Assistant

Slovenia

Argentina/Slovenia

Samuel Arajo, Jr.

Naila Ceribai

Jean Kidula

Mohd Anis Md Nor

Executive Board Member

Executive Board Member

Executive Board Member

Executive Board Member

Brazil

Croatia

Kenya/USA

Malaysia

Jonathan P.J. Stock

Razia Sultanova

Kati Szego

Terada Yoshitaka

Executive Board Member

Executive Board Member

Executive Board Member

Executive Board Member

UK/Ireland

UK

Canada

Japan

Trn Quang Hi

J. Lawrence Witzleben

Xiao Mei

Saida Yelemanova

Executive Board Member

Executive Board Member

Executive Board Member

Executive Board Member

France

USA

China

Kazakhstan

Bulletin of the ICTM Vol. 123 October 2013 Page 56

Membership information
The International Council for Traditional Music is
an Non-Governmental Organization in formal consultative relations with UNESCO. Its aims are to further the study, practice, documentation, preservation and
dissemination of traditional music and dance of all countries. To these ends the Council organizes World Conferences, Symposia and Colloquia.

(**) Individuals may take advantage of Student Membership rates for a maximum of ve years. Proof of student
status will be required.
(***) Available only to applicants retired from full time
work which had been members of the ICTM for at least 5
years.

The Council publishes the Yearbook for Traditional Music,


distributes the online Bulletin of the ICTM, and maintains

Memberships for organizations

an online Membership Directory.

libraries, regional scholarly societies, radio-television organizations and other corporate bodies. Corporate Members are

By means of its wide international representation and the


activities of its Study Groups, the International Council for
Traditional Music acts as a bond among peoples of dierent
cultures and thus serves the peace of humankind.

Membership
All memberships to ICTM run from 1 January to 31 December, except for Life and Joint Life Memberships (see
below).

Corporate Memberships are available to institutions,

able to choose the number of individuals they would like to


attach to their Corporate Membership (minimum 4). These
Corporate Related Members enjoy the same benets of full
Ordinary Members, i.e., participate in the Council's activities, vote in elections, receive publications, and access premium website content.
Institutional Subscriptions to the Yearbook for Traditional Music are available in electronic-only, print+only and
print+electronic formats. Please visit this page for more
information.

Members in good standing are entitled to:


1. Participate in the activities of the Council (such as presenting a paper at a World Conference).

Supporting memberships
All members who are able to sponsor individuals or institu-

2. Receive the Council's publications.


3. Obtain access to premium website content (such as the
ICTM Online Directory).
4. Vote in ICTM elections.

Memberships for individuals

tions in a soft currency country are urged do so by paying


an additional fee of EUR 30.00 for each sponsored membership or institution. If the recipient is not named, ICTM will
award the supported membership to one or more individuals or institutions in such country.

Ordinary Membership: EUR 60.00

Payment methods

Joint Ordinary Membership (*): EUR 90.00

Student Membership (**): EUR 40.00

Emeritus Membership (***): EUR 40.00

Remittance payable to the ICTM Secretariat is preferred in


euros via Electronic Funds Transfer (aka bank transfer,
giro, wire transfer, or SEPA/UPO order). Other currencies

Life Membership:EUR 1,200.00

Joint Life Membership (*):EUR 1,500.00

(*) Joint Memberships are available for spouses who both


wish to join. They receive only one set of ICTM publica-

and payment methods are accepted (major credit and debit


cards, PayPal, cheques), but additional charges may apply.
For any questions regarding memberships, please write to
[email protected].

tions, but otherwise enjoy all other privileges and responsibilities of ordinary members.

Bulletin of the ICTM Vol. 123 October 2013 Page 57

Publications by ICTM
Yearbook for
Traditional Music

Bulletin of the ICTM

The Yearbook for Traditional Musicis a refereed scholarly


journal which carries essays, reviews, and reports in the area
of traditional music and dance research.
ISSN (Print): 0740-1558.

The Bulletin of the International Council for Traditional


Musiccarries news from the world of traditional music and
dance, a calendar of upcoming events, and reports from
ICTM Study Groups and ICTM National and Regional Representatives.

ISSN (Online): 2304-3857.

ISSN (Online): 2304-4039

General Editor:Kati Szego.

Editor:Carlos Yoder.

The Yearbookwas established in 1949 as theJournal of the

TheBulletin of the ICTMwas established in 1948 as


theBulletin of the International Folk Music Council. Until

International Folk Music Council, and itis published in English every November.All ICTM members and institutional
subscribers in good standing receive a copy of the Yearbook
via priority air mail.
The 2013 issue of the Yearbook (Vol. 45) will be published
next month, in November 2013.

its April 2011 issue (Vol. 118), the Bulletin was printed and
posted to all members and subscribers in good standing.
Starting with its October 2011 issue (Vol. 119), theBulletin
became an electronic-only publication.
The Bulletin of the ICTMis made available through the
ICTMs website in January, April, October each year. It can
be downloadedfree of charge, and all are encouraged to redistribute it according to the Creative Commons BY-NC-SA
3.0 Unported License which protects it.
For more information about submissions, and how to access
or purchase back issues, please visit the Bulletins home page.

Directory of Traditional Music


The Directory of Traditional Music is a discontinued biennial
publication which listed ICTM members in good standing,
ordered by country, interests, projects, and eldwork. A
complete alphabetical index of members and subscribers in
good standing was also included.
Its last issue was published in 2005 by the Department of
Ethnomusicology of the University of California, United
States of America.
ISSN (Print): 0893-3068.
In 2010, the Directory was relaunched as an electronic-only
publication within the main ICTM website.

For more information about submissions to the Yearbook, and


how to get back issues (both in print and electronic form),
please visit the Yearbooks home page.

Bulletin of the ICTM Vol. 123 October 2013 Page 58

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