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Wyświetlanie 1-3 z 3
Tytuł:
Idee i wzorce muzyczne luteranizmu w zderzeniu z kulturą ludową
Musical Ideas and Models of Lutheranism in Collision with Folk Culture
Autorzy:
Nawrocka-Wysocka, Arleta
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/521904.pdf
Data publikacji:
2011
Wydawca:
Akademia Muzyczna im. Stanisława Moniuszki w Gdańsku
Tematy:
Lutheranism
chorale
old way singing
congregational singing
oral tradition
acculturation
ethnohymnology
Scandinavia
Masuria
Opis:
The clash of Lutheranism with traditional culture is the subject of research by contemporary Scandinavian hymnologists, who propose a creation of a separate research discipline: ethnohymnology. The use of traditional historical methods and those borrowed from anthropology and ethnomusicology allows for observation of normative and unchanging ideas (i.e. contained within sources of ideas and patterns) on one hand, and dynamic elements transmitted by oral tradition on the other. According to Martin Luther’s presumptions, an excellent and widespread model of music should be a monophonic religious hymn inspired by Gregorian chant, pre-Reformation church hymns, and German folk songs. A huge role in the dissemination of such a repertoire among the common people was played by songbooks used during individual and family prayers. For local communities, they were almost relics that were not parted with both in everyday life and during holidays. Most often, the songbooks contained no musical notation, so people were learning the melodies of the songs by ear during church services, or at home from their parents and grandparents. In 19th-century sources, the predominant level in the liturgy of the Lutheran rural churches was evaluated as appalling, and congregation singing was described as chaotic and devoid of any artistic rules. According to contemporary scholars, calls to unify and improve the artistic merit appeared in Scandinavian churches with the wave of a widespread movement of renewal, which emerged in the German Lutheran Church in the early 19th century. These relations also confi rm the presence of a characteristic style of Lutheran singing called “the old way of singing” in Scandinavia and the Baltic countries. Originally, the term used to describe a singing style that existed during several centuries in the parish churches of England (from the 15th to the 18th century), and it was later adopted, by analogy, from English musicology. As the main determinants of the old practice, the following factors are mentioned: isolated communities, diffi cult access to churches, replacing church services with family prayer, lack of organs in churches, and lack of codifi ed collections of hymn tunes. Characteristic features of the style are: slow tempo, very loud singing, a melismatic richness and heterophony resulting from superimposing variants of the melodies. After the reform, this style was eliminated from the liturgy and survived only fragmentarily within situations outside the church (during individual prayer, work, folk customs), or was cultivated by pietistic religious communities. This is confi rmed by fi eld recordings conducted in the 20th century in the Scandinavian countries, the Baltic countries, as well as Masuria.
Źródło:
Aspekty Muzyki; 2011, 1; 141-155
2082-6044
Pojawia się w:
Aspekty Muzyki
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
Rekonstrukcja XIX-wiecznej mapy muzycznych tradycji polskojęzycznych ewangelików
Reconstructing the map of 19th-century music traditions among Polish-speaking Protestants
Autorzy:
Nawrocka-Wysocka, Arleta
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/28408355.pdf
Data publikacji:
2019
Wydawca:
Polska Akademia Nauk. Instytut Sztuki PAN
Tematy:
ewangelicyzm
kancjonał
luteranie
chorał luterański
Mazury Pruskie
Śląsk Cieszyński
Słowińcy
Protestantism
hymnbook
Lutherans
Lutheran chorale
Prussian Masuria
Cieszyn Silesia
Slowinzen
Opis:
W badaniach tradycji muzycznych polskich ewangelików kategoria pogranicza jest bardzo pomocna i nośna. Ze względu na rozmieszczenie geograficzne i uzależnienie polityczne społeczności te, mimo iż starały się utrzymywać lokalną tradycję pozostawały pod dużym wpływem kultury oficjalnej. Na XIX-wiecznej mapie tradycji polskich ewangelików takich społeczności występowało całkiem sporo – kilka z nich uległo dezintegracji i zanikowi. Wykorzystując wyniki najnowszych badań historyków, etnografów i religioznawców, a także informacje zgromadzone podczas kwerend źródłowych autorka podejmuje w artykule próbę nakreślenia XIX-wiecznej mapy tradycji polskich ewangelików. Na mapie oprócz społeczności lepiej znanych, jak ewangelicy ze Śląska Cieszyńskiego czy społeczność ewangelicka z Mazur Pruskich zostali umieszczeni również ewangelicy Pomorza Zachodniego (tak zwani Słowińcy), „zapomniany” lud z południowej Wielkopolski, ewangelicy z Dolnego i Górnego Śląska oraz z Królestwa Polskiego. Opracowanie  naświetla takie problemy jak: przenikanie kultur narodowych (niemieckiej i czeskiej zwłaszcza), wzajemne wpływy pomiędzy rozproszonymi społecznościami ewangelickimi, oraz postrzeganie tych społeczności przez duchownych i władze Kościoła. Muzyczne tradycje rozumiane są jako zwyczaje towarzyszące śpiewom religijnym oraz repertuar propagowany przez lokalne śpiewniki. W artykule zagadnienia te, jak również lokalny styl wykonawczy omówione są bardzo ogólnie, gdyż szczegółowa analiza zawartości poszczególnych śpiewników i porównanie zachowanych zapisów melodycznych wymaga osobnego opracowania. Ze względu na niesymetryczność zachowanych źródeł, dokładna rekonstrukcja mapy tradycji nie jest możliwa. W artykule przedstawiono jednak po raz syntetyczny obraz poszczególnych społeczności luterańskich obejmujący elementy uniwersalne i istotne cechy wyróżniające.
The category of the frontier is very helpful and popular in the study of the Polish Protestant music traditions. Owing to their geographic location and political dependencies, these communities – though striving to cultivate their local traditions – were under the strong influence of official culture. The map of Polish 19th-century Protestant music traditions shows many such communities, though several of them later disintegrated and disappeared. On the basis of most recent research undertaken by historians, ethnographers and specialists in religious studies, as well as information collected during source surveys, the author attempts to draw a map of Polish 19th-century Protestant traditions. Apart from well-known communities, such as those found in the Těšín (Pol. Cieszyn) region in Silesia and in Masuria (part of Prussia at that time), the map also includes Western Pomerania (the so-called Slowinzen in German, Słowińcy in Polish), the ‘forgotten folk’ of southernGreater Poland, the Protestants of the Lower and Upper Silesia, as well as of the (Congress) Kingdom of Poland. The article discusses such issues as the interpenetration of national cultures (especially German and Czech with the local one), mutual influences among the widely scattered Protestant communities, and the perception of those communities by the clergy and by the Church authorities. Music traditions are understood here as the customs that accompany religious song performances and the repertoire promoted in the local hymnbooks. I discuss these topics (as well as local performance styles) in very general terms, since a detailed analysis of the hymnbook contents and comparison of the preserved (notated) melodies calls for a separate study. The sources have been preserved to a different extent in different places, which makes a precise reconstruction of the map of traditions largely impossible. What this paper therefore attempts to do is to provide a synthetic picture of the various Lutheran communities, their universal as well as specifically local qualities.
Źródło:
Muzyka; 2019, 64, 2; 70-88
0027-5344
2720-7021
Pojawia się w:
Muzyka
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
Pomerania non cantat? Uwagi o ewangelikach z Pomorza Zachodniego, ich repertuarze religijnym i sposobie śpiewania
Pomerania non cantat? Remarks on Lutherans of Western Pomerania, their religious repertoire and way of singing
Autorzy:
Nawrocka-Wysocka, Arleta
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/521861.pdf
Data publikacji:
2014
Wydawca:
Akademia Muzyczna im. Stanisława Moniuszki w Gdańsku
Tematy:
Kashubians
Lutherans
Slovincians
cantional
religious songs
chorale
Western Pomerania
Opis:
Because of geographical distribution, origin, political involvement and religious specificity, Lutherans of Western Pomerania are treated as a border community. The largest populations of Polish-speaking Protestants occurred in the counties of Lębork, Bytów and Słupsk. This commu-nity disappeared at the end of the nineteenth century, although still in the 20s and 30s, researchers recorded a lot of people who knew the Kashubian dialect. Lutherans in the Kashubian region were generally unknown to religious communities of Masuria, Silesia and the Polish Kingdom. More knowledge about them brought only through a study conducted by Alexander Hilferding — a Russian Slavicist traveling in these areas in 1856. The greatest popularity in the definition of this com-munity has won ethnonym Slovincians propagated by Alexander Hilferding. Available sources and studies mainly publish information on the language, especially its use in church services and teach-ing religion. Thera are, however, extremely rare eyewitness accounts relating used hymn books and cantionals, popularity of a particular repertoire and the context of its practice. From the relation-ship and visitation of church printed from the sixteenth to the eighteenth century, we know that they were used in religious services “Polish songbooks”. The oldest of them is cantional prepared by a priest Simon Krofey from Bytów with a handwritten appendix compiled from the sixteenth to the eighteenth century. Pastor Lorek from Cecenowo immortalized in the consciousness of later generations stereotypes of a tacit and gloomy Kashubian. However, according to later observers, Kashubians sang willingly and often but only a religious repertoire, while the folk song and dance sounded very rare. Considering the available sources it seems that the inhabitants of these lands — like the Protestants from Silesia and Masuria had used their own repertoire, which could be performed in an original and unique way.
Źródło:
Aspekty Muzyki; 2014, 4; 31-51
2082-6044
Pojawia się w:
Aspekty Muzyki
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
    Wyświetlanie 1-3 z 3

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