Människorna, musiken och de mekaniska instrumenten i Norge cirka 1480-1890
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Date
2024-01-30
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Abstract
An international history of mechanical musical instruments is well documented from a
technological perspective (innovation, patents etc.), for instance musical clocks, barrel organs,
musical box and organettes. The purpose of this study is to elucidate the specific
region of Norway from a sociocultural narrative, by analyzing the emergence, distribution,
and reception of these instruments. The hitherto unexplored Norwegian milieu is compared
with the canonized European. The study is enabled by the rich sources of digitalized
newspapers, domestic literature as well as well-registered extant mechanical instruments in
museums. Four articles enlighten the mechanical instruments from various organological
perspectives by: 1) examining musical clocks through a sound study analysis, 2) recanonizing
the repertory in the Norwegian clocks, 3) analyzing changes of concepts, examining
the slow establishment of barrel organs, and 4) exploring idiomatic adjustments of arrangements
of disc music boxes and comparing them with the original score. The study
shows how mechanical instruments in Norway were established with a delay in time in
comparison to the international scene. Also, a distinctive hymnal repertory can be noted
in musical clocks. Later, the initial import of music boxes by non-music specialists shifted
during the 1800s to an effective distribution by direct import from the producers, retailers
in general or by the specialized music trade, when also the term «mechanical instruments»
was established. Central uses over the years include the imitation of nature (during the
Enlightenment period), to show good taste, to use as a tool of power for rationality (time
discipline) as well as stressing the magic perspective (look, no hands) and to give consolation.
They also played an important part in the emerging entertainment and consumer
market In the thesis I juxtapose technical and social perspectives on the music box discs &
cylinders as on the phonograph. This opens for a new understanding of the distribution of
tangible, portable, repeatable, and temporal musical objects, and in the long term, of the
process of mediatization and musicalization of society. Finally, a discussion on the Ogden
& Richards theory of symbol-thought-referent can serve as a tool for museum use in terminology
and taxonomy matters.
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Keywords
Classification, Barrel Organ, Cylinder Music Box, Disc Music Box, Idiomacy, Mechanical Instrument, Mediatization, Musical Clock, Musicalization, Musical Canon, Music Repertory, Organology, Popular Music, Terminology