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EN
In the 60ties we had a fruitful cooperation between folk song, instrumental and dance research, which influenced vocal research backward as an autonomous field. They developed to a wider field with special themes and interdisciplinary relations. The contribution joins to papers of A. Elscheková and S. Burlasová, presented on the 1st Ethnomusicological seminar (1970), and reflects the investigation of the last 30 years. Our considerations refer mainly to the 90ties, when important changes have been accomplished, influenced by external and internal processes. From fieldwork to archival investigations, to short time fieldwork, focusing on restricted topics, having in mind European relations, connected with new methods and technical aspects. We shall concentrate our interest to the working procedures with the material collected, without taking into account fieldwork and editorial issues. They firstly depend on the research and disciplinary context; musicology - ethnomusicology, ethnology - folkloristic, literary research anthropology, sociology etc. Our evaluation is based on ethnomusicological aspects. There is a change of the concept of folk song, traditional song, having in mind their function, changing from song to vocal music at all, its social meaning, function, holder etc. , and in interpreting them also as a marginal phenomenon. The topics are shifted - bearer, repertory, song genre, minorities, urban ethnomusicology etc., which are in the front of interest. The transition has influenced also further special themes as: variation process, multi-part music, text-music relations, function, musical structure etc. The processing has been attached by the computer use, in building e.g. databases, catalogues, and applying sound analysis. The shifting from autonomous structural view to contextual analysis was important for a better understanding, including also the proper music structure and its mutual text relations.
EN
Bratislava Choral Society, founded in 1879, focused on the cultivation of mixed choral singing. Under the leadership of its first choirmaster Anton Strehlen (1879 – 1906), its concerts were already of a high artistic level. The programmes of concerts and soirées consisted of cantatas, choirs, hymns, vocal ensembles (especially vocal quartets), extracts from operas, and also instrumental music. This article is concerned with the Society’s concert repertoire in the era of A. Strehlen, particularly the presentation of cantata works (by R. Mader, N. W. Gade, R. Schumann, M. Bruch, H. Hofmann, G. Zichy, among others) and their reception. New findings are presented on the biography of A. Strehlen and other singers and instrumentalists participating in the Society’s activity.
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