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1 - The notion of relevance

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 January 2010

Simha Arom
Affiliation:
Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Paris
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Summary

WHAT IS RELEVANCE?

Having developed a method and shown it to be well-founded, we now have the technique we need to transcribe and analyse polyphony. We can record unwritten polyphonic music part by part, and our recordings enable us to see how the parts combine and interlock. They thus provide the raw material for further research; however, analysis as such cannot begin without a transcription.

We now come to a fundamental methodological question. Do we want a rational and meaningful transcription based on the way the people who use the music perceive and understand it, i.e., do we really want to follow through with our stated purpose of setting aside whatever Western notions we might be tempted to project onto African music? If so, before we actually start to transcribe, we must develop another device to enable us to determine what we can and ought to extract from our recorded material. Referring only to criteria present in the musical tradition under study, the investigator should be able to decide which data in the raw material are meaningful, and which are not. We therefore require a device like a sequence of filters, which can separate out whatever is meaningful. This device must operate on the basis of the notion of relevance.

The musicologist has, in fact, a choice of two alternatives. He may remain as close to the recorded material as he can and try to note every detail with maximal accuracy. This approach, while apparently convincing from the acoustic standpoint, nevertheless suffers from the fact that there is no limit of ultimate accuracy, as transcriptions like Bartók's have shown. The other possibility would be to try to determine beforehand what the members of the community consider to be meaningful in their own music.

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Chapter
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African Polyphony and Polyrhythm
Musical Structure and Methodology
, pp. 137 - 157
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1991

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