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The wave of sound recordings of traditional music and dance that spread throughout France and Europe from the 1960s onwards led to the creation of documentary collections, often decades after the collections were made, and we are now seeking to gain a clearer understanding of their origins and scope...

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Main Author: Jean-Jacques Castéret
Format: Article
Language:fra
Published: Ministère de la Culture et de la Communication 2024-12-01
Series:In Situ
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/insitu/42672
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author Jean-Jacques Castéret
author_facet Jean-Jacques Castéret
author_sort Jean-Jacques Castéret
collection DOAJ
description The wave of sound recordings of traditional music and dance that spread throughout France and Europe from the 1960s onwards led to the creation of documentary collections, often decades after the collections were made, and we are now seeking to gain a clearer understanding of their origins and scope. This article looks at the wide variety of recordings and the trajectories of collectors who are largely unknown or even unsuspected. Their autobiographical testimonies describe dynamics that are in part distinct, yet expressed in the same societal in-between, all nourished by frustrations and, against the backdrop of social protest in the late 1960s, aspirations to build a new world. These trajectories between two worlds, opposing town and country, capital and periphery, also take place in an in-between period that is bound to raise questions, the time of an invisible initiation (Fabre) with tape recorder in hand, of which the resulting archive and autobiographical narrative are the audible mark.
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publishDate 2024-12-01
publisher Ministère de la Culture et de la Communication
record_format Article
series In Situ
spelling doaj-art-889da8e6139c435dae882a096eacee172025-01-09T12:43:58ZfraMinistère de la Culture et de la CommunicationIn Situ1630-73052024-12-015410.4000/12w7eEn mode REC[ORD] Jean-Jacques CastéretThe wave of sound recordings of traditional music and dance that spread throughout France and Europe from the 1960s onwards led to the creation of documentary collections, often decades after the collections were made, and we are now seeking to gain a clearer understanding of their origins and scope. This article looks at the wide variety of recordings and the trajectories of collectors who are largely unknown or even unsuspected. Their autobiographical testimonies describe dynamics that are in part distinct, yet expressed in the same societal in-between, all nourished by frustrations and, against the backdrop of social protest in the late 1960s, aspirations to build a new world. These trajectories between two worlds, opposing town and country, capital and periphery, also take place in an in-between period that is bound to raise questions, the time of an invisible initiation (Fabre) with tape recorder in hand, of which the resulting archive and autobiographical narrative are the audible mark.https://journals.openedition.org/insitu/42672initiationBrittanyheritagizationcollectingfield recordingethnomusicology
spellingShingle Jean-Jacques Castéret
En mode REC[ORD] 
In Situ
initiation
Brittany
heritagization
collecting
field recording
ethnomusicology
title En mode REC[ORD] 
title_full En mode REC[ORD] 
title_fullStr En mode REC[ORD] 
title_full_unstemmed En mode REC[ORD] 
title_short En mode REC[ORD] 
title_sort en mode rec ord
topic initiation
Brittany
heritagization
collecting
field recording
ethnomusicology
url https://journals.openedition.org/insitu/42672
work_keys_str_mv AT jeanjacquescasteret enmoderecord