The Musicology LabTeamwork and the Musicological Toolbox

  1. Álvaro Torrente 1
  2. Ana Llorens 2
  1. 1 Instituto Complutense de Ciencias Musicales
  2. 2 Universidad Complutense de Madrid
    info

    Universidad Complutense de Madrid

    Madrid, España

    ROR 02p0gd045

Libro:
Music Encoding Conference Proceedings 2021, 19–22 July, 2021 University of Alicante (Spain): Onsite & Online
  1. Stefan Münnich (dir. congr.)
  2. David Rizo (dir. congr.)

Editorial: Universidad de Alicante / Universitat d'Alacant

ISBN: 978-84-1302-173-7

Año de publicación: 2022

Páginas: 9-20

Tipo: Capítulo de Libro

Resumen

Musicology is a small discipline within the wide spectrum of human knowledge, yet it is already divided intovarious branches, each with its own societies, conferences, journals, jargons, degrees, prejudices, …, and jobs.Although they share their object of investigation – “the art of music as a physical, psychological, aesthetic, andcultural phenomenon” [4, p. 153] –, these branches very often ignore one another. Research in musicology ismostly a solitary task, as investigations, papers, and publications are commonly signed by single authors, incontrast with STEM disciplines where teamwork is the rule. This is in part the result of tradition – the “Musicological Toolbox” [22] – but also the aftermath of the job market and financing programs.Large funding schemes such as the European Research Council (ERC) grants are becoming a major disruptivefactor in many disciplines in the humanities, including musicology. Scholars in all fields now have the opportunity to build research teams, and most of their members receive their salaries to exclusively work on theproject. In other words, we are starting to build what could be called a Musicology Lab, learning along the wayhow teamwork is reshaping and transforming the Musicological Toolbox, the look and feel of our discipline, theway we work as well as the way we publish and disseminate our results.This paper presents some of the key features of the ERC Didone project, one of its principal tasks being tocreate a digitally encoded corpus of some 3,000 arias in MusicXML format from about 180 musical settingsof a small number of opera librettos by Pietro Metastasio. It focuses on some of the project’s research tasks,emphasizing how the skills of a team of eighteen scholars with very different expertise – historical musicology,music theory and analysis, cultural history, librettology, archival research, music performance, music engraving, MIR, computer science, and statistical modeling – combine to explore the potential answer(s) to the mainresearch question of the project: How are emotions expressed through music?