CHIGIANA CONFERENCE 2021

“Music and Power in the Long Nineteenth Century”
2-4 December 2021

The instrumentalization of the arts, including music, to represent and exercise power has been investigated extensively within the societal context of the ancien régime and the twentieth century, mostly in relation to absolutism and dictatorship. This conference shall instead delve into this topic during the “long nineteenth century” (c. 1789-1914): the age of the Industrial Revolution, liberalism and social conflicts, nationalism, and colonialism.

‘Power’ is understood not only in the strictly political sense, as state power, or as the domination of one nation or ethnic group over others; rather, in light of recent historiographical and philosophical debates, the scope of the concept extends broadly to all aspects of social life where there is a significant relationship of domination/submission. The geographical scope will focus on the Western world (Europe and the Americas), including extra-European territories subject to or influenced by colonial rule. Papers will cover the entire field of music without limitations in genre, from sacred to instrumental music, from musical theater to folk song, and beyond.

The conference sessions will be broadcast live online on this page.
All times are in the Central European time zone UTC+1.

SCIENTIFIC COMMITTEE

Massimiliano Locanto, Esteban Buch, Fabrizio Della Seta, Markus Engelhardt, Axel Körner, Fiamma Nicolodi, Antonio Rostagno, Carlotta Sorba

ORGANIZING COMMITTEE

Susanna Pasticci, Antonio Artese, Stefano Jacoviello, Matteo Macinanti, Anna Passarini, Nicola Sani, Samantha Stout

KEYNOTE 1

AXEL KÖRNER
Universität Leipzig

Music, Power, and the Changing Semantics of Time in the Long Nineteenth Century

Thursday, 2 December at 17:20

KEYNOTE 2

CARLOTTA SORBA
Università di Padova

Palchi reali nei teatri italiani del primo Ottocento: spazi, pratiche, significati

Saturday, 4 December at 9:30

BOOK OF ABSTRACTS

SESSION ARCHIVE

SESSION 1 
Control, Abuse, Repression

SESSION 2 
Structures of Power
in Opera and Music Theatre

SESSION 3 
Imperialism, Colonialism, Decolonization

SESSION 4 
Music, Institutions and Power

SESSION 5 
Music and Power in the Aftermath of the Congress of Vienna

SESSION 6 
The Power of the Music Industry

WELCOME & INTRODUCTION

NICOLA SANI, Accademia Chigiana
MASSIMILIANO LOCANTO, Scientific Chair

LIVE SESSION (UTC +1)
Thursday, 2 December at 15:00

SESSION 1: Control, Abuse, Repression

Chair: SUSANNA PASTICCI
Università di Cassino

LIVE PRESENTATION (UTC +1)
Thursday, 2 December at 15:40

KEYNOTE 1: Music, Power, and the Changing Semantics of Time in the Long Nineteenth Century

AXEL KÖRNER
Universität Leipzig

LIVE PRESENTATION (UTC +1)
Thursday, 2 December at 17:20

IN MEMORIAM: tribute to Fiamma Nicolodi and Antonio Rostagno

Mila De Santis and Matteo Macinanti, testimonials
Antonio Artese, piano

LIVE PRESENTATION (UTC +1)
Thursday, 2 December at 18:30

Please note: there is a single Zoom webinar for the above presentations 

SESSION 2: Structures of Power in Opera and Music Theatre

Chair: FABRIZIO DELLA SETA
Università di Pavia

LIVE PRESENTATION (UTC +1)
Friday, 3 December at 9:30

SESSION 3: Imperialism, Colonialism, Decolonization

Chair: MARKUS ENGELHARDT
Deutsches Historisches Institut in Rom

LIVE PRESENTATION (UTC +1)
Friday, 2 December at 15:00

KEYNOTE 2: Palchi reali nei teatri italiani del primo Ottocento: spazi, pratiche, significati

CARLOTTA SORBA
Università di Padova

LIVE PRESENTATION (UTC +1)
Saturday, 4 December at 9:30

SESSION 4: Music, Institutions and Power

Chair: ESTEBAN BUCH
École des hautes études en sciences sociales

LIVE PRESENTATION (UTC +1)
Saturday, 4 December at 10:10

Please note: there is a single Zoom webinar for the above presentations 

SESSION 5: Music and Power in the Aftermath of the Congress of Vienna

Chair: MASSIMILIANO LOCANTO
Università di Salerno

LIVE PRESENTATION (UTC +1)
Saturday, 4 December at 15:00

SESSION 6: The Power of the Music Industry

Chair: STEFANO JACOVIELLO
Università di Siena

LIVE PRESENTATION (UTC +1)
Saturday, 4 December at 16:40

Please note: there is a single Zoom webinar for the above presentations 

CHRISTOPHER SMITH 
Vernacular Music Center, Texas Tech University

Against the Grain and Out Yonder: Decolonizing the Music Conservatory via Vernacular Pedagogies

In a 21st century post-industrial west in which disinformation and the “fog of propaganda” are intentionally deployed via powerful and addictive digital media, oppositional art-making which situates itself in local, tactile, communal, and somatic material experience is an act of resistance. In university music education systems, in which outcomes and assessments drive influence, promotion, and finance, to attempt to recover—or even to employ – the art of the grassroots local is both systemically challenging and immensely important. Drawing on analytical frames from performance studies, the anthropology of performance, and practice-based research in team- and project-oriented learning, this presentation investigates, problematizes, and rationalizes the production of a piece of site-specific immersive musical theater, set in – and in fact suggested by – a decayed 1928 movie palace in Levelland Texas in the American Southwest, undertaken by a multimodal team of university composers, dramatists, educators, and student performers, in partnership with a community-based non-profit. It further investigates strategies for recovering the tactile, communal, and experiential in the era of pandemic quarantine, and the means by which these essential human experiences can be recovered via alternate media. It argues that vernacular pedagogies – learning which is, in its ethos, intentions, and models, project-, and apprenticeship-based – provide a way forward from the trap of centralized, standardized, hierarchical, incremental, canon-based, and sequential university music education, and models for an artistic citizenship which is ethical, responsive, and engaged.

Christopher J. Smith is Professor, Chair of Musicology, and founding director of the Vernacular Music Center at Texas Tech University. He composed the theatrical show Dancing at the Crossroads (2013), the “folk oratorio” Plunder! Battling for Democracy in the New World (2017), and the immersive-theater show Yonder (2019). His monograph The Creolization of American Culture: William Sidney Mount and the Roots of Blackface Minstrelsy (University of Illinois Press, 2013) won the Irving Lowens Award; his newest book is Dancing Revolution: Bodies, Space, and Sound in American Cultural History (University of Illinois Press, 2019). He is a collaborator, with Thomas Irvine (Southampton), on the Turing Institute project “Jazz as Social System.” A former student of jazz pedagogue David N. Baker, he conducts the Elegant Savages Orchestra symphonic folk group at Texas Tech, and concertizes on guitar, bouzouki, banjo, and diatonique accordion. He is a former nightclub bouncer, carpenter, lobster fisherman, and oil-rig roughneck, and a published poet.

QUESTIONS FOR SPEAKERS

We would like to offer the possibility for attendees to pose questions in advance of the live discussion sessions.  Questions will be sent to the Chair of each session. To submit a question in response to any of the presentations please click the button to fill the form. You may fill the form multiple times.