Name: | Description: | Size: | Format: | |
---|---|---|---|---|
4.07 MB | Adobe PDF |
Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
Neste contexto digital e globalizado, onde algoritmos e mercados moldam a escuta e a produção musical, a diversidade sonora enfrenta uma crescente homogeneização. Esta dissertação investiga como a escuta crítica pode informar decisões éticas e criativas na prática do produtor musical independente.
Partindo da etnomusicologia e atravessando filosofia, antropologia da música e práticas artísticas, propõe-se uma escuta situada: atenta aos contextos culturais, consciente das heranças sonoras e comprometida com a diferença. A Walking Methodology serve como base para uma investigação que integra teoria e prática, som e corpo, tradição e experimentação.
Ao longo deste trabalho, defende-se que a escuta não é apenas um gesto sensorial, mas uma ferramenta de pensamento, de resistência estética e de responsabilidade ética.
Através da produção de um arquivo sonoro original, esta dissertação propõe um modelo de criação musical que dialoga com o mundo de forma crítica e implicada.
In a digital and globalised world where algorithms and markets shape the way music is produced and consumed, sonic diversity is increasingly threatened by homogenisation. This dissertation explores how critical listening can guide the ethical and creative decisions of the independent music producer. Grounded in ethnomusicology and drawing from philosophy, music anthropology and artistic practice, it advocates for a situated listening: culturally aware, context-sensitive, and open to difference. Using Walking Methodology, this research combines theory and practice, sound and body, tradition and experimentation. Listening here is not merely a sensory act, but a cognitive and ethical tool. Through the creation of an original sonic archive, this dissertation outlines a model of music production that engages with the world critically and responsibly.
In a digital and globalised world where algorithms and markets shape the way music is produced and consumed, sonic diversity is increasingly threatened by homogenisation. This dissertation explores how critical listening can guide the ethical and creative decisions of the independent music producer. Grounded in ethnomusicology and drawing from philosophy, music anthropology and artistic practice, it advocates for a situated listening: culturally aware, context-sensitive, and open to difference. Using Walking Methodology, this research combines theory and practice, sound and body, tradition and experimentation. Listening here is not merely a sensory act, but a cognitive and ethical tool. Through the creation of an original sonic archive, this dissertation outlines a model of music production that engages with the world critically and responsibly.
Description
Keywords
Escuta crítica Antropologia da música Produção musical independente Ética sonora Globalização digital Critical listening Anthropology of music Independent music production Sonic ethics Digital globalisation