E-LAUTE: Electronic Linked Annotated Unified Tablature Edition
Project website: https://e-laute.info
Project number: | FWF I 6019 |
Project leader: | Dr. Kateryna Schöning |
Research institution: | Department of Music Acoustics – Wiener Klangstil (IWK) University of Music and Performing Arts Vienna |
Project members: | Prof. Dr. Martin Kirnbauer, Prof. Dr. Marc Lewon, Prof. Dr. Irene Holzer, Prof. Dr. Cordula Kropik, Dr. David M. Weigl , Prof. Dr. Andreas Rauber, Mag. Max Kaiser, Dr. Reinier de Valk |
Date of approval: |
02.05.2022 |
Project start: | 2023 |
Project end: | |
Scientific areas: | Arts (65%) Computer Sciences (25%) Linguistics and Literature(10%) |
Keywords: | lute tablature, lute music, digital edition, digital humanities, music and literature, German culture 1450-1550 |
Project data: | tba. |
The Lute in the German-Speaking Area 1450–1550
We are creating an open-access comprehensive and interactive edition of the lute tablatures (special notations for lutes) of the German-speaking area between 1450 and 1550. The corpus (2,000 pages) has not yet been investigated as a whole and is barely accessible to scholars and professional musicians as well as to the broad public, has not been deciphered and has therefore been evaluated only selectively. The reasons for this being the notation (‘German lute tablature’), which is little used today, the sites of the manuscripts scattered throughout Central Europe, and the fact that consistent adequate research methods have not yet been worked up.
The E-LAUTE project brings together international and interdisciplinary researchers to achieve desiderata in the evaluation of this cultural heritage. The core team consists of Prof. Dr. Martin Kirnbauer, Prof. Dr. Marc Lewon (Schola Cantorum Basiliensis / FHNW Basel; musicology and performance practice), Prof. Dr. Irene Holzer (Ludwig-Maximilian-Univ. Munich; Musicology), Prof. Dr. Cordula Kropik (Univ. Bayreuth; German Medieval Studies), Dr. Kateryna Schöning (Univ. Vienna; Musicology), Dr. David M. Weigl (Univ. of Music and Performing Arts Vienna; Web Science and Music Informatics), Prof. Dr. Andreas Rauber (Vienna Univ. of Technology; Information and Software Engineering), Mag. Max Kaiser (Austrian National Library (host); IT) and Dr. Reinier de Valk (Denmark; Music Encoding).
As scholars, we are also working on five pilot studies on our platform that cover some current gaps in the research and practice of music before 1600: Variance and Retextualisation in the Music and Text of the Love Song (I), On the Origin of German Lute Tablature (II), Tablature Notation as Reflective Images of 16th-Century Culture (III), Dialogues About Music (‘interactive annotations’) (IV) and Hybrid Editions (V). As part of our project, the first hybrid edition in the Denkmäler der Tonkunst in Österreich series will be produced.