Parallelism and Musical Structures in Ingrian and Karelian Oral Poetry

Listening to historical oral poetry usually means listening to archival sound recordings with no possibility to ask questions or compare performances by one singer in different performance arenas. Yet, when a greater number of recordings from different singers and by different collectors is availabl...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Kallio, Kati
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10355/65398
Description
Summary:Listening to historical oral poetry usually means listening to archival sound recordings with no possibility to ask questions or compare performances by one singer in different performance arenas. Yet, when a greater number of recordings from different singers and by different collectors is available, the comparison of these performances has the potential to reveal some locally shared understandings on the uses of poetic registers. In the present article, this setting is applied to examine the relationships of textual parallelism and musical structures in Kalevala-metric oral songs recorded from two Finnic language areas, Ingria and Karelia. Abstract from website. Kati Kallio works as a postdoctoral researcher at the Finnish Literature Society in the project "Letters and Songs: Registers of Beliefs and Expressions in the Early Modern North" of the Academy of Finland. Combining perspectives from Folklore Studies, Linguistic Anthropology, Ethnomusicology and History, she is particularly interested in questions relating to oral poetics, performance, intertextuality, ritual, and emotion.