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Articles

The Extensions of Opera: Radio, Internet, and Immersion

 

Abstract

Social distancing is a central (un)word of the pandemic year 2020. Now, music culture thrives on performative ‘liveness’—even in classical music, where live experience has become the core of the musical artwork in the age of its mechanical reproduction. At the same time, the history of music can be read as a history of the dissolution of boundaries: from the body (voice), to mechanical instruments, to electronic extensions. Accelerated by regulations in response to the COVID-19 crisis, music culture passes another media transformation, entering new virtual stages. In fact, crisis always implies changes and chances too: economists call it ‘creative destruction’, artists call it innovation. And indeed, ‘social distancing’ in interaction with accelerated digitalisation also holds media-aesthetic potential. With the support of new media, and this is the hypothesis of this essay, the contemporary music scene in particular can form new dramatic forms that go far beyond the classical one-way stream: by enabling virtual participation instead of physical co-presence.

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No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).

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Anna Schürmer

Dr. Anna Schürmer is interested in discourses, mediality and aesthetics of contemporary music culture. As a journalist, she regularly publishes and produces in print media as well as in radio and online formats. As a media scientist and musicologist, she researches in the field of sonic cultures and sound studies. Her particular focus is on interference potentials of sound (noise, glitch, imperfection), new music and avant-gardes, aesthetic scandals, post-/transhumanism, gender and ludomusicology. Since completion of her dissertation Klingende Eklats. Skandal und Neue Musik (Transcript 2017), she has been working on the epochal aesthetics of the digital era: De|Human?! (www.interpolationen.de).

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