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dc.contributor.authorWilliams, Bede
dc.date.accessioned2025-02-12T16:30:10Z
dc.date.available2025-02-12T16:30:10Z
dc.date.issued2020-09-01
dc.identifier271217989
dc.identifier7fedd0a8-88d9-49eb-92b1-173324f1fa02
dc.identifier.citationWilliams , B 2020 , ' Recontextualising a singing treasure : Eve De Castro-Robinson’s Clarion ' , Paper presented at CFP: Words, Music and Marginalisation (27.03.2020) , St Andrews , United Kingdom , 1/09/20 - 3/09/20 .en
dc.identifier.citationconferenceen
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/10023/31380
dc.description.abstractThis paper is partially presented as a personal narrative or piece of autoethnography. What follows is an account of how I came to commission a new trumpet concerto by leading New Zealand composer Eve De Castro-Robinson’s for trumpet and pūtātara (name given to a conch shell adapted with a wooden mouthpiece by the Māori people). Over the past four decades traditional Māori instruments from New Zealand (called taonga pūoro or ‘singing treasures’) have had a major revival in the hands of musicians, scholars and instrument makers. The writing considers what I feel to be the ethical considerations of playing a when I myself am Pākehā (of European descent).
dc.format.extent6
dc.format.extent1212001
dc.language.isoeng
dc.rightsCopyright 2020, the author.en
dc.titleRecontextualising a singing treasure : Eve De Castro-Robinson’s Clarionen
dc.typeConference paperen
dc.contributor.institutionUniversity of St Andrews.Music Centreen
dc.description.statusNon peer revieweden


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