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UID:bf5cf99ea6b6a6d5d2e867e32b335e45
CATEGORIES:Colloques, Séminaire du CREM, CREM
CREATED:20170925T132119
SUMMARY:Between Speech and Song : Liminal Utterances
LOCATION:Bâtiment Grappin (B)\, salle des conférences - 200 avenue de la République\
 , Nanterre\, \, 92000\, 
DESCRIPTION:23e colloque ICTM — organisé par le CREM \nProposé sous l’égide de l’Intern
 ational Council for Traditional Music (ICTM) et organisé par le Centre de r
 echerche en ethnomusicologie (CREM-LESC/CNRS) à l’université Paris Ouest Na
 nterre la Défense, ce colloque permettra aux spécialistes des interactions 
 vocales de débattre durant trois jours des questions et des pistes actuelle
 s dans l’étude des énoncés liminaires. L’objet appelant par nature le crois
 ement de plusieurs disciplines, les chercheurs invités, au nombre de vingt,
  proviennent de l’anthropologie, de l’ethnolinguistique, de l’ethnomusicolo
 gie, et de l’acoustique. S’y ajoutent des ingénieurs en traitement des arch
 ives et en analyse informatique du signal, qui travaillent actuellement à d
 e nouveaux outils d’indexation des formes vocales.\nComment caractériser la
  relation singulière que le langage entretient avec la voix ? Leur lien pou
 vait paraître évident avant le développement de l'écriture. Avec celle-ci c
 ependant, une part significative de la communication linguistique peut se d
 érouler en dehors de la vocalité, et ce quelle que soit la langue considéré
 e. De nombreux travaux en anthropologie et en linguistique ont par ailleurs
  montré que l’usage de voix dans le langage était perméable à d’autres mani
 ères d’utiliser l’appareil phonatoire. Décrits comme « chants », « cris », 
 « lamentations », « psalmodies », « rires », « onomatopées » ou « idéophone
 s », ces usages de la voix ont en commun d’entrer dans une dynamique comple
 xe avec le langage articulé. Objets d’étude pour une part croissante de la 
 communauté scientifique, ces énoncés liminaires interrogent également les i
 ngénieurs et archivistes confrontés à la nécessité d’en catégoriser les doc
 uments sonores selon des critères stables et cohérents. En parallèle, l’étu
 de pragmatique des interactions vocales rencontre d’autres cas-limite sous 
 les traits de la glossolalie, du ventriloquisme, des voix « habitées » des 
 médiums et des chamanes. Ces cas posent tous la question de la source d’ani
 mation du message, et de l’efficacité performative des énoncés en tant qu’a
 ctes vocaux.\nProposé sous l’égide de l’International Council for Tradition
 al Music (ICTM) et organisé au Centre de recherche en ethnomusicologie (CRE
 M-LESC/CNRS) à l’université Paris Ouest Nanterre la Défense, ce colloque pe
 rmettra aux spécialistes des interactions vocales de débattre durant trois 
 jours des questions et des pistes actuelles dans l’étude des énoncés limina
 ires. L’objet appelant par nature le croisement de plusieurs disciplines, l
 es chercheurs invités, au nombre de vingt, proviennent de l’anthropologie, 
 de l’ethnolinguistique, de l’ethnomusicologie, et de l’acoustique. S’y ajou
 tent des ingénieurs en traitement des archives et en analyse informatique d
 u signal, qui travaillent actuellement à de nouveaux outils d’indexation de
 s formes vocales.\n\nhttp://archives.crem-cnrs.fr/archives/items/CNRSMH_I_2
 010_004_001_81/player/346x130/\n\nLa relation entre langage et musique a fa
 it l’objet d’un long débat en ethnomusicologie. Le sujet a été soulevé dans
  l'article de List sur la frontière entre parole et chant (1963), dans les 
 travaux de George Herzog sur la relation entre musique et texte (1934, 1942
 , 1950), et dans l'analyse du « discours musical » de John Blacking (1982).
  En une chaîne quasiment ininterrompue, différents travaux ont depuis préci
 sé les données ethnographiques sur différentes pratiques vocales aux fronti
 ères entre langage et musique (lamentations, récitations et psalmodies, cha
 nts dont les paroles sont ou non compréhensibles pour les locuteurs).\n\nEn
  ethnolinguistique, des auteurs tels Laura Graham (1984, 1987), Ellen Basso
  (1985), Charles Briggs (1993), Jean-Jacques Nattiez (1999), et Aaron Fox (
 1992, 2004) ont analysé des modes d’énonciation où la forme vocale prend le
  pas sur le contenu sémantique (salutations rituelles ou incantations théra
 peutiques par exemple), ou bien des formes d’interaction affectée par l’irr
 uption d’énonciateurs non-humains (divinités, esprits, animaux) dans la voi
 x des locuteurs. L’une des conclusions vers lesquelles ces travaux converge
 nt est que la musicalité du discours est un aspect crucial, trop souvent né
 gligé, ouvrant la voie à une description rigoureuse des croyances religieus
 es.\n\nTrès peu d'études ont cependant pris pour point de départ le lien ét
 roit qui existe entre les dimensions sémantique et acoustique de la voix (v
 oir Feld et Fox 1994). La fragmentation épistémologique du champ vocal entr
 e linguistique, musicologie et anthropologie reste un obstacle de taille. P
 our tenter de relever le défi, ce colloque portera précisément sur les énon
 cés liminaires situés à la frontière entre la voix parlée et chantée. Seron
 t privilégiés des matériaux comme les lamentations, le babillage, les compt
 ines, la récitation coranique, les narrations mélodisées et les contes chan
 tés, le scat, la glossolalie, ainsi que l’usage et les variations de la voi
 x dans la liturgie, le recours à l'iconicité du langage, ou encore à des je
 ux portant sur l'intonation dans les performances poétiques et les discours
  politiques. Au travers de ces études de cas, l’enjeu sera de croiser les a
 nalyses acoustique, sémantique et pragmatique des énoncés vocaux. Aux front
 ières de l’anthropologie, de l’ethnomusicologie, de la linguistique et de l
 ’ingénierie, le colloque s’inscrit dans une perspective interdisciplinaire 
 qui fera surgir de nouveaux objets.\n \n23rd ICTM colloquium — organized by
  the CREMThe relation between speech and song is an old debate in ethnomusi
 cology. The topic was notably addressed List’s important article on the bou
 ndaries of speech and song (1963), in George Herzog's early explorations of
  the relationship between music and text (1934, 1942, 1950), and in John Bl
 acking's account of musical "discourse" (1982). Linguistically informed wor
 ks addressed the question as well, such as that by Laura Graham (1984, 1987
 ), Charles Briggs (1993), Jean-Jacques Nattiez (1999), and Aaron Fox (1992,
  2004).But five decades after List’s foundational article, the topic contin
 ues to inspire discussion. The reason may be, as Anthony Seeger suggested, 
 that the separation of disciplines that study different aspects of “vocal a
 nd verbal art has had a disastrous effect on the development of our thinkin
 g about them” (1986: 59). The wish to reconsider this separation has been p
 ointed out for decades. This is particularly the case for studies focusing 
 on liminal utterances, such as glossolalias or scat. Described by practitio
 ners as an “event occurring in my throat” (Certeau 1996: 38), glossolalias 
 are cases of vocal production without clear semantic meaning which multipli
 es the possibilities of speech. The decomposition of syllables and the comb
 ination of elementary sounds in games of alliteration create “an indefinite
  space outside of the jurisdiction of a language" (Certeau 1996: 42). In hi
 s study on scat, Brent Hayes Edwards (2002) also argues about an extended v
 ocal space: a continuum between instrumental uses of the voice and vocal us
 es of instruments. In jazz, both are supposed to narrate stories.But still 
 very few studies build their analysis on the intimate link between the sema
 ntics and acoustics of voice production. As pointed out by Steven Feld and 
 Aaron Fox (1994), most studies in ethnomusicology have difficulties in simu
 ltaneously taking into account the words and sounds of vocal production, an
 d combined analyses of the semantics and acoustics of vocal production are 
 still very few and mostly unsatisfactory.\n\nTo try to take up this challen
 ge, this colloquium will focus on liminal utterances, at the border between
  speech and song. We will consider utterances such as laments, nursery rhym
 es, Qur'anic chanting, recitative or the use of the monotone voice in litur
 gy, iconicity of language, scat, glossolalias, melodized narrations, sung t
 ales, vocal intonation in poetical performances and in political discourses
 , among others. Special attention will be given to a deeply combined analys
 is of the acoustics and semantics of these utterances.\nRéférences\nBEAUDET
  Jean-Michel 1996 “Rire. Un exemple d'Amazonie”. L'Homme 36 (140): 81-99.\n
 BLACKING John 1982 “The Structure of Musical Discourse: The Problem of the 
 Song Text”. Yearbook for Traditional Music 14: 15‑23.\nBRIGGS Charles L. 19
 93 “Personal Sentiments and Polyphonic Voices in Warao Women’s Ritual Waili
 ng: Music and Poetics in a Critical and Collective Discourse”. American Ant
 hropologist 95(4): 929‑957.\nCERTEAU (DE) Michel 1996 “Vocal Utopias: Gloss
 olalias”. Representations 56: 29‑47.\nEDWARDS Brent Hayes 2002 “Louis Armst
 rong and the Syntax of Scat”. Critical Inquiry 28(3): 618‑649.\nFELD Steven
  &amp; FOX Aaron 1994 “Music and Language”. Annual Review of Anthropology 2
 3: 25―53.\nFOX Aaron 1992 “The Jukebox of History: Narratives of Loss and D
 esire in the Discourse of Country Music”. Popular Music 11(1): 53‑72.\n2004
  Real Country: Music and Language in Working-Class Culture. Durham, N.C. : 
 Duke University Press.\nGRAHAM Laura 1984 “Semanticity and Melody: Paramete
 rs of Contrast in Shavante Vocal Expression”. Latin American Music Review 5
 (2): 161‑185.\n1987 “Three Modes of Shavante Vocal Expression: Wailing, Col
 lective Singing, and Political Oratory”, in Sherzer &amp; Urban dir.: Nativ
 e South American Discourse. Berlin, New-York: Mouton de Gruyter: 83‑118.\nH
 ERZOG George 1934 “Speech-Melody and Primitive Music”. The Musical Quarterl
 y 20(4): 452‑466.\n1942 “The Text and Melody in Primitive Music”. Bulletin 
 of the American Musicological Society 6: 10‑11.\n1950 “Song”, in Leach dir.
 : Funk and Wagnalls Standart Dictionary of Folklore, Mythology and Legend. 
 New-York: Funk and Wagnalls 2: 1032‑1050.\nLIST George 1963 “The Boundaries
  of Speech and Song”. Ethnomusicology 7(1): 1‑16.\nNATTIEZ Jean-Jacques 199
 9 Proust musicien. Paris : Christian Bourgeois éditeur.\nSEEGER Anthony 198
 6 “Oratory Is Spoken, Myth Is Told, and Song Is Sung, But They Are All Musi
 c to My Ears”, in Sherzer &amp; Urban dir.: Native South American Discourse
 . Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter: 59‑82.\nProgramme  (images/scalapi/eventscrem/
 ICTM2015_programme_A4-2.pdf) \nOrganizersCoordination: Estelle AMY DE LA BR
 ETÈQUE (CREM-LESC/CNRS, France)\n\n\nScientific committeeBernd BRABEC DE MO
 RI (University of Music and Performing Arts, Austria)\n\nJunzo KAWADA (Kana
 gawa University, Japan)\n\nAnthony SEEGER (UCLA, USA)\n\nKati SZEGO (Memori
 al University of Newfoundland - Executive Board member of ICTM, Canada)\n\n
 Stephen WILD (Australian National University - Vice President of ICTM, Aust
 ralia)\n\n\nLocal organization committeeJean-Michel BEAUDET (UPO - CREM-LES
 C/CNRS)\n\nSusanne FÜRNISS (MNHN/CNRS, president of the French Society for 
 Ethnomusicology)\n\nAndrea-Luz GUTIERREZ-CHOQUEVILCA (EPHE/LAS - Collège de
  France)\n\nGiordano MARMONE (UPO, CREM-LESC/CNRS)\n\nMagali De RUYTER (UPO
 , CREM-LESC/CNRS)\n\nVictor A. STOICHITA (Director of the Research Center f
 or Ethnomusicology – CREM-LESC/CNRS)\n\nWith additional help from: Loré Aji
 rent-Sagaspe, Éline Breton, Sisa Calapi, Preciosa Dombele, Laurence Lemaur 
 (ethnomusicology students at UPO) and Iris Lemaître (student in Librarian S
 tudies, UPO).\n\n\nPartner institutionsThe International Council for Tradit
 ional Music (http://www.ictmusic.org/) (ICTM) is a Non-Governmental Organis
 ation in formal consultative relations with UNESCO. Its aims are to further
  the study, practice, documentation, preservation and dissemination of trad
 itional music and dance of all countries. To these ends the Council organis
 es World Conferences, Symposia and Colloquia. The Council also promotes the
 se goals by publishing the Yearbook for Traditional Music (http://www.ictmu
 sic.org/publications/yearbook-for-traditional-music), distributing the onli
 ne Bulletin of the ICTM (http://www.ictmusic.org/publications/bulletin-ictm
 ), and maintaining a rich Online Membership Directory (http://www.ictmusic.
 org/civicrm/profile?gid=1&amp;reset=1). By means of its wide international 
 representation (http://www.ictmusic.org/world-network) and the activities o
 f its Study Groups, the International Council for Traditional Music acts as
  a bond among peoples of different cultures.\n\nThe Research Center in Ethn
 omusicology (http://crem-cnrs.fr/) (CREM) is heir to the former Ethnomusico
 logy Department of the Musée de l’Homme (1929-2008), and has been part of t
 he Research Team in Ethnology and Comparative Sociology (http://www.mae.u-p
 aris10.fr/lesc/) (LESC – UMR 7186) since 2007. The CREM is dedicated to the
  study of musical practices and knowledge worldwide.\nBased on ethnography 
 and a systematic collection of musical data, its approach pertains to an an
 thropology of music conceived in its socio-cultural, aesthetic, formal, aco
 ustic, kinesthetic and cognitive dimensions. The Center investigates new re
 search topics such as the embodiment of musical and choreographic skills, t
 he cultural and cognitive production of musical emotion, the interconnected
 ness of sensory modalities, the ecology of sonic environments, the construc
 tion and emergence of musical systems. Its researchers also create new moda
 lities of musical representation (http://crem-cnrs.fr/realisations-multimed
 ia), such as their “listening clues” (clés d’écoute) : these multimedia dev
 ices guide the general public towards crucial aspects of specific musical e
 xpressions.\nThe CREM manages a large collection of sound archives (http://
 archives.crem-cnrs.fr/) inherited from the Musée de l’Homme and accumulated
  over more than a century. With more than 4,000 hours of unpublished fieldw
 ork recordings and about 4,000 hours of published documents, these archives
  of great patrimonial value are made available online through the collabora
 tive platform Telemeta. The collections are constantly nourished through th
 e researchers’ fieldwork. The recordings are used as materials for new rese
 arch, as preparation for new fieldwork, and for the training of graduate st
 udents.\nCREM researchers, lecturers and professors hold important responsi
 bilities at the Anhropology department (https://dep-anthropologie.u-paris10
 .fr/dpt-ufr-ssa-anthropologie/master-emad/) of Paris Ouest Nanterre – La Dé
 fense University, as well as at the Musicology Department (http://193.54.15
 9.130/spip.php?article1685) of Paris 8 – St Denis University. Numerous grad
 uate students from these universities are members of the CREM, which offers
  them a stimulating scientific and logistic environment.\n\nThe ANR project
  DIADEMS (http://www.irit.fr/recherches/SAMOVA/DIADEMS/fr/welcome/&amp;cult
 ureKey=en) (Description, Indexation, et Accès aux Documents Ethnomusicologi
 ques et Sonores) is a partnership between several teams dealing with acoust
 ics, ethnolinguistics and ethnomusicological documents, and informaticians.
  The laboratory of Ethnology and Comparative Sociology (LESC) including the
  research center of ethnomusicology (CREM) and the center of teaching and r
 esearch in American Indian ethnology (EREA) as well as the laboratory of an
 thropology of National Museum of Natural History (MNHN) are dealing with th
 e need to index the audio archives they manage, while keeping track of the 
 contents, which is a long, fastidious and expensive task. Since 2007, as no
  open-source application exists on the market to access the audio data reco
 rded by researchers, the CREM-LESC, the LAM and the sound archives of the M
 NHN began the conception of an innovate and collaborative tool that answers
  the trade needs (linked to the documents temporal span), while being adapt
 ed to the researchers requirements.\nWith financial support from the CNRS T
 rès Grand Equipement (TGE), ADONIS and the Mnistry of culture, the Telemeta
  platform, developed by Parisson, is online since May 2011 (http://archives
 .crem-cnrs.fr (http://archives.crem-cnrs.fr/)). On this platform, basic sig
 nal analysis tools are already available, It is however mandatory to have a
  set of advanced and innovative tools for automatic or semi-automatique ind
 exing of this audio data, that includes sometimes long recordings, with qui
 te heterogeneous content and quality. The aim of the DIADEMS project is to 
 supply some of these tools, to integrate them into Telemeta, while also sat
 isfying specific user needs related to ergonomy and accest rights managemen
 t.\n\nL'école doctorale « Milieux, cultures et sociétés du passé et du prés
 ent » (http://www.u-paris10.fr/recherche/ecole-doctorale-milieux-cultures-e
 t-societes-du-passe-et-du-present-ed-395-255195.kjsp) associe un ensemble d
 e disciplines : Archéologie, Ethnologie- Préhistoire-Ethnomusicologie, Géog
 raphie, Aménagement-urbanisme, Histoire, Histoire de l'Art, Langues et Lett
 res anciennes. Elle regroupe 9 équipes de recherche entre lesquelles se rép
 artissent quelque 460 doctorants et 105 directeurs de thèse.  Elle assure 3
  missions au sein de l'Université : pédagogique — organisation des enseigne
 ments doctoraux et suivi des doctorants, soutien à la professionnalisation 
 ; organisationnelle — budget, contrats doctoraux, a politique de financemen
 t des thèses mais aussi de veille au respect de la charte des thèses de l'u
 niversité ; animation de la recherche —  recherche de convergences entre le
 s programmes des unités de recherche de manière à définir de grandes orient
 ations thématiques.\n\nLa Société française d’ethnomusicologie (SFE) (http:
 //ethnomusicologie.fr/) est une société savante dont la mission est d'encou
 rager, de soutenir et de promouvoir la réflexion sur les musiques du monde.
  La SFE, est aussi un réseau d’experts, actifs au sein d’institutions comme
  l’Unesco, les musées, les festivals ou les médias (presse écrite, radios, 
 TV, internet), qui contribuent ainsi à la connaissance et à la diffusion de
 s expressions artistiques et culturelles de l’humanité. Elle est l’organe r
 eprésentatif de l’ICTM en France.\n\nAttendingThanks to our partner institu
 tions, attending the colloquium is entirely free for everyone.\n\nAudience 
 members (apart from staff and invited speakers) are welcome to share the co
 llective meals, at their own expense.\n\nHotelInvited participants are host
 ed at Hôtel Qualys Nanterre (http://en.qualys-hotel.com/hotel/france/ile-de
 -france/nanterre/nanterre-paris-la-defense), 2, avenue Benoît Frachon 92000
  Nanterre, Tel. 01 46 95 08 08.\nThe hotel is within a few minutes walk fro
 m the RER A stop "Nanterre Ville". \nTo plan your arrival, we suggest using
  the RATP route planner available here: http://www.ratp.fr/itineraires/en/r
 atp/recherche-avancee (http://www.ratp.fr/itineraires/en/ratp/recherche-ava
 ncee) If you encounter any difficulties with the planner, please email us y
 our travel details and we’ll check the best route for you.\n\nParticipants 
 staying at the hotel will be provided upon their arrival with RER tickets f
 or the daily commuting between the hotel and the university (1 stop).\n\nIt
  is also possible to walk the distance, should you prefer to do so.\nEasies
 t way to arrive, whether from Paris or from the hotel, is by RER A, stop "N
 anterre Université". It is also possible to walk from the Hotel to the Univ
 ersity (straight walk, ca. 20 min).\nThe colloquium takes place on the camp
 us of Nanterre University, building B, Salle des Conférences. Below is a ma
 p of the campus.\n \n\n \n\n\n\n \nMealsLunches will be served at the unive
 rsity’s restaurant on campus — the pink building on the map above, named Re
 sto U.\n\nInvited speakers arriving on the 19th afternoon are invited for d
 inner at Hotel Qualys.\n\nDinners and vocal workshops on 20th and 21st will
  take place at the "Ferme du Bonheur". This is just in front of the buildin
 g marked "MAE" in green on the map (but it is not a component of the Univer
 sity, therefore it doesn’t appear on the map).\n\nFarewell dinner on 22nd w
 ill take place at Flam’s restaurant in Paris (Rue des Lombardshttp://crem-c
 nrs.fr/plugins/system/jcemediabox/img/zoom-link.gif (http://www.flams.fr/im
 ages/images_restaurants/Lombards/mapslombards2.png)); background-color: tra
 nsparent; display: inherit; background-position: right center; background-r
 epeat: no-repeat no-repeat;"&gt;).\n\nThe intention of this colloquium on L
 iminal utterances is to discuss "hands on", with as many audio and video ex
 amples as possible. The Multimedia Presentations are an experiment in that 
 direction. Presenters were invited to combine audiovisual data and analysis
  in order to produce a (more-or-less) self-standing video file containing a
 n argument or simply raising questions about the illustrated sound practice
 s. These files are available below. They will also be played during the con
 ference, where each of them will be followed by extensive discussion sessio
 ns with their authors. Click on an image below to start a presentation (sho
 uld open an popup with a HTML5 video).\n\n\nLiminal utterances: multimedia 
 presentations Between Speech and Song: Liminal utterances of sadness in Ana
 tolia and the Caucasus (http://crem-cnrs.fr/images/audio-video/ICTM2015_Amy
 DeLaBreteque_BetweenSpeechAndSong.mp4)ESTELLE AMY DE LA BRETEQUE (CREM-LESC
 /CNRS, France)This presentation explores the practice of melodized speech i
 n the Caucasus and Anatolia. Taking as a case study the Yezidi Kurds in Arm
 enia, it explains why this practice, linked to the narration of sad events,
  stands at the border between speech and song in the local typology of voca
 l production. On a wider area, the comparison of three case studies from fi
 eldwork conducted in Azerbaijan, Turkey and Armenia shows how elderly women
  integrate melodized speech in daily conversations. Beyond religious, natio
 nal and linguistic differences, the similarity of these practices suggests 
 a shared social-vocal nexus in Anatolia and the Caucasus.\n\n \n\n \n\n\nTh
 e vocality of a religious poem among the Pomaks (http://crem-cnrs.fr/images
 /audio-video/ICTM2015_EftychiaDroutsa2015_VocalityReligiousPoem_web.mp4)EFT
 YCHIA DROUTSA (Iremus/University Paris 4 Sorbonne, France) \nThis work ques
 tions “vocality”, that is the sound production of speech and song among the
  Pomaks through their religious poem called mevlud.\n\n Dating from the 15t
 h century, the mevlud is a poem attributed to the poet Suleyman Çelebi, in 
 which he relates the birth, the life and the death of the Prophète Mohamed.
  It is written in osmanli (Othoman, ancient Turkish in arabic characters) i
 n the poetic form of masnavi, structured in a series of versified distiches
  where each verse adheres on a metric regularity of eleven syllables. We fi
 nd this poem among Pomaks, a mountain population, muslim and trilingual, wh
 o speaktheir own Slavic dialect - Pomak -, Greek and Turkish. They live in 
 the north of Greece in the area of Thrace and are recognized officially as 
 “a religious minority” by the Greek Government. Pomaks learn to read the me
 vlud, on which they adapt a repetitive motif borrowed, modified and customi
 zed according to individual preferences and abilities. However, most of the
 m do not understand the literal meaning of the poetic text. It is in this p
 articular context, where the words are detached from their litteral meaning
  and become a medium for statement, that we will approach the duality of sp
 eech and song through a sound editing, where the words are sung, whispered,
  muttered, recited or simply said.\n\n \n\n \n\n\nDevelopment of turn takin
 g in vocal interaction between mothers and infants aged between 2 and 4 mon
 ths (http://crem-cnrs.fr/images/audio-video/ICTM2015_Infanti_infants.mp4)RU
 BIA INFANTI &amp; EBRU YILMAZ (Laboratoire Ethologie, Cognition, Developmen
 t -EA 3456-, University Paris-West, France)Infants are known to engage in c
 onversation-like exchanges from the end of the second month after birth. Th
 ese ‘protoconversations’ involve both turn-taking and overlapping vocalizat
 ion. Previous research has shown that the timing of adult-infant turn-takin
 g sequences is close to that of adult verbal conversation. The gap between 
 turns in protoconversational exchange seldom exceeds 500ms. It has also bee
 n shown that young infants adjust the quality of their vocalization in resp
 onse to the quality and timing of adult vocalization. Furthermore, turn-tak
 ing exchanges often involve mutual imitation of sounds, pitches and melodic
  contour. We present new evidence of the timing and temporal organization o
 f turn-taking interaction between mothers and 2 to 4-month-olds recorded in
  naturalistic contexts based on a corpus of recordings from 50 French dyads
 . All of them were recorded in naturalistic contexts, in their home, when i
 nfants were in a quiet alert state. The entire sample comprised a total of 
 2943 vocalizations of which 748 (25.4%) were produced by the infants, 1851 
 (62.9%) were produced by the mothers, and 344 were overlapping vocalization
 s (11.7%). In all, 489 turns taking sequences were identified. The quality 
 and duration of infant vocalizations differed according to whether or not t
 hey were produced within a turn-taking sequence. Finally, length and number
  of turns were highly correlated between mothers and infants vocalizations.
 \n\n [Coming soon…]\n\n \n\n \n\n\nSung assemblies or declaimed songs? The 
 samburu soloists (Kenya) on the border between political discussion and mus
 ical activity (http://crem-cnrs.fr/images/audio-video/ICTM2015_Marmone_Samb
 uru.mp4)GIORDANO MARMONE (CREM-LESC/University Paris West)Among the Samburu
  of Kenya the leaders and the spokesmen of the warriors' age-grade, the so-
 called larikok, play a fundamental role in both political and musical domai
 ns. The oratorical skills of which they must be provided to protect the int
 erests of the warriors during the assemblies, core of the Samburu political
  system, also allow them to stand out as main soloists during the singing a
 nd dancing\n\n \n\n \n\n\n  Ferdinand Brunot and the Archives de la Parole 
 (http://crem-cnrs.fr/images/audio-video/ICTM2015_Picard_BrunotArchivesParol
 e.mp4)FRANÇOIS PICARD (Iremus, University Paris 4 Sorbonne, France)The Arch
 ives de la Parole or Spoken Archives have been founded by the French histor
 ian of French language and grammarian Ferdinand Brunot at Sorbonne universi
 ty in 1911. Using a Pathéphone phonograph, he recorded spoken or singing vo
 ices, he classified in main sections: I for “interprètes”, O for “orateurs”
 , L for «langues”, D for “dialectes”. Taking it as a solid corpus, we analy
 se it using digital tools according to the relation between pitch, intensit
 y and timbre, and find it possible through strong descriptors to recover lo
 cal, culturally meaningful, categories. The question of whether this new ca
 tegorisation could be universal will be asked.sessions. This double form of
  authority is based on what, among the Samburu, is considered as one of the
  essential features of male leadership: the ability of “dominating the word
 s” in all their forms, both sung and spoken. At the same time, this connect
 ion between political debate and soloist singing is not focused exclusively
  on the double social role of the larikok. The vocal technique that charact
 erizes a big part of the Samburu's musical repertoire, in fact, is definabl
 e as a form of speech shaped around the rhythm of the dance. It confers to 
 the melodic contour of the soloist's part the prosodic characteristics of t
 he spoken language, making Samburu choral songs a sort of oratorical confro
 ntation between soloists, very close, structurally and verbally, to the ass
 emblies' debate scheme. The process of decision-making and the composition 
 of the songs' lyrics lead, in both cases, to the creation of accounts which
  aim to expose opinions and stories based on real events. But if during the
  assemblies the speakers' purpose is to use their own charisma for the poli
 tical administration of the community as representatives of an age-grade's 
 or an age-set's interests, during the singing and dancing sessions the solo
 ists have the responsibility to stand for their age-group and share with th
 e listeners the narrative of its collective memory, contributing to assert 
 its presence within the society.\n
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:<h4 style="color: #000000; font-family: Tahoma, Geneva, sans-serif; font-si
 ze: 14.399999618530273px; margin-bottom: 0mm; line-height: 14.3999996185302
 73px;"><strong>23<sup>e</sup>&nbsp;colloque ICTM — organisé par le CREM</st
 rong></h4><p>&nbsp;</p><span style="font-family: Tahoma,Geneva,sans-serif; 
 font-size: 10pt; text-align: justify; background-color: #f4f4f4;"><img styl
 e="margin-right: 10px; margin-bottom: 10px; float: left;" alt="Liminal Utte
 rances CREM ICTM 2015" src="https://www.lesc-cnrs.fr/images/scalapi/eventsc
 rem/Liminal-Utterances_CREM-ICTM_2015.jpg" /><span style="font-family: taho
 ma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif;">Proposé sous l’égide de l’International Cou
 ncil for Traditional Music (ICTM) et organisé par le Centre de recherche en
  ethnomusicologie (CREM-LESC/CNRS) à l’université Paris Ouest Nanterre la D
 éfense, ce colloque permettra aux spécialistes des interactions vocales de 
 débattre durant trois jours des questions et des pistes actuelles dans l’ét
 ude des énoncés liminaires. L’objet appelant par nature le croisement de pl
 usieurs disciplines, les chercheurs invités, au nombre de vingt, proviennen
 t de l’anthropologie, de l’ethnolinguistique, de l’ethnomusicologie, et de 
 l’acoustique. S’y ajoutent des ingénieurs en traitement des archives et en 
 analyse informatique du signal, qui travaillent actuellement à de nouveaux 
 outils d’indexation des formes vocales.</span></span><br /><span style="fon
 t-family: tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif;"></span><p><span style="font-f
 amily: Tahoma, Geneva, sans-serif; font-size: 14.399999618530273px; backgro
 und-color: #f4f4f4;"><img src="https://www.lesc-cnrs.fr/images/scalapi/even
 tscrem/HPIM5699_BinBash_Sketch1.jpg" alt="HPIM5699 BinBash Sketch1" style="
 margin-right: 10px; margin-bottom: 10px; float: left;" /><span style="font-
 family: tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size: 10pt;">
 Comment caractériser la relation singulière que le langage entretient avec 
 la voix&nbsp;? Leur lien pouvait paraître évident avant le développement de
  l'écriture. Avec celle-ci cependant, une part significative de la communic
 ation linguistique peut se dérouler en dehors de la vocalité, et ce quelle 
 que soit la langue considérée. De nombreux travaux en anthropologie et en l
 inguistique ont par ailleurs montré que l’usage de voix dans le langage éta
 it perméable à d’autres manières d’utiliser l’appareil phonatoire. Décrits 
 comme «&nbsp;chants&nbsp;», «&nbsp;cris&nbsp;», «&nbsp;lamentations&nbsp;»,
  «&nbsp;psalmodies&nbsp;», «&nbsp;rires&nbsp;», «&nbsp;onomatopées&nbsp;» o
 u «&nbsp;idéophones&nbsp;», ces usages de la voix ont en commun d’entrer da
 ns une dynamique complexe avec le langage articulé. Objets d’étude pour une
  part croissante de la communauté scientifique, ces énoncés liminaires inte
 rrogent également les ingénieurs et archivistes confrontés à la nécessité d
 ’en catégoriser les documents sonores selon des critères stables et cohéren
 ts. En parallèle, l’étude pragmatique des interactions vocales rencontre d’
 autres cas-limite sous les traits de la glossolalie, du ventriloquisme, des
  voix «&nbsp;habitées&nbsp;» des médiums et des chamanes. Ces cas posent to
 us la question de la source d’animation du message, et de l’efficacité perf
 ormative des énoncés en tant qu’actes vocaux</span>.</span></span></p><p><s
 pan style="font-family: tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif; font-size: 10pt;
 ">Proposé sous l’égide de l’International Council for Traditional Music (IC
 TM) et organisé au Centre de recherche en ethnomusicologie (CREM-LESC/CNRS)
  à l’université Paris Ouest Nanterre la Défense, ce colloque permettra aux 
 spécialistes des interactions vocales de débattre durant trois jours des qu
 estions et des pistes actuelles dans l’étude des énoncés liminaires. L’obje
 t appelant par nature le croisement de plusieurs disciplines, les chercheur
 s invités, au nombre de vingt, proviennent de l’anthropologie, de l’ethnoli
 nguistique, de l’ethnomusicologie, et de l’acoustique. S’y ajoutent des ing
 énieurs en traitement des archives et en analyse informatique du signal, qu
 i travaillent actuellement à de nouveaux outils d’indexation des formes voc
 ales.</span></p><p><br /><span style="font-family: tahoma,arial,helvetica,s
 ans-serif; font-size: 10pt;"><a href="http://archives.crem-cnrs.fr/archives
 /items/CNRSMH_I_2010_004_001_81/player/346x130/">http://archives.crem-cnrs.
 fr/archives/items/CNRSMH_I_2010_004_001_81/player/346x130/</a></span><br />
 <br /><span style="font-family: tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif; font-siz
 e: 10pt;">La relation entre langage et musique a fait l’objet d’un long déb
 at en ethnomusicologie. Le sujet a été soulevé dans l'article de List sur l
 a frontière entre parole et chant (1963), dans les travaux de George Herzog
  sur la relation entre musique et texte (1934, 1942, 1950), et dans l'analy
 se du «&nbsp;discours musical&nbsp;» de John Blacking (1982). En une chaîne
  quasiment ininterrompue, différents travaux ont depuis précisé les données
  ethnographiques sur différentes pratiques vocales aux frontières entre lan
 gage et musique (lamentations, récitations et psalmodies, chants dont les p
 aroles sont ou non compréhensibles pour les locuteurs).</span><br /><br /><
 span style="font-family: tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif; font-size: 10pt
 ;">En ethnolinguistique, des auteurs tels Laura Graham (1984, 1987), Ellen 
 Basso (1985), Charles Briggs (1993), Jean-Jacques Nattiez (1999), et Aaron 
 Fox (1992, 2004) ont analysé des modes d’énonciation où la forme vocale pre
 nd le pas sur le contenu sémantique (salutations rituelles ou incantations 
 thérapeutiques par exemple), ou bien des formes d’interaction affectée par 
 l’irruption d’énonciateurs non-humains (divinités, esprits, animaux) dans l
 a voix des locuteurs. L’une des conclusions vers lesquelles ces travaux con
 vergent est que la musicalité du discours est un aspect crucial, trop souve
 nt négligé, ouvrant la voie à une description rigoureuse des croyances reli
 gieuses.</span><br /><br /><span style="font-family: tahoma,arial,helvetica
 ,sans-serif; font-size: 10pt;">Très peu d'études ont cependant pris pour po
 int de départ le lien étroit qui existe entre les dimensions sémantique et 
 acoustique de la voix (voir Feld et Fox 1994). La fragmentation épistémolog
 ique du champ vocal entre linguistique, musicologie et anthropologie reste 
 un obstacle de taille. Pour tenter de relever le défi, ce colloque portera 
 précisément sur les énoncés liminaires situés à la frontière entre la voix 
 parlée et chantée. Seront privilégiés des matériaux comme les lamentations,
  le babillage, les comptines, la récitation coranique, les narrations mélod
 isées et les contes chantés, le scat, la glossolalie, ainsi que l’usage et 
 les variations de la voix dans la liturgie, le recours à l'iconicité du lan
 gage, ou encore à des jeux portant sur l'intonation dans les performances p
 oétiques et les discours politiques. Au travers de ces études de cas, l’enj
 eu sera de croiser les analyses acoustique, sémantique et pragmatique des é
 noncés vocaux. Aux frontières de l’anthropologie, de l’ethnomusicologie, de
  la linguistique et de l’ingénierie, le colloque s’inscrit dans une perspec
 tive interdisciplinaire qui fera surgir de nouveaux objets.</span></p><p><s
 pan>&nbsp;</span></p><h4 style="color: #000000; font-family: Tahoma, Geneva
 , sans-serif; font-size: 14.399999618530273px; margin-bottom: 0mm; line-hei
 ght: 14.399999618530273px;"><strong>23<sup>rd</sup>&nbsp;ICTM colloquium — 
 organized by the CREM</strong></h4><span style="font-size: 10pt; font-famil
 y: tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif;"><span style="background-color: #f4f4
 f4;"><span style="background-color: #ffffff;">The relation between speech a
 nd song is an old debate in ethnomusicology. The topic was notably addresse
 d List’s important article on the boundaries of speech and song (1963), in 
 George Herzog's early explorations of the relationship between music and te
 xt (1934, 1942, 1950), and in John Blacking's account of musical "discourse
 " (1982). Linguistically informed works addressed the question as well, suc
 h as that by Laura Graham (1984, 1987), Charles Briggs (1993), Jean-Jacques
  Nattiez (1999), and Aaron Fox (1992, 2004)</span>.</span>But five decades 
 after List’s foundational article, the topic continues to inspire discussio
 n. The reason may be, as Anthony Seeger suggested, that the separation of d
 isciplines that study different aspects of “vocal and verbal art has had a 
 disastrous effect on the development of our thinking about them” (1986:&nbs
 p;59). The wish to reconsider this separation has been pointed out for deca
 des. This is particularly the case for studies focusing on liminal utteranc
 es, such as glossolalias or scat. Described by practitioners as an “event o
 ccurring in my throat” (Certeau 1996:&nbsp;38), glossolalias are cases of v
 ocal production without clear semantic meaning which multiplies the possibi
 lities of speech. The decomposition of syllables and the combination of ele
 mentary sounds in games of alliteration create “an indefinite&nbsp;space ou
 tside of the jurisdiction of a language" (Certeau 1996:&nbsp;42). In his st
 udy on scat, Brent Hayes Edwards (2002) also argues about an extended vocal
  space: a continuum between instrumental uses of the voice and vocal uses o
 f instruments. In jazz, both are supposed to narrate stories.</span><p><spa
 n style="font-size: 10pt; font-family: tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif;">
 But still very few studies build their analysis on the intimate link betwee
 n the semantics and acoustics of voice production. As pointed out by Steven
  Feld and Aaron Fox (1994), most studies in ethnomusicology have difficulti
 es in simultaneously taking into account the words and sounds of vocal prod
 uction, and combined analyses of the semantics and acoustics of vocal produ
 ction are still very few and mostly unsatisfactory.</span><br /><br /><span
  style="font-size: 10pt; font-family: tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif;">T
 o try to take up this challenge, this colloquium will focus on liminal utte
 rances, at the border between speech and song. We will consider utterances 
 such as laments, nursery rhymes, Qur'anic chanting, recitative or the use o
 f the monotone voice in liturgy, iconicity of language, scat, glossolalias,
  melodized narrations, sung tales, vocal intonation in poetical performance
 s and in political discourses, among others. Special attention will be give
 n to a deeply combined analysis of the acoustics and semantics of these utt
 erances.</span></p><p class="western" style="color: #000000; font-family: T
 ahoma, Geneva, sans-serif; font-size: 14.399999618530273px; margin-bottom: 
 0mm;"><span style="font-size: 10pt;"><strong>Références</strong></span></p>
 <p><span style="font-size: 10pt; font-family: tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-s
 erif;">BEAUDET Jean-Michel 1996 “Rire. Un exemple d'Amazonie”.&nbsp;<i>L'Ho
 mme</i>&nbsp;36 (140): 81-99.</span><br /><span style="font-size: 10pt; fon
 t-family: tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif;">BLACKING John 1982 “The Struc
 ture of Musical Discourse: The Problem of the Song Text”.&nbsp;<i>Yearbook 
 for Traditional Music</i>&nbsp;14: 15‑23.</span><br /><span style="font-siz
 e: 10pt; font-family: tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif;">BRIGGS Charles L.
  1993 “Personal Sentiments and Polyphonic Voices in Warao Women’s Ritual Wa
 iling: Music and Poetics in a Critical and Collective Discourse”.&nbsp;<i>A
 merican Anthropologist</i>&nbsp;95(4): 929‑957.</span><br /><span style="fo
 nt-size: 10pt; font-family: tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif;">CERTEAU (DE
 ) Michel 1996 “Vocal Utopias: Glossolalias”.&nbsp;<i>Representations</i>&nb
 sp;56: 29‑47.</span><br /><span style="font-size: 10pt; font-family: tahoma
 ,arial,helvetica,sans-serif;">EDWARDS Brent Hayes 2002 “Louis Armstrong and
  the Syntax of Scat”.&nbsp;<i>Critical Inquiry</i>&nbsp;28(3): 618‑649.</sp
 an><br /><span style="font-size: 10pt; font-family: tahoma,arial,helvetica,
 sans-serif;">FELD Steven &amp; FOX Aaron 1994 “Music and Language”.&nbsp;<i
 >Annual Review of Anthropology</i>&nbsp;23: 25―53.</span><br /><span style=
 "font-size: 10pt; font-family: tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif;">FOX Aaro
 n 1992 “The Jukebox of History: Narratives of Loss and Desire in the Discou
 rse of Country Music”.&nbsp;<i>Popular Music</i>&nbsp;11(1): 53‑72.</span><
 br /><span style="font-size: 10pt; font-family: tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans
 -serif;">2004&nbsp;<i>Real Country: Music and Language in Working-Class Cul
 ture</i>. Durham, N.C.&nbsp;: Duke University Press.</span><br /><span styl
 e="font-size: 10pt; font-family: tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif;">GRAHAM
  Laura 1984 “Semanticity and Melody: Parameters of Contrast in Shavante Voc
 al Expression”.&nbsp;<i>Latin American Music Review</i>&nbsp;5(2): 161‑185.
 </span><br /><span style="font-size: 10pt; font-family: tahoma,arial,helvet
 ica,sans-serif;">1987 “Three Modes of Shavante Vocal Expression: Wailing, C
 ollective Singing, and Political Oratory”, in Sherzer &amp; Urban dir.:&nbs
 p;<i>Native South American Discourse</i>. Berlin, New-York: Mouton de Gruyt
 er: 83‑118.</span><br /><span style="font-size: 10pt; font-family: tahoma,a
 rial,helvetica,sans-serif;">HERZOG George 1934 “Speech-Melody and Primitive
  Music”.&nbsp;<i>The Musical Quarterly</i>&nbsp;20(4): 452‑466.</span><br /
 ><span style="font-size: 10pt; font-family: tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-ser
 if;">1942 “The Text and Melody in Primitive Music”.&nbsp;<i>Bulletin of the
  American Musicological Society</i>&nbsp;6: 10‑11.</span><br /><span style=
 "font-size: 10pt; font-family: tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif;">1950 “So
 ng”, in Leach dir.:&nbsp;<i>Funk and Wagnalls Standart Dictionary of Folklo
 re, Mythology and Legend</i>. New-York: Funk and Wagnalls&nbsp;2: 1032‑1050
 .</span><br /><span style="font-size: 10pt; font-family: tahoma,arial,helve
 tica,sans-serif;">LIST George 1963 “The Boundaries of Speech and Song”.&nbs
 p;<i>Ethnomusicology</i>&nbsp;7(1): 1‑16.</span><br /><span style="font-siz
 e: 10pt; font-family: tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif;">NATTIEZ Jean-Jacq
 ues 1999&nbsp;<i>Proust musicien</i>. Paris&nbsp;: Christian Bourgeois édit
 eur.</span><br /><span style="font-size: 10pt; font-family: tahoma,arial,he
 lvetica,sans-serif;">SEEGER Anthony 1986 “Oratory Is Spoken, Myth Is Told, 
 and Song Is Sung, But They Are All Music to My Ears”, in Sherzer &amp; Urba
 n dir.:&nbsp;<i>Native South American Discourse</i>. Berlin: Mouton de Gruy
 ter: 59‑82.</span></p><h4><a href="https://www.lesc-cnrs.fr/images/scalapi/
 eventscrem/ICTM2015_programme_A4-2.pdf" target="_blank">Programme&nbsp;</a>
 </h4><p>&nbsp;</p><h4 style="clear: both; color: #000000; font-family: Taho
 ma, Geneva, sans-serif;"><strong>Organizers</strong></h4><p><span style="fo
 nt-family: tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif; font-size: 10pt;"><strong>Coo
 rdination:</strong>&nbsp;<strong>Estelle AMY DE LA BRETÈQUE</strong>&nbsp;(
 CREM-LESC/CNRS, France)</span><br /><br /></p><h4 style="color: #000000; fo
 nt-family: Tahoma, Geneva, sans-serif; font-size: 14.399999618530273px;"><s
 pan style="font-family: tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif; font-size: 10pt;
 ">Scientific committee</span></h4><p><span style="font-family: tahoma,arial
 ,helvetica,sans-serif; font-size: 10pt;"><strong>Bernd BRABEC DE MORI</stro
 ng>&nbsp;(University of Music and Performing Arts, Austria)</span><br /><br
  /><span style="font-family: tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif; font-size: 
 10pt;"><strong>Junzo KAWADA</strong>&nbsp;(Kanagawa University, Japan)</spa
 n><br /><br /><span style="font-family: tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif; 
 font-size: 10pt;"><strong>Anthony SEEGER</strong>&nbsp;(UCLA, USA)</span><b
 r /><br /><span style="font-family: tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif; font
 -size: 10pt;"><strong>Kati SZEGO&nbsp;</strong>(Memorial University of Newf
 oundland - Executive Board member of ICTM, Canada)</span><br /><br /><span 
 style="font-family: tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif; font-size: 10pt;"><s
 trong>Stephen WILD&nbsp;</strong>(Australian National University - Vice Pre
 sident of ICTM, Australia)</span><br /><br /></p><h4 style="color: #000000;
  font-family: Tahoma, Geneva, sans-serif; font-size: 14.399999618530273px;"
 ><span style="font-family: tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif; font-size: 10
 pt;">Local organization committee</span></h4><p><span style="font-family: t
 ahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif; font-size: 10pt;"><strong>Jean-Michel BEA
 UDET</strong>&nbsp;(UPO - CREM-LESC/CNRS)</span><br /><br /><span style="fo
 nt-family: tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif; font-size: 10pt;"><strong>Sus
 anne FÜRNISS&nbsp;</strong>(MNHN/CNRS, president of the French Society for 
 Ethnomusicology)</span><br /><br /><span style="font-family: tahoma,arial,h
 elvetica,sans-serif; font-size: 10pt;"><strong>Andrea-Luz GUTIERREZ-CHOQUEV
 ILCA&nbsp;</strong>(EPHE/LAS - Collège de France)</span><br /><br /><span s
 tyle="font-family: tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif; font-size: 10pt;"><st
 rong>Giordano MARMONE</strong>&nbsp;(UPO, CREM-LESC/CNRS)</span><br /><br /
 ><span style="font-family: tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif; font-size: 10
 pt;"><strong>Magali De RUYTER</strong>&nbsp;(UPO, CREM-LESC/CNRS)</span><br
  /><br /><span style="font-family: tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif; font-
 size: 10pt;"><strong>Victor A. STOICHITA&nbsp;</strong>(Director of the Res
 earch Center for Ethnomusicology – CREM-LESC/CNRS)</span><br /><br /><span 
 style="font-family: tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif; font-size: 10pt;">Wi
 th additional help from:&nbsp;<strong>Loré Ajirent-Sagaspe</strong>,&nbsp;<
 strong>Éline Breton</strong>,&nbsp;<strong>Sisa Calapi, Preciosa Dombele</s
 trong>,&nbsp;<strong>Laurence Lemaur</strong>&nbsp;(ethnomusicology student
 s at UPO) and&nbsp;<strong>Iris Lemaître</strong>&nbsp;(student in Libraria
 n Studies, UPO).</span><br /><br /></p><h4 style="clear: both; color: #0000
 00; font-family: Tahoma, Geneva, sans-serif;"><strong>Partner institutions<
 /strong></h4><p><span style="font-size: 10pt; font-family: tahoma,arial,hel
 vetica,sans-serif;">The&nbsp;<a href="http://www.ictmusic.org/" target="_bl
 ank" style="border: none; color: #0f3179;"><strong>International Council fo
 r Traditional Music</strong></a>&nbsp;(ICTM) is a Non-Governmental Organisa
 tion in formal consultative relations with UNESCO. Its aims are to further 
 the study, practice, documentation, preservation and dissemination of tradi
 tional music and dance of all countries. To these ends the Council organise
 s World Conferences, Symposia and Colloquia. The Council also promotes thes
 e goals by publishing the&nbsp;<a href="http://www.ictmusic.org/publication
 s/yearbook-for-traditional-music" style="border: none; color: #0f3179;"><em
 >Yearbook for Traditional Music</em></a>, distributing the online&nbsp;<a h
 ref="http://www.ictmusic.org/publications/bulletin-ictm" style="border: non
 e; color: #0f3179;"><em>Bulletin of the ICTM</em></a>, and maintaining a ri
 ch&nbsp;<a href="http://www.ictmusic.org/civicrm/profile?gid=1&amp;reset=1"
  style="border: none; color: #0f3179;">Online Membership Directory</a>. By 
 means of its&nbsp;<a href="http://www.ictmusic.org/world-network" style="bo
 rder: none; color: #0f3179;">wide international representation</a>&nbsp;and
  the activities of its Study Groups, the International Council for Traditio
 nal Music acts as a bond among peoples of different cultures.</span><br /><
 br /><span style="font-size: 10pt; font-family: tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans
 -serif;">The&nbsp;<a href="http://crem-cnrs.fr/" target="_blank" style="bor
 der: none; color: #0f3179;"><strong>Research Center in Ethnomusicology</str
 ong></a>&nbsp;(CREM) is heir to the former Ethnomusicology Department of th
 e Musée de l’Homme (1929-2008), and has been part of the&nbsp;<a href="http
 ://www.mae.u-paris10.fr/lesc/" target="_blank" style="border: none; color: 
 #0f3179;">Research Team in Ethnology and Comparative Sociology</a>&nbsp;(LE
 SC – UMR 7186) since 2007. The CREM is dedicated to the study of musical pr
 actices and knowledge worldwide.</span><br /><span style="font-size: 10pt; 
 font-family: tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif;">Based on ethnography and a
  systematic collection of musical data, its approach pertains to an anthrop
 ology of music conceived in its socio-cultural, aesthetic, formal, acoustic
 , kinesthetic and cognitive dimensions. The Center investigates new researc
 h topics such as the embodiment of musical and choreographic skills, the cu
 ltural and cognitive production of musical emotion, the interconnectedness 
 of sensory modalities, the ecology of sonic environments, the construction 
 and emergence of musical systems. Its researchers also create&nbsp;<a href=
 "http://crem-cnrs.fr/realisations-multimedia" target="_blank" style="border
 : none; color: #0f3179;">new modalities of musical representation</a>, such
  as their “listening clues” (<i>clés d’écoute</i>) : these multimedia devic
 es guide the general public towards crucial aspects of specific musical exp
 ressions.</span><br /><span style="font-size: 10pt; font-family: tahoma,ari
 al,helvetica,sans-serif;">The CREM manages a&nbsp;<a href="http://archives.
 crem-cnrs.fr/" target="_blank" style="border: none; color: #0f3179;">large 
 collection of sound archives</a>&nbsp;inherited from the Musée de l’Homme a
 nd accumulated over more than a century. With more than 4,000 hours of unpu
 blished fieldwork recordings and about 4,000 hours of published documents, 
 these archives of great patrimonial value are made available online through
  the collaborative platform&nbsp;<i>Telemeta</i>. The collections are const
 antly nourished through the researchers’ fieldwork. The recordings are used
  as materials for new research, as preparation for new fieldwork, and for t
 he training of graduate students.</span><br /><span style="font-size: 10pt;
  font-family: tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif;">CREM researchers, lecture
 rs and professors hold important responsibilities at the&nbsp;<a href="http
 s://dep-anthropologie.u-paris10.fr/dpt-ufr-ssa-anthropologie/master-emad/" 
 target="_blank" style="border: none; color: #0f3179;">Anhropology departmen
 t</a>&nbsp;of Paris Ouest Nanterre – La Défense University, as well as at t
 he&nbsp;<a href="http://193.54.159.130/spip.php?article1685" target="_blank
 " style="border: none; color: #0f3179;">Musicology Department</a>&nbsp;of P
 aris 8 – St Denis University. Numerous graduate students from these univers
 ities are members of the CREM, which offers them a stimulating scientific a
 nd logistic environment.</span><br /><br /><span style="font-size: 10pt; fo
 nt-family: tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif;">The&nbsp;<strong><a href="ht
 tp://www.irit.fr/recherches/SAMOVA/DIADEMS/fr/welcome/&amp;cultureKey=en" t
 arget="_blank" style="border: none; color: #0f3179;">ANR project DIADEMS</a
 >&nbsp;</strong>(Description, Indexation, et Accès aux Documents Ethnomusic
 ologiques et Sonores) is a partnership between several teams dealing with a
 coustics, ethnolinguistics and ethnomusicological documents, and informatic
 ians. The laboratory of Ethnology and Comparative Sociology (LESC) includin
 g the research center of&nbsp;ethnomusicology (CREM) and the center of teac
 hing and research in American Indian ethnology (EREA) as well as the labora
 tory of anthropology of National Museum of Natural History (MNHN) are deali
 ng with the need to index the audio archives they manage, while keeping tra
 ck of the contents, which is a long, fastidious and expensive task. Since 2
 007, as no open-source application exists on the market to access the audio
  data recorded by researchers, the CREM-LESC, the LAM and the sound archive
 s of the MNHN began the conception of an innovate and collaborative tool th
 at answers the trade needs (linked to the documents temporal span), while b
 eing adapted to the researchers requirements.</span><br /><span style="font
 -size: 10pt; font-family: tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif;">With financia
 l support from the CNRS Très Grand Equipement (TGE), ADONIS and the Mnistry
  of culture, the Telemeta platform, developed by Parisson, is online since 
 May 2011 (<a href="http://archives.crem-cnrs.fr/" style="border: none; colo
 r: #0f3179;">http://archives.crem-cnrs.fr</a>). On this platform, basic sig
 nal analysis tools are already available, It is however mandatory to have a
  set of advanced and innovative tools for automatic or semi-automatique ind
 exing of this audio data, that includes sometimes long recordings, with qui
 te heterogeneous content and quality. The aim of the DIADEMS project is to 
 supply some of these tools, to integrate them into Telemeta, while also sat
 isfying specific user needs related to ergonomy and accest rights managemen
 t.</span><br /><br /><span style="font-size: 10pt; font-family: tahoma,aria
 l,helvetica,sans-serif;">L'<strong><a href="http://www.u-paris10.fr/recherc
 he/ecole-doctorale-milieux-cultures-et-societes-du-passe-et-du-present-ed-3
 95-255195.kjsp" target="_blank" style="border: none; color: #085cf7;">école
  doctorale « Milieux, cultures et sociétés du passé et du présent »</a></st
 rong>&nbsp;associe un ensemble de disciplines : Archéologie, Ethnologie- Pr
 éhistoire-Ethnomusicologie, Géographie, Aménagement-urbanisme, Histoire, Hi
 stoire de l'Art, Langues et Lettres anciennes. Elle regroupe 9 équipes de r
 echerche entre lesquelles se répartissent quelque 460 doctorants et 105 dir
 ecteurs de thèse.&nbsp; Elle assure 3 missions au sein de l'Université : pé
 dagogique — organisation des enseignements doctoraux et suivi des doctorant
 s, soutien à la professionnalisation ; organisationnelle — budget, contrats
  doctoraux, a politique de financement des thèses mais aussi de veille au r
 espect de la charte des thèses de l'université ; animation de la recherche 
 —  recherche de convergences entre les programmes des unités de recherche d
 e manière à définir de grandes orientations thématiques.</span><br /><br />
 <span style="font-size: 10pt; font-family: tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-seri
 f;">La&nbsp;<a href="http://ethnomusicologie.fr/" target="_blank" style="bo
 rder: none; color: #0f3179;"><strong>Société française d’ethnomusicologie&n
 bsp;</strong>(SFE)</a>&nbsp;est une société savante dont la mission est d'e
 ncourager, de soutenir et de promouvoir la réflexion sur les musiques du mo
 nde. La SFE, est aussi un réseau d’experts, actifs au sein d’institutions c
 omme l’Unesco, les musées, les festivals ou les médias (presse écrite, radi
 os, TV, internet), qui contribuent ainsi à la connaissance et à la diffusio
 n des expressions artistiques et culturelles de l’humanité. Elle est l’orga
 ne représentatif de l’ICTM en France.</span></p><p><span style="font-size: 
 10pt; font-family: tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif;"></span></p><h4><stro
 ng><span style="color: #000000;">Attending</span></strong></h4><p><span sty
 le="font-family: tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif; font-size: 10pt;">Thank
 s to our&nbsp;partner institutions,&nbsp;<strong>attending the colloquium i
 s entirely free</strong>&nbsp;for everyone.</span><br /><br /><span style="
 font-family: tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif; font-size: 10pt;">Audience 
 members (apart from staff and invited speakers) are welcome to share the co
 llective meals, at their own expense.</span></p><p><span style="font-family
 : tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif; font-size: 10pt;"></span></p><h4 style
 ="color: #000000; font-family: Tahoma, Geneva, sans-serif; font-size: 14.39
 9999618530273px;"><strong>Hotel</strong></h4><p><span style="font-family: t
 ahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif;">Invited participants are hosted at&nbsp;
 <a href="http://en.qualys-hotel.com/hotel/france/ile-de-france/nanterre/nan
 terre-paris-la-defense" target="_blank" style="border: none; color: #0f3179
 ;">Hôtel Qualys Nanterre</a>, 2, avenue Benoît Frachon 92000 Nanterre, Tel.
  01 46 95 08 08.</span><br /><span style="font-family: tahoma,arial,helveti
 ca,sans-serif;">The hotel is within a few minutes walk from the&nbsp;<stron
 g>RER A stop "Nanterre Ville".&nbsp;<br /></strong>To plan your arrival, we
  suggest using the RATP route planner available here:&nbsp;<a href="http://
 www.ratp.fr/itineraires/en/ratp/recherche-avancee" style="border: none; col
 or: #0f3179;">http://www.ratp.fr/itineraires/en/ratp/recherche-avancee</a>&
 nbsp;If you encounter any difficulties with the planner, please email us yo
 ur travel details and we’ll check the best route for you.</span><br /><br /
 ><span style="font-family: tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif;">Participants
  staying at the hotel will be provided upon their arrival with RER tickets 
 for the daily commuting between the hotel and the university (1 stop).</spa
 n><br /><br /><span style="font-family: tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif;"
 >It is also possible to walk the distance, should you prefer to do so.</spa
 n><br /><span style="font-family: tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif;">Easie
 st way to arrive, whether from Paris or from the hotel, is by&nbsp;<strong>
 RER A, stop "Nanterre Université"</strong>. It is also possible to walk fro
 m the Hotel to the University (straight walk,&nbsp;<em>ca.</em>&nbsp;20 min
 ).</span><br /><span style="font-family: tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif;
 "><span style="font-family: Tahoma,Geneva,sans-serif; font-size: 14.4px; te
 xt-align: justify; background-color: #f4f4f4;">The colloquium takes place o
 n the campus of Nanterre University,&nbsp;</span><strong style="font-family
 : Tahoma,Geneva,sans-serif; font-size: 14.4px; text-align: justify;">buildi
 ng B, Salle des Conférences</strong><span style="font-family: Tahoma,Geneva
 ,sans-serif; font-size: 14.4px; text-align: justify; background-color: #f4f
 4f4;">. Below is a map of the campus.</span></span></p><p>&nbsp;</p><p styl
 e="text-align: justify;"><img src="https://www.lesc-cnrs.fr/images/scalapi/
 eventscrem/map_qualys.jpg" alt="map qualys" style="margin-right: 10px; marg
 in-bottom: 10px; float: left;" /></p><p>&nbsp;</p><p><img style="margin-rig
 ht: 10px; margin-bottom: 10px; float: left;" alt="map qualys fac" src="http
 s://www.lesc-cnrs.fr/images/scalapi/eventscrem/map_qualys-fac.jpg" /><br />
 <span style="font-family: Tahoma, Geneva, sans-serif; font-size: 14.3999996
 18530273px; text-align: justify; background-color: #f4f4f4;"></span></p><p 
 style="text-align: justify;"><img src="https://www.lesc-cnrs.fr/images/scal
 api/eventscrem/2014-plan-du-campusNanterre-legende.jpg" alt="2014 plan du c
 ampusNanterre legende" style="margin-right: 10px; margin-bottom: 10px; floa
 t: left;" /></p><p>&nbsp;</p><h4 style="color: #000000; font-family: Tahoma
 , Geneva, sans-serif; font-size: 14.399999618530273px;"><strong><span style
 ="color: #000000;">Meals</span></strong></h4><p><span style="font-size: 10p
 t;"><strong>Lunches</strong>&nbsp;will be served at the university’s restau
 rant on campus — the pink building on the map above, named Resto U.</span><
 br /><br /><span style="font-size: 10pt;">Invited speakers arriving on the 
 19th afternoon are invited for dinner at Hotel Qualys.</span><br /><br /><s
 pan style="font-size: 10pt;"><strong>Dinners and vocal workshops on 20<sup>
 th</sup>&nbsp;and 21<sup>st</sup></strong>&nbsp;will take place at the "Fer
 me du Bonheur". This is just in front of the building marked "MAE" in green
  on the map (but it is not a component of the University, therefore it does
 n’t appear on the map).</span><br /><br /><span style="font-size: 10pt;"><s
 trong>Farewell dinner on 22</strong><sup>nd</sup>&nbsp;will take place at F
 lam’s restaurant in Paris (<a href="http://www.flams.fr/images/images_resta
 urants/Lombards/mapslombards2.png" target="_blank" class="jcepopup" style="
 border: none; color: #0f3179;">Rue des Lombards<span class="jcemediabox-zoo
 m-link" http:="" crem-cnrs="" fr="" plugins="" system="" jcemediabox="" img
 ="" zoom-link="" gif="" style="padding-right: 16px;">http://crem-cnrs.fr/pl
 ugins/system/jcemediabox/img/zoom-link.gif</span></a>); background-color: t
 ransparent; display: inherit; background-position: right center; background
 -repeat: no-repeat no-repeat;"&gt;).</span></p><p><span style="font-size: 1
 0pt;"></span></p><p><span style="font-size: 10pt;">The intention of this co
 lloquium on Liminal utterances is to discuss "hands on", with as many audio
  and video examples as possible. The Multimedia Presentations are an experi
 ment in that direction. Presenters were invited to combine audiovisual data
  and analysis in order to produce a (more-or-less) self-standing video file
  containing an argument or simply raising questions about the illustrated s
 ound practices. These files are available below. They will also be played d
 uring the conference, where each of them will be followed by extensive disc
 ussion sessions with their authors. Click on an image below to start a pres
 entation (should open an popup with a HTML5 video).</span><br /><br /></p><
 h2>Liminal utterances: multimedia presentations</h2><h4><span style="font-s
 ize: 10pt;"> Between Speech and Song: Liminal utterances of sadness in Anat
 olia and the Caucasus</span></h4><h4><span style="font-family: tahoma,arial
 ,helvetica,sans-serif;"><a href="http://crem-cnrs.fr/images/audio-video/ICT
 M2015_AmyDeLaBreteque_BetweenSpeechAndSong.mp4" target="_blank" class="jcep
 opup jcemediabox-image"><span style="margin: 0px 10px 10px 0px; float: left
 ; padding: 0px; max-width: 300px; border: 0px none #0f3179;" class="jcemedi
 abox-zoom-span"><img style="margin: 0px; padding: 0px; float: none;" class=
 "nosmartresize" title="Amy de la Bretèque — view the presentation" alt="Amy
  de la Bretèque — view the presentation" src="http://crem-cnrs.fr/images/au
 dio-video/ICTM2015_AmyDeLaBreteque_BetweenSpeechAndSong.jpg" height="225" w
 idth="300" /></span></a>ESTELLE AMY DE LA BRETEQUE (CREM-LESC/CNRS, France)
 </span></h4><p><span style="font-family: tahoma,arial,helvetica,sans-serif;
 ">This presentation explores the practice of melodized speech in the Caucas
 us and Anatolia. Taking as a case study the Yezidi Kurds in Armenia, it exp
 lains why this practice, linked to the narration of sad events, stands at t
 he border between speech and song in the local typology of vocal production
 . On a wider area, the comparison of three case studies from fieldwork cond
 ucted in Azerbaijan, Turkey and Armenia shows how elderly women integrate m
 elodized speech in daily conversations. Beyond religious, national and ling
 uistic differences, the similarity of these practices suggests a shared soc
 ial-vocal nexus in Anatolia and the Caucasus.</span><br /><br /> <br /><br 
 /> <br /><br /></p><h4>The vocality of a religious poem among the Pomaks</h
 4><h4><a href="http://crem-cnrs.fr/images/audio-video/ICTM2015_EftychiaDrou
 tsa2015_VocalityReligiousPoem_web.mp4" target="_blank" class="jcepopup jcem
 ediabox-image"><span style="margin: 0px 10px 10px 0px; float: left; padding
 : 0px; max-width: 300px; border: 0px none #0f3179;" class="jcemediabox-zoom
 -span"><img style="margin: 0px; padding: 0px; float: none;" class="nosmartr
 esize" title="Eftychia Droutsa — view the presentation" alt="Eftychia Drout
 sa — view the presentation" src="http://crem-cnrs.fr/images/audio-video/ICT
 M2015_EftychiaDroutsa2015_VocalityReligiousPoem_web.jpg" height="225" width
 ="300" /></span></a>EFTYCHIA DROUTSA (Iremus/University Paris 4 Sorbonne, F
 rance)</h4><p>&nbsp;</p><p><span style="font-size: 10pt;">This work questio
 ns “vocality”, that is the sound production of speech and song among the Po
 maks through their religious poem called mevlud.</span><br /><br /><span st
 yle="font-size: 10pt;"> Dating from the 15th century, the <em>mevlud</em> i
 s a poem attributed to the poet Suleyman Çelebi, in which he relates the bi
 rth, the life and the death of the Prophète Mohamed. It is written in osman
 li (Othoman, ancient Turkish in arabic characters) in the poetic form of ma
 snavi, structured in a series of versified distiches where each verse adher
 es on a metric regularity of eleven syllables. We find this poem among Poma
 ks, a mountain population, muslim and trilingual, who speaktheir own Slavic
  dialect - Pomak -, Greek and Turkish. They live in the north of Greece in 
 the area of Thrace and are recognized officially as “a religious minority” 
 by the Greek Government. Pomaks learn to read the mevlud, on which they ada
 pt a repetitive motif borrowed, modified and customized according to indivi
 dual preferences and abilities. However, most of them do not understand the
  literal meaning of the poetic text. It is in this particular context, wher
 e the words are detached from their litteral meaning and become a medium fo
 r statement, that we will approach the duality of speech and song through a
  sound editing, where the words are sung, whispered, muttered, recited or s
 imply said.</span><br /><br /> <br /><br /> <br /><br /></p><h4>Development
  of turn taking in vocal interaction between mothers and infants aged betwe
 en 2 and 4 months</h4><h4><a href="http://crem-cnrs.fr/images/audio-video/I
 CTM2015_Infanti_infants.mp4" target="_blank" class="jcepopup jcemediabox-im
 age"><span style="margin: 0px 10px 10px 0px; float: left; padding: 0px; max
 -width: 300px; border: 0px none #0f3179;" class="jcemediabox-zoom-span"><im
 g style="margin: 0px; padding: 0px; float: none;" class="nosmartresize" alt
 ="Click to play the presentation" src="http://crem-cnrs.fr/images/audio-vid
 eo/ICTM2015_Infanti_infants.jpg" height="169" width="300" /></span></a>RUBI
 A INFANTI &amp; EBRU YILMAZ (Laboratoire Ethologie, Cognition, Development 
 -EA 3456-, University Paris-West, France)</h4><p><span style="font-size: 10
 pt;">Infants are known to engage in conversation-like exchanges from the en
 d of the second month after birth. These ‘protoconversations’ involve both 
 turn-taking and overlapping vocalization. Previous research has shown that 
 the timing of adult-infant turn-taking sequences is close to that of adult 
 verbal conversation. The gap between turns in protoconversational exchange 
 seldom exceeds 500ms. It has also been shown that young infants adjust the 
 quality of their vocalization in response to the quality and timing of adul
 t vocalization. Furthermore, turn-taking exchanges often involve mutual imi
 tation of sounds, pitches and melodic contour. We present new evidence of t
 he timing and temporal organization of turn-taking interaction between moth
 ers and 2 to 4-month-olds recorded in naturalistic contexts based on a corp
 us of recordings from 50 French dyads. All of them were recorded in natural
 istic contexts, in their home, when infants were in a quiet alert state. Th
 e entire sample comprised a total of 2943 vocalizations of which 748 (25.4%
 ) were produced by the infants, 1851 (62.9%) were produced by the mothers, 
 and 344 were overlapping vocalizations (11.7%). In all, 489 turns taking se
 quences were identified. The quality and duration of infant vocalizations d
 iffered according to whether or not they were produced within a turn-taking
  sequence. Finally, length and number of turns were highly correlated betwe
 en mothers and infants vocalizations.</span><br /><br /><span style="font-s
 ize: 10pt;"> <strong>[Coming soon…]</strong></span><br /><br /> <br /><br /
 > <br /><br /></p><h4>Sung assemblies or declaimed songs? The samburu soloi
 sts (Kenya) on the border between political discussion and musical activity
 </h4><h4><a href="http://crem-cnrs.fr/images/audio-video/ICTM2015_Marmone_S
 amburu.mp4" target="_blank" class="jcepopup jcemediabox-image"><span style=
 "margin: 0px 10px 10px 0px; float: left; padding: 0px; max-width: 300px; bo
 rder: 0px none #0f3179;" class="jcemediabox-zoom-span"><img style="margin: 
 0px; padding: 0px; float: none;" class="nosmartresize" title="Giordano Marm
 one — View the presentation" alt="Giordano Marmone — View the presentation"
  src="http://crem-cnrs.fr/images/audio-video/ICTM2015_Marmone_Samburu.jpg" 
 height="225" width="300" /></span></a>GIORDANO MARMONE (CREM-LESC/Universit
 y Paris West)</h4><p><span style="font-size: 10pt;">Among the Samburu of Ke
 nya the leaders and the spokesmen of the warriors' age-grade, the so-called
  larikok, play a fundamental role in both political and musical domains. Th
 e oratorical skills of which they must be provided to protect the interests
  of the warriors during the assemblies, core of the Samburu political syste
 m, also allow them to stand out as main soloists during the singing and dan
 cing</span><br /><br /> <br /><br /> <br /><br /></p><h2>&nbsp;</h2><h2>&nb
 sp;</h2><h4>Ferdinand Brunot and the Archives de la Parole</h4><h4><a href=
 "http://crem-cnrs.fr/images/audio-video/ICTM2015_Picard_BrunotArchivesParol
 e.mp4" target="_blank" class="jcepopup jcemediabox-image"><span style="marg
 in: 0px 10px 10px 0px; float: left; padding: 0px; max-width: 300px; border:
  0px none #0f3179;" class="jcemediabox-zoom-span"><img style="margin: 0px; 
 padding: 0px; float: none;" class="nosmartresize" title="François Picard — 
 view the presentation" alt="François Picard — view the presentation" src="h
 ttp://crem-cnrs.fr/images/audio-video/ICTM2015_Picard_BrunotArchivesParole.
 jpg" height="225" width="300" /></span></a>FRANÇOIS PICARD (Iremus, Univers
 ity Paris 4 Sorbonne, France)</h4><p><span style="font-size: 10pt;">The Arc
 hives de la Parole or Spoken Archives have been founded by the French histo
 rian of French language and grammarian Ferdinand Brunot at Sorbonne univers
 ity in 1911. Using a Pathéphone phonograph, he recorded spoken or singing v
 oices, he classified in main sections: I for “interprètes”, O for “orateurs
 ”, L for «langues”, D for “dialectes”. Taking it as a solid corpus, we anal
 yse it using digital tools according to the relation between pitch, intensi
 ty and timbre, and find it possible through strong descriptors to recover l
 ocal, culturally meaningful, categories. The question of whether this new c
 ategorisation could be universal will be asked.sessions. This double form o
 f authority is based on what, among the Samburu, is considered as one of th
 e essential features of male leadership: the ability of “dominating the wor
 ds” in all their forms, both sung and spoken. At the same time, this connec
 tion between political debate and soloist singing is not focused exclusivel
 y on the double social role of the larikok. The vocal technique that charac
 terizes a big part of the Samburu's musical repertoire, in fact, is definab
 le as a form of speech shaped around the rhythm of the dance. It confers to
  the melodic contour of the soloist's part the prosodic characteristics of 
 the spoken language, making Samburu choral songs a sort of oratorical confr
 ontation between soloists, very close, structurally and verbally, to the as
 semblies' debate scheme. The process of decision-making and the composition
  of the songs' lyrics lead, in both cases, to the creation of accounts whic
 h aim to expose opinions and stories based on real events. But if during th
 e assemblies the speakers' purpose is to use their own charisma for the pol
 itical administration of the community as representatives of an age-grade's
  or an age-set's interests, during the singing and dancing sessions the sol
 oists have the responsibility to stand for their age-group and share with t
 he listeners the narrative of its collective memory, contributing to assert
  its presence within the society.</span></p>
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