标题: | 冷战听觉转向第三世界的音乐生产:李双泽、杨祖珺、王明辉的思想实践 From Cold War Listening Experiences to Third World Music Production: Thinking Practice of LI Shuangze, YANG Tsuchuen and WANG Minghui |
作者: | 刘雅芳 陈光兴 何东洪 Liu, Ya-Fang Chen, Kuan-Hsing Ho, Tung-Hung 社会与文化研究所 |
关键字: | 冷战听觉;第三世界;亚洲;美国主义;通俗音乐;李双泽;杨祖珺;王明辉;黑名单工作室;Cold War Listening Experience;the Third World;Asia;Americanism;Popular Music;LI Shuangze;YANG Tsuchuen;WANG Minghui;Blacklist Production(Blacklist Studio) |
公开日期: | 2016 |
摘要: | 本论文以通俗音乐的生产通向声(身)在第三世界/殖民亚洲所遭逢的,以二战后美国主义为开启征兆的“冷战听觉”想像结构。这是同处于此想像与意识再生产结构的台湾,它声(身)在第三世界/殖民亚洲的声音、情感与精神的面貌。这段启动“冷战听觉”的历史至今尚未终结,它是“过去”但是也从未离开“现在”。经过重叠着新旧帝国殖民视线、冷战、美国在亚洲参与的战争、反共戒严的历史,而贴近全世界青年耳朵的民谣、摇滚乐,到现在已经是各地当代音乐生产内容,但是这股音乐形式所曾主/被动搅动的文化与意识形态的斗争却仍未止息。 为描绘与再问题化这段主要形构冷战听觉的二战后历史阶段(1960-1970年代),本论文进入三位成长于冷战年代的音乐工作者的生命轨迹,他们是:李双泽(1949-1977)、杨祖珺(1955-)、黑名单工作室王明辉(1953-)。在他们的听觉与音乐生产轨迹当中,我们可以发现他们身历音乐所思考的历史与社会问题,或身处在地与世界的历史与社会转折之处透过创作/制作音乐表达情感和思想的声音。 第二章由重新解读李双泽的音乐书写、游记随笔、小说,探看其经历与思想活动中的“第三世界/亚洲”文化视野。重新勾勒他参与创作新民歌行动的丰富精神世界。 第三章以承接“唱自己的歌”文化运动之精神为歌手的杨祖珺为线索,探论1970年代民歌运动的后续效应。尤其是1980年代她筹划与制作的党外录音带与党外政治/文化运动参与。 第四章探论王明辉与黑名单工作室介入冷战戒严史与本土化意识形态结构的音乐实践。特别是他在《摇篮曲》(1996)之后担任合辑制作人、成立Nature High Asia,再到剧场音乐设计所逐步进行的亚洲音乐计画。 最后,本论文提出“面向‘唱自己的歌’的亚洲/第三世界”作为开放式的结论以及重新连结听觉经验的起点。同时介绍同声(身)在冷战–殖民亚洲也共享冷战听觉经验,并以制作音乐走出不同思想与实践路径的其他亚洲创作歌手。 By discussing the production of popular music, the dissertation explores the imaginary structure of “Cold War Listening Experience” whose sprouting is symptomized by post-war Americanism that befalls the human voices (bodies) of the Third World/colonial Asia. For Taiwan that shares the same structure of imagination and ideological reproduction, it also represents the vocal, emotional and mental status of the island whose voices (bodies) also lie in the Third World/colonial Asia. This initiated history of “Cold War Listening Experience” has not ended; it belongs to the “past” but never gets separated from the “present.” Going through the overlapped visions of the old and the new imperialism and colonialism, the Cold War, Asian wars that the U.S. had participated in and the anti-communist and martial-law history, the folk song and the rock music which are familiar to the ears of the young people around the world have formed the main content of the contemporary music everywhere. However, the cultural and ideological struggles triggering/triggered by the music form has never stopped. To delineate and problematize the post-war historical stage (the 1960s-1970s) that shapes the Cold War listening experience, the dissertation explores the life trajectories of the three music workers who grew up during the Cold War: Li Shuangze (1949-1977), Yang Tsuchuen (1955- ) and Wang Minghui (1953- ). From their listening experiences and musical production, we may find the historical and social problems that they ponder through music and the sounds of feeling and thoughts that they express through music composition/production for the historical and social turning points of the local or world history that they have lived in. The second chapter reconsiders Li Shuangze’s musical writing, travel essays and fictions to investigate the cultural horizon of “the Third World/Asia” in his career and thinking activities. It aims to re-depict Li’s rich inner world during his participation in the new folk song composition movement. The third chapter focuses on Yang Tsuchuen, who has adhered to the spirit of “Sing Our Own Songs” cultural movement, to discuss the aftereffects of the 1970s folk song movement. It particularly discusses the Tangwai cassettes of the 1980s planned and produced by Yang and the Tangwai political and cultural movements she had participated in. The fourth chapter discusses the musical practice that Wang Minghui and Blacklist Production (also known as Blacklist Studio) make to intervene in the Cold War-martial law history and the nativist ideological structure. Particularly, the chapter focuses on Wang’s career after Lullaby (1996) as the producer of compilation album, the establishment of Nature High Asia and his Asian music project deriving from the theatrical music composition. In the final section, the dissertation proposes “Let’s turn to Asia/the Third World to sing our own songs” as an open-ended conclusion as well as a starting point to re-imagine listening experiences. Meanwhile, it also introduces other Asian singer-songwriters who share the same Cold War-colonial Asian voices (bodies) but intend to create alternative thinking and practice routes through music production. |
URI: | http://etd.lib.nctu.edu.tw/cdrfb3/record/nctu/#GT079649801 http://hdl.handle.net/11536/140454 |
显示于类别: | Thesis |