Digital heritage seminar 2018
Digital environments of Indigenous song

Digital environments of Indigenous song

Streamed live as part of the Digital Heritage Seminars series on 3 October 2018

In Australia, repatriation of song records from archives to communities-of-origin has emerged as key intervention used to support the social production and transmission of song knowledge. In repatriating and disseminating data it is essential that we consider the complex musical, social, economic and political issues to which legacy records, and the new digital technologies used to disseminate them, give rise. While our attention to musical resilience and vitality in contexts of socio-cultural, linguistic, economic and political change is growing, we are yet to consider how musical traditions are responding to this brave new world, and it is essential that we turn our attention to the technologies that we are using to sustain them. Using data from projects funded by the Australian Research Council investigating music sustainability, this seminar explored markers of musical resilience and vitality in Junba from the north-central Kimberley and Tabi from the west Pilbara. It considered how resilience and vitality in these songs interacts with the changing digital environments - both technologies indigenous to communities of practitioners, and those introduced by researchers and archives.

Presenter

Dr Sally Treloyn
Faculty of Fine Arts and Music

Dr Sally Treloyn
Dr Sally Treloyn

Sally Treloyn is an ARC Future Fellow and Co-Director of the Research Unit for Indigenous Arts and Cultures in the Faculty of Fine Arts and Music. Treloyn is an applied ethnomusicologist and has conducted research on Junba in the west and northcentral Kimberley for 19 year. Through a current ARC Discovery and Future Fellowship project, Sally also currently researches Tabi from the west Pilbara, and is focusing on the digital environments of indigenous song.