The Björling 'Opera' : A children's Nursery Academy and an Italian Conservatory in Miniature


Autoria(s): Liljas, Juvas Marianne
Data(s)

2012

Resumo

The aim in this chapter is to develop a deeper understanding about the informal Björling 'School' in Sweden. Contextually the example is related to the micro history of opera education contributing to the macro perspective illuminating a provincial example of the concept of domestic opera schooling. The specific focus was on Karl David Björling (1873-1926), the teaching parent of the Swedish tenor Jussi Björling (1911-1960) and his brothers Gösta and Olle.   The Björling family model of opera schooling belongs to the classical canon of domestic home education which was common during the epoch. The phenomenon is also within the field of opera singing an important reference to the historical context of the Nordic opera history of vocal education.   The uniqueness concerning the Björling School seems to be the rigorous and exceptionally early training. David Björling’s pedagogy was rooted in earlier German theories of musical upbringing. It's clear from his results that he was familiar with the neo-humanistic ideal on which reformed music education was based. Of a specific interest is the term Gesang als Unterricht as a concept for developing childrens musical and memorising capacities.   Conceptually the roots of the Björling model are in the eighteenth-century Romantic view of prodigies and their abilities. The extensive touring is connected to the promotion of wonder-children, and David Björling’s educational style to the conservative Master-pupil tradition.   David Björling's vocal ideal was a part of the contemporary debate about “The decadence of the singing art”, and seems to have its roots in an older Italian tradition. There are recurring similarities between his educational methods and the didactic principles of the Lamperti School: Enjoying a revival around the late 1800s and early 1900s, it has been called the natural or the national school. Nevertheless, through authentic experiences and gramophone recordings the Italian tenor Enrico Caruso became David Björling’s pedagogical role model.

<p>Founded of NOS-HS Exploratory Workshop "Opera on the Move in the Nordic Countries:Tourings Artists and the Construction of National Identites in the Long 19th Century" (2011-2012) at the Sibelius Academy</p>

Forskningsnätverket Opera on the Move in the Nordic Countries:Tourings Artists and the Construction of National Identites in the Long 19th Century (2011-2012); Den musikaliska salongen i Falun under 1800-talet

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:du-10934

urn:isbn:978-952-5959-46-8

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Högskolan Dalarna, Pedagogiskt arbete

Helsingfors : Sibelius Academy

Relação

DocMus Research Publications, 2242-6418 ; 4

Opera on the Move in the Nordic Countries During the Long 19th Century, p. 17-49

Direitos

info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess

Palavras-Chave #Domestic opera education #history of vocal pedagogy #teaching children singing #musical upbringing #wonder children #Educational Sciences #Utbildningsvetenskap
Tipo

Chapter in book

info:eu-repo/semantics/bookPart

text