Gratier2008

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Gratier2008
BibType ARTICLE
Key Gratier2008
Author(s) Maya Gratier
Title Grounding in musical interaction: evidence from jazz performances
Editor(s)
Tag(s) EMCA, Improvisation, grounding, interaction, performance, phrasing
Publisher
Year 2008
Language English
City
Month
Journal Musicae Scientiae
Volume 12
Number 1
Pages 71–110
URL Link
DOI 10.1177/1029864908012001041
ISBN
Organization
Institution
School
Type
Edition
Series
Howpublished
Book title
Chapter

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Abstract

This study explores the issue of mutual understanding between musicians in improvised performance. It attempts to describe how improvising musicians indicate to each other that they have grasped each other's expressive intentions in order to collaboratively negotiate common expressive trajectories. The process of moment-to-moment monitoring of shared understanding is referred to as “grounding”. Shared knowledge, beliefs and assumptions provide an important basis for grounding and grounding in turn reinforces a “common ground” of shared representation. Based on research on “grounding” in conversational exchange and on studies of nonverbal mother-infant interaction, some possible indices of “grounding” in musical interaction are discussed. Grounding in conversational exchange is attained through acknowledgement, relevance and sustained attention. It is proposed here that displays of mutual understanding between musicians are rooted in a collaboratively negotiated embodied phrasing through which repetition, mirroring and matching, punctuation, and completion and synchronisation might constitute the musical basis for grounding.

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