Bruno nettl biography
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Department of Folklore and Ethnomusicology
After attending University High School, Bruno pursued music studies at Indiana University, completing the Ph.D. () beneath the tutelage of Dr. George at IU, Bruno served as one of the first Graduate Assistants at the Archive of Traditional Music, where he worked closely with faculty from music, folklore, linguistics, and anthropology. His dissertation on the musical practices of the Blackfoot people of Montana, marked the first ever doctorate in the nascent field of ethnomusicology. Upon graduation Bruno began his career as Music Librarian at Wayne State University, and later assumed a professorship at the University of Illinois, founding its ethnomusicology programing
As a scholar, teacher, friend, and colleague, it is difficult to overstate Brunos significance for the discipline of ethnomusicology. Author and editor of 36 books and articles (seriously I counted), Brunos research encompassed Native American, Iranian, South India
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Bruno Nettl
American ethnomusicologist (–)
"Nettl" redirects here. For other uses, see Nettl (disambiguation).
Bruno Nettl (March 14, – January 15, ) was an American ethnomusicologist and academic of Czech birth. A central figure of ethnomusicology, he was among the discipline's most influential scholars. Nettl's research interests varied widely; he wrote on music of the Blackfoot people, Iran, Southern India and particularly the scope and methods of ethnomusicology as a discipline. His lengthy teaching-career centered on the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, where his many students included Stephen Blum and Philip V. Bohlman.
Early life and education
[edit]Bruno Nettl was born on March 14, in Prague, then in Czechoslovakia, to a musical family. His father was Paul Nettl[de] (–), a well-known musicologist who researched Mozart as well as the connections between Czech, German and Jewish musical traditions. Among the elder Nettl's work was the Handbuch d
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Active principally in the field of ethnomusicology, he has done field research with Native American peoples and in Iran, and secondarily in Israel and Southern India. He has served as President of the samhälle for Ethnomusicology and as editor of its journal, Ethnomusicology, and also of the Yearbook for Traditional Music.
Among his several books, the best known are Theory and Method inEthnomusicology (), The Study of Ethnomusicology (), and the most recent, Blackfoot Musical Thought: Comparative Perspectives (), The Radif of Persian Music (rev. ed., ), and Heartland Excursions: Ethnomusicological Perspectives on Schools of Music ().