词条 | European Music Council | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
释义 |
|name = European Music Council |image = |map = |mcaption = |type = European Umbrella Organisation |membership = 75 active members |headquarters = {{nowrap|Bonn, Germany}} |formation = 1972 |leader_title = Sec. Gen. |leader_name = Simone Dudt, Ruth Jakobi |language = |website = www.emc-imc.org }} The European Music Council (EMC) is a regional group of the International Music Council (IMC) representing Europe. It was established in 1972 as the 'European regional group of the IMC' and was renamed the European Music Council in 1992. The IMC was founded by UNESCO in 1949, and is, today, a non-governmental organisation (NGO), which still retains formal relations with UNESCO.[1] Until 2000 the secretariat was based in Aarau, Switzerland, and is now in Bonn, Germany. The EMC functions as a non-governmental advisory body on musical matters. The membership includes National Music Councils from 15 European countries (including countries outside the European Union such as Azerbaijan, Israel, Russia, and Ukraine); 18 European music organisations; 18 international music organisations and 24 national music organisations or organisations that specialise in specific areas of music. MembersAs of June 2018, The European Music Council has 75 members based in 29 countries. National Music CouncilsNational music councils represented are Austria, Azerbaijan, Czech Republic, Estonia, Finland, Germany, Hungary, Israel, Italy, Latvia, Norway, Poland, Switzerland, and Ukraine. International Music OrganisationsThe EMC has 18 members that carry out work on an international level (defined as an organisation that has members or carries out activities in a minimum of ten countries outside of Europe).[2]
European Music OrganisationsThere are 15 organisations in the 'European Music Organisations' category of the EMC (defined as operating in a minimum of 20% of Europe).
National and Specialised OrganisationsThere are 24 National and Specialised Organisations in the European Music Council's membership (defined as any legal constituted organisation, association, society, company, foundation, corporation or NGO working in the field of arts and culture, which does not fulfill the requirements of an international or regional musical organisation or National Music Council)
Board of the European Music CouncilThe Board of the European Music Council consists of seven members and they are elected every two years at the EMC's Annual Meeting. The eight current board members, elected at the EMC's Annual Meeting in Oslo, June 2018 are:
As the two candidates for the seventh position received the same number of votes, both were co-opted to the Board upon decision of the Annual Meeting of Members of the EMC. Annual MeetingsThe European Music Council hosts an annual meeting to discuss the work of the council. From 2010, the Annual Meeting was combined with a new European Forum on Music, based on the model set by the International Music Council's World Forum on Music.
Projects and other EventsEuropean Forum for Music Education and Training (EFMET)The European Forum for Music Education and Training (EFMET), was formed in 2003 with the aim of bringing organisations that deal with formal and non-formal music education together. It ways supported by the European Commission through its Culture programme. It aimed to improve the collaboration and communication between the facilitators on formal and non-formal music education, map current trends, and formulate recommendations for future use. ExTra! Exchange TraditionsThe aim of the ExTra! project was to stimulate the exchange of different musical traditions in Europe. Its main focus was on the integration of the musical traditions of immigrants and cultural minorities together with those already existing in Europe. The European Music Council, as coordinator, usually collaborates with some of its member organisations, as well as other interested parties, for projects. In ExTra!, they were:
Music on Troubled SoilsMusic on Troubled Soils was a conference held in Jerusalem in 2008 which discussed the role of music in troubled regions such as Israel, Cyprus and South Africa. Speakers included: Marco Abbondanza, founder and director of 7 Sois 7 luas International Festival; Alenka Barber-Kersovan, lecturer at the Institute for Musicology of the University of Hamburg; Nenad Bogdanovic is a Serbian born Cypriot musician, organizer and youth-cultural worker; Veronika Cohen, Chairperson of the Department of Music Education at the Jerusalem Academy of Music and Dance; Danny Felsteiner, director of the Silwan Music School in East Jerusalem; Marion Haak; Rahib Haddad, conductor; Laura Hassler, director of Musicians without Borders; Timo Klemettinen, Secretary General of the Finnish Music Council and Chairman of the EMC Board; Dubi Lenz, artistic director in Israel; Melisse Lewine-Boskovich, founder of the Arab-Jewish Adamai Ensemble; Myrna Lewis; Dochy Lichtensztajn, musicologist; Eva de Mayo, conductor and music teacher; Henrik Melius, founder of Spiritus Mundi; David Sanders, director of the National Music Council of the United States; Edwin Seroussi, Professor of Musicology and Director of the Jewish Music Research Center of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem; Maya Shavit, founder of the Efroni girls' choir; Hania Souda Sabbara, director of the Magnificat Institute; Wouter Turkenburg, the founder of the International Association of Schools of Jazz; Merlijn Twaalfhoven, composer; Frans Wolfkamp, managing director of Music in ME. European Agenda for Music
The European Agenda for Music aims to converge the European music sector’s many voices in order to establish an ongoing dialogue between policy makers and music sector stakeholders and was successfully launched on March 21, 2018.
The European Agenda for Music contributes to a musically thriving Europe by setting out priorities for the music sector in Europe for the years to come.The European Agenda for Music took into account the specific advocacy papers the EMC formulated in 2010 and 2011, which are the “Manifesto for Youth and Music in Europe” and the “Bonn Declaration” that gives recommendation for the music education sector in Europe and for national and European legislation. STAMP - Shared Training Activities for Music ProfessionalsSTAMP responds to a need voiced by professionals in the music sector for greater professional training and the related process of lifelong learning and will aim at:
References1. ^imc-cim.org 2. ^imc-cim.org 3. ^menuhin-foundation.com 4. ^musicaustria.at External links
4 : International music organizations|Organisations based in Bonn|1972 establishments in Europe|Music organisations based in Germany |
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