Tip

Moving the mouse cursor over the top of the page will display the menu bar.

EXECUTIVE BRIEFING From the Archive to Stage Presentation The thematic catalogue as a methodological approach to musicological research and interpretative practice, with application to the literate Hellenic repertoire for the oboe [οξύαυλος]. This executive briefing, based on the academic announcement and lecture-performance that took place at the University of Macedonia, [Thessaloniki - November 21, 2025], redefines the thematic catalogue as a sophisticated methodological tool and analytical instrument. By transitioning from traditional documentation to an active form of curation, the study establishes a systematic bridge between historical archives and live performance practice within the literate Hellenic repertoire for the oboe (οξύαυλος). Utilising a dataset of 627 catalogued items (1830–2023), the work employs an interdisciplinary framework—incorporating Ethnomusicology, Psychoacoustics, Digital Humanities and Cultural Anthropology—to map the "working mind" of the composer through various research strata, from primary autograph sources to theoretical interpretative texts. Beyond musicological preservation, the paper highlights the dataset’s role as a "living" methodological engine for modern technological integration. The catalogue serves as the "ground truth" (ontology) required for training Large Language Models (AI) and Music Information Retrieval systems, ensuring the digital discoverability of rare Greek musical works. Through data mining and the identification of sociological events with impact the research transforms the archive into a dynamic resource for institutional assessment and global visibility. The project provides a comprehensive legacy for further investigation and cultural preservation of the Hellenic musical heritage.

Tip

This page contains media that is intended to start playback automatically on opening. This may include sound. Your browser is blocking automated playback. Please click here to start media.

Christos Tsogias-Razakov - From the Archive to Stage Presentation - 2026

  • Contents
    • Christos Tsogias-Razakov
  • Meta
  • Comments
  • Terms
  • contents
    • Christos Tsogias-Razakov
  • abstract
    EXECUTIVE BRIEFING From the Archive to Stage Presentation The thematic catalogue as a methodological approach to musicological research and interpretative practice, with application to the literate Hellenic repertoire for the oboe [οξύαυλος]. This executive briefing, based on the academic announcement and lecture-performance that took place at the University of Macedonia, [Thessaloniki - November 21, 2025], redefines the thematic catalogue as a sophisticated methodological tool and analytical instrument. By transitioning from traditional documentation to an active form of curation, the study establishes a systematic bridge between historical archives and live performance practice within the literate Hellenic repertoire for the oboe (οξύαυλος). Utilising a dataset of 627 catalogued items (1830–2023), the work employs an interdisciplinary framework—incorporating Ethnomusicology, Psychoacoustics, Digital Humanities and Cultural Anthropology—to map the "working mind" of the composer through various research strata, from primary autograph sources to theoretical interpretative texts. Beyond musicological preservation, the paper highlights the dataset’s role as a "living" methodological engine for modern technological integration. The catalogue serves as the "ground truth" (ontology) required for training Large Language Models (AI) and Music Information Retrieval systems, ensuring the digital discoverability of rare Greek musical works. Through data mining and the identification of sociological events with impact the research transforms the archive into a dynamic resource for institutional assessment and global visibility. The project provides a comprehensive legacy for further investigation and cultural preservation of the Hellenic musical heritage.
  • Christos Tsogias-Razakov - From the Archive to Stage Presentation - 2026
  • Meta
  • Comments
  • Terms