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Associate Professor Hugh de Ferranti

Associate Professor, School of Languages, Cultures and Linguistics

Qualifications

B Mus (Hons) (Sydney), MA (Tokyo Geijutsu Daigaku), PhD (Sydney)

Contact

Email: hdeferra@une.edu.au
Room: E11 221
Phone: 02 6773 3518 (or +61 2 6773 3518 overseas)

Hugh de Ferranti trained in musicology and composition at the University of Sydney, where he was introduced to academic studies of several genres of Japanese traditional music.  He pursued practical study of biwa, a form of lute, between 1985 and 1988, and submitted a research thesis in Japanese to Tokyo National University of Arts and Music (Tôkyô Geijutsu Daigaku), from which institution he received the M.A. degree in 1989.  From 1990 he entered the Ph.D. programme at Sydney, but in 1991 returned to Japan for a year as a doctoral research fellow to do fieldwork research with blind performers of the zatôbiwa tradition in the Kumamoto (formerly Higo) region of central Kyusu.  He was awarded the Ph.D. in 1997 for the thesis Text and Music in Biwa Narrative:  the Zatôbiwa Tradition of Kyushu, submitted to Sydney University.  In the meantime he had taught both regular and summer courses on music, culture and language at the University of California, Berkeley, and San Francisco State University.  From 1996-97 he was a Mellon Teaching-Research Fellow at Cornell University.  In 1998 he became an Assistant Professor jointly appointed in two Departments, Asian Languages and Cultures, and Musicology, at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor.  In 2001-02 he received research grants from the Japan Foundation and the Fulbright-Hays Commission, and was accepted as an affiliated researcher at the National Museum of Ethnology, Osaka.  In January 2003, he returned to Australia to join the Asian lanaguages and cultures division of the School of Languages, Cultures and Linguistics at the University of New England.

As someone who began studying biwa performance traditions soon after completing his undergraduate education, de Ferranti has always worked with Japanese poetic narrative texts and their musical vehicles, the singing and declaiming voice, and instrumental sound.  Writings on the history, performance practice, notation systems, social and interpretive contexts for biwa narrative have appeared in Asian Music, Repercussions, Musica Asiatica, Musicology Australia and The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians.  He has also written research papers on Japanese popular music (in the U.K. journal, Popular Music, vol 21/2, 2002) and the work of composer, Takemitsu Tôru, for Japanese traditional instruments.  He is the author of Japanese Musical Instruments (Oxford University Press, 2000) and co-editor of A Way a Lone:  Writings on Tôru Takemitsu (Academia Music, Tokyo, 2002).

In addition to his teaching of classes on Japanese language and 'world music' tradition, Hugh de Ferranti initiated an undergraduate lecture course on Japanese popular music at the University of Michigan.  He also taught undergraduate and post-graduate seminars on Japanese theatre, historical music traditions, and the development, reception and transformation of the canonical pre-modern text, Heike Monogatari (The Tale of the Heike).